After that night Vixen held her peace.
There were no more bitter words between Mrs. Tempest
and her daughter, but the mother knew that there was
a wellspring of bitterness-a Marah whose
waters were inexhaustible-in her daughter’s
heart; and that domestic happiness, under one roof,
was henceforth impossible for these two.
There were very few words of any kind
between Violet and Mrs. Tempest at this time.
The girl kept herself as much a possible apart from
her mother. The widow lived her languid drawing-room
life, dawdling away long slow days that left no more
impression behind them than the drift of rose-leaves
across the velvet lawn before her windows. A little
point-lace, deftly worked by slim white fingers flashing
with gems; a little Tennyson; a little Owen Meredith;
a little Browning-only half understood
at best; a little scandal; a great deal of orange pekoe,
sipped out of old Worcester teacups of royal blue or
flowered Swansea; an hour’s letter-writing on
the last fashionable note-paper; elegantly-worded
inanity, delicately penned in a flowing Italian hand,
with long loops to the Y’s and G’s, and
a serpentine curve at the end of every word.
No life could well have been more
useless or vapid. Even Mrs. Tempest’s charities-those
doles of wine and soup, bread and clothing, which are
looked for naturally from the mistress of a fine old
mansion-were vicarious. Trimmer, the
housekeeper, did everything. Indeed, in the eyes
of the surrounding poor, Mrs. Trimmer was mistress
of the Abbey House. It was to her they looked
for relief; it was her reproof they feared; and to
her they louted lowest. The faded beauty, reclining
in her barouche, wrapped in white raiment of softest
China crape, and whirling past them in a cloud of
dust, was as remote as a goddess. They could
hardly have realised that she was fashioned out of
the same clay that made themselves.
Upon so smooth and eventless an existence
Captain Winstanley’s presence came like a gust
of north wind across the sultry languor of an August
noontide. His energy, his prompt, resolute manner
of thinking and acting upon all occasions, impressed
Mrs. Tempest with an extraordinary sense of his strength
of mind and manliness. It seemed to her that she
must always be safe where he was. No danger, no
difficulty could assail her while his strong arm was
there to ward it off. She felt very much as Mary
Stuart may have done about Bothwell; when, moved to
scornful aversion by the silken boy-profligate Darnley,
her heart acknowledged its master in the dark freebooter
who had slain him. There had been no Darnley
in Pamela Tempest’s life; but this resolute,
clear-brained soldier was her Bothwell. She had
the Mary Stuart temperament, the love of compliments
and fine dresses, dainty needlework and luxurious
living, without the Stuart craft. In Conrad Winstanley
she had found her master, and she was content to be
so mastered; willing to lay down her little sum of
power at his feet, and live henceforward like a tame
falcon at the end of a string. Her position, as
a widow, was an excellent one. The Squire’s
will had been dictated in fullest confidence in his
wife’s goodness and discretion; and doubtless
also with the soothing idea common to most hale and
healthy men, that it must be a long time before their
testamentary arrangements can come into effect.
It was a holograph will, and the Squire’s own
composition throughout. “He would have
no lawyer’s finger in that pie,” he had
said. The disposal of his estate had cost him
many hours of painful thought before he rang the bell
for his bailiff and his butler, and executed it in
their presence.
Mrs. Tempest was mistress of the Abbey
House for her life; and at her death it was to become
Violet’s property. Violet was not to come
of age until she was twenty-five, and in the meantime
her mother was to be her sole guardian, and absolute
mistress of everything. There was no question
of an allowance for the maintenance of the heiress,
no question as to the accumulation of income.
Everything was to belong to Mrs. Tempest till Violet
came of age. She had only to educate and maintain
her daughter in whatever manner she might think fit.
At Violet’s majority the estate was to pass
into her possession, charged with an income of fifteen
hundred a year, to be paid to the widow for her lifetime.
Until her twenty-fifth birthday, therefore, Violet
was in the position of a child, entirely dependent
on her mother’s liberality, and bound to obey
her mother as her natural and only guardian. There
was no court of appeal nearer than the Court of Chancery.
There was no one to whom the two women could make
their complaints or refer their differences.
Naturally, Captain Winstanley had
long before this made himself acquainted with the
particulars of the Squire’s will. For six
years he saw himself sole master of a very fine estate,
and at the end of six years reduced to an income which
seemed, comparatively, a pittance, and altogether
inadequate for the maintenance of such a place as the
Abbey House. Still, fifteen hundred a year and
the Abbey House were a long way on the right side
of nothing: and Captain Winstanley felt that he
had fallen on his feet.
That was a dreary June for Vixen.
She hugged her sorrow, and lived in a mental solitude
which was almost awful in so young a soul. She
made a confidante of no one, not even of kind-hearted
Mrs. Scobel, who was quite ready to pity her and condole
with her, and who was secretly indignant at the widow’s
folly.
The fact of Mrs. Tempest’s intended
marriage had become known to all her friends and neighbours,
with the usual effect of such intelligence. Society
said sweet things to her; and praised Captain Winstanley;
and hoped the wedding would be soon; and opined that
it would be quite a nice thing for Miss Tempest to
have such an agreeable stepfather, with whom she could
ride to hounds as she had done with the dear Squire.
And the same society, driving away from the Abbey
House in its landaus and pony-carriages, after
half-an-hour’s pleasant gossip and a cup of
delicately flavoured tea, called Mrs. Tempest a fool,
and her intended husband an adventurer.
Vixen kept aloof from all the gossip
and tea-drinking. She did not even go near her
old friends the Scobels, in these days of smothered
wrath and slow consuming indignation. She deserted
the schools, her old pensioners, even the little village
children, to whom she had loved to carry baskets of
good things, and pocketfuls of halfpence, and whose
queer country dialect had seemed as sweet to her as
the carolling of finches and blackbirds in the woods.
Everything in the way of charity was left to Mrs.
Trimmer now. Vixen took her long solitary rides
in the Forest, roaming wherever there was a footway
for her horse under the darkening beeches, dangerously
near the swampy ground where the wet grass shone in
the sunlight, the green reedy patches that meant peril;
into the calm unfathomable depths of Mark Ash, or Queen’s
Bower; up to the wild heathy crest of Boldrewood;
wherever there was loneliness and beauty.
Roderick had gone to London for the
season, and was riding with Lady Mabel in the Row,
or dancing attendance at garden-parties, exhibitions,
and flower-shows.
“I wonder how he likes the dusty
days, and the crowded rooms, the classical music,
and high-art exhibitions?” thought Vixen savagely.
“I wonder how he likes being led about like
a Pomeranian terrier? I don’t think I could
endure it if I were a man. But I suppose when
one is in love -”
And then Vixen thought of their last
talk together, and how little of the lover’s
enthusiasm there was in Roderick’s mention of
his cousin.
“In the bottom of my heart I
know that he is going to marry her for the sake of
her estate, or because his mother wished it and urged
it, and he was too weak-minded to go on saying No.
I would not say it for the world, or let anyone else
say it in my hearing, but, in my heart of hearts,
I know he does not love her.”
And then, after a thoughtful silence,
she cried to the mute unresponsive woods:
“Oh, it is wicked, abominable,
mad, to marry without love!”
The woods spoke to her of Roderick
Vawdrey. How often she had ridden by his side
beneath these spreading beech-boughs, dipping her childish
head, just as she dipped it to-day, under the low branches,
steering her pony carefully between the prickly holly-bushes,
plunging deep into the hollows where the dry leaves
crackled under his hoofs.
“I fancied Rorie and I were
to spend our lives together-somehow,”
she said to herself. “It seems very strange
for us to be quite parted.”
She saw Mr. Vawdrey’s name in
the fashionable newspapers, in the lists of guests
at dinners and drums. London life suited him very
well, no doubt. She heard that he was a member
of the Four-in-hand Club, and turned out in splendid
style at Hyde Park Corner. There was no talk yet
of his going into Parliament. That was an affair
of the future.
Since that evening on which Mrs. Tempest
announced her intention of taking a second husband,
Violet and Captain Winstanley had only met in the
presence of other people. The Captain had tried
to infuse a certain fatherly familiarity into his
manner; but Vixen had met every attempt at friendliness
with a sullen disdain, which kept even Captain Winstanley
at arm’s length.
“We shall understand each other
better by-and-by,” he said to himself, galled
by this coldness. “It would be a pity to
disturb these halcyon days by anything in the way
of a scene. I shall know how to manage Miss Tempest-afterwards.”
He spoke of her, and to her, always
as Miss Tempest. He had never called her Violet
since that night in the Pavilion garden.
These days before her wedding were
indeed a halcyon season for Mrs. Tempest. She
existed in an atmosphere of millinery and pretty speeches.
Her attention was called away from a ribbon by the
sweet distraction of a compliment, and oscillated
between tender whispers and honiton lace. Conrad
Winstanley was a delightful lover. His enemies
would have said that he had done the same kind of
thing so often, that it would have been strange if
he had not done it well. His was assuredly no
’prentice hand in the art. Poor Mrs. Tempest
lived in a state of mild intoxication, as dreamily
delicious as the effects of opium. She was enchanted
with her lover, and still better pleased with herself.
At nine-and-thirty it was very sweet to find herself
exercising so potent an influence over the Captain’s
strong nature. She could not help comparing herself
to Cleopatra, and her lover to Antony. If he had
not thrown away a world for her sake, he was at least
ready to abandon the busy career which a man loves,
and to devote his future existence to rural domesticity.
He confessed that he had been hardened by much contact
with the world, that he did not love now for the first
time; but he told his betrothed that her influence
had awakened feelings which had never before been
called into life, that this love which he felt for
her was to all intents and purposes a first love, the
first pure and perfect affection that had subjugated
and elevated his soul.
After that night in Mrs. Tempest’s
boudoir, it was only by tacit avoidance of her mother
that Vixen showed the intensity of her disapproval.
If she could have done any good by reproof or entreaty,
by pleading or exhortation, she would assuredly have
spoken; but she saw the Captain and her mother together
every day, and she knew that, opposed to his influence,
her words were like the idle wind which bloweth where
it listeth. So she held her peace, and looked
on with an aching angry heart, and hated the intruder
who had come to steal her dead father’s place.
To take her father’s place; that in Violet’s
mind was the unpardonable wrong. That any man
should enter that house as master, and sit in the
Squire’s seat, and rule the Squire’s servants,
and ride the Squire’s horses, was an outrage
beyond endurance. She might have looked more
leniently on her mother’s folly, had the widow
chosen a second husband with a house and home of his
own, who would have carried off his wife to reign
over his own belongings, and left the Abbey House
desolate-a temple dedicated to the dead.
Mrs. Tempest’s manner towards
her daughter during this period was at once conciliatory
and reproachful. She felt it a hard thing that
Violet should have taken up such an obnoxious position.
This complaint she repeated piteously, with many variations,
when she discussed Violet’s unkindness with
her lover. She had no secrets from the Captain,
and she told him all the bitter things Violet had
said about him.
He heard her with firmly-set lips
and an angry sparkle in his dark eyes, but his tone
was full of paternal indulgence presently, when Mrs.
Tempest had poured out all her woes.
“Is it not hard upon me, Conrad?”
she asked in conclusion.
“My dear Pamela, I hope you
are too strong-minded to distress yourself seriously
about a wilful girl’s foolishness. Your
daughter has a noble nature, but she has been spoiled
by too much indulgence. Even a race-horse-the
noblest thing in creation-has to be broken
in; not always without severe punishment. Miss
Tempest and I will come to understand each other perfectly
by-and-by.”
“I know you will be a second
father to her,” said Mrs. Tempest tearfully.
“I will do my duty to her, dearest, be assured.”
Still Mrs. Tempest went on harping
upon the cruelty of her daughter’s conduct.
The consciousness of Violet’s displeasure weighed
heavily upon her.
“I dare not even show her my
trousseau,” she complained, “all
confidence is at an end between us. I should like
to have had her opinion about my dresses-though
she is sadly deficient in taste, poor child! and has
never even learnt to put on her gloves perfectly.”
“And your own taste is faultless,
love,” replied the Captain soothingly.
“What can you want with advice from an inexperienced
girl, whose mind is in the stable?”
“It is not her advice I want,
Conrad; but her sympathy. Fanny Scobel is coming
this afternoon. I can show her my things.
I really feel quite nervous about talking to Violet
of her own dress. She must have a new dress for
the wedding, you know; though she cannot be a bridesmaid.
I think that is really unfair. Don’t you,
Conrad?”
“What is unfair, dearest?”
asked the Captain, whose mind had scarcely followed
the harmless meanderings of his lady’s speech.
“That a widow is not allowed
to have bridesmaids or orange-blossoms. It seems
like taking the poetry out of a wedding, does it not?”
“Not to my mind, Pamela.
The poetry of wedlock does not lie in these details-a
sugared cake, and satin favours; a string of carriages,
and a Brussels veil. The true poetry of marriage
is in the devotion and fidelity of the two hearts
it binds together.”
Mrs Tempest sighed gently, and was
almost resigned to be married without bridesmaids
or orange-blossoms.
It was now within a month of the wedding,
which was to be solemnised on the last day of August-a
convenient season for a honeymoon tour in Scotland.
Mrs. Tempest liked to travel when other people travelled.
Mountain and flood would have had scarcely any charm
for her “out of the season.” The
time had come when Violet’s dress must be talked
about, as Mrs. Tempest told the Vicar’s wife
solemnly. She had confided the secret of her
daughter’s unkindness to Mrs. Scobel, in the
friendly hour of afternoon tea.
“It is very hard upon me,”
she repeated-“very hard that the only
drawback to my happiness should come from my own child.”
“Violet was so fond of her father,”
said Mrs. Scobel excusingly.
“But is that any reason she
should treat me unkindly? Who could have been
fonder of dear Edward than I was? I studied his
happiness in everything. There never was an unkind
word between us. I do not think anyone could
expect me to go down to my grave a widow, in order
to prove my affection for my dearest Edward.
That was proved by every act of my married life.
I have nothing to regret, nothing to atone for.
I feel myself free to reward Captain Winstanley’s
devotion. He has followed me from place to place
for the last two years; and has remained constant,
in spite of every rebuff. He proposed to me three
times before I accepted him.”
Mrs. Scobel had been favoured with
the history of these three separate offers more than
once.
“I know, dear Mrs. Tempest,”
she said somewhat hurriedly, lest her friend should
recapitulate the details. “He certainly
seems very devoted. But, of course, from a worldly
point of view, you are an excellent match for him.”
“Do you think I would marry
him if I thought that consideration had any weight
with him?” demanded Mrs. Tempest indignantly.
And Mrs. Scobel could say no more.
There are cases of physical blindness
past the skill of surgery, but there is no blindness
more incurable than that of a woman on the verge of
forty who fancies herself beloved.
“But Violet’s dress for
the wedding,” said Mrs. Scobel, anxious to get
the conversation upon safer ground. “Have
you really said nothing to her about it?”
“No. She is so headstrong
and self-willed. I have been absolutely afraid
to speak. But it must be settled immediately.
Theodore is always so busy. It will be quite
a favour to get the dress made at so short a notice,
I daresay.”
“Why not speak to Violet this afternoon?”
“While you are here? Yes,
I might do that,” replied Mrs. Tempest eagerly.
She felt she could approach the subject
more comfortably in Mrs. Scobel’s presence.
There would be a kind of protection in a third person.
She rang the bell.
“Has Miss Tempest come home from her ride?”
“Yes, ma’am. She has just come in.”
“Send her to me at once then. Ask her not
to stop to change her dress.”
Mrs. Tempest and Mrs. Scobel were
in the drawing-room, sitting at a gipsy table before
an open window; the widow wrapped in a China-crape
shawl, lest even the summer breeze should be too chill
for her delicate frame, the Worcester cups and saucers,
and antique silver tea pot and caddy and kettle set
out before her, like a child’s toys.
Violet came running in, flushed after her ride, her
habit muddy.
“Bogged again!” cried
Mrs. Tempest, with ineffable disgust. “That
horse will be the death of you some day.”
“I think not, mamma. How do you do, Mrs.
Scobel?”
“Violet,” said the Vicar’s
wife gravely, “why do you never come to our
week-day services now?”
“I-I-don’t
know. I have not felt in the humour for coming
to church. It’s no use to come and kneel
in a holy place with rebellious thoughts in my heart.
I come on Sundays for decency’s sake; but I think
it is better to keep away from the week-day services
till I am in a better temper.”
“I don’t think that’s
quite the way to recover your temper, dear.”
Violet was silent, and there was a rather awkward
pause.
“Will you have a cup of tea, dear?” asked
Mrs. Tempest.
“No, thanks, mamma. I think,
unless you have something very particular to say to
me, I had better take my muddy habit off your carpet.
I feel rather warm and dusty. I shall be glad
to change my dress.”
“But I have something very particular
to say, Violet. I won’t detain you long.
You’d better have a cup of tea.”
“Just as you please, mamma.”
And forgetful of her clay-bespattered
habit, Violet sank into one of the satin-covered chairs,
and made a wreck of an antimacassar worked in crewels
by Mrs. Tempest’s own hands.
“I am going to write to Madame
Theodore by this evening’s post, Violet,”
said her mother, handing her a cup of tea, and making
believe not to see the destruction of that exquisite
antimacassar; “and I should like to order your
dress-for-the wedding. I
have been thinking that cream-colour and pale blue
would suit you to perfection. A cream-coloured
hat-the Vandyck shape-with a
long blue ostrich -”
“Please don’t take any
trouble about it, mamma,” said Vixen, whose
cheek had paled at the word “wedding,”
and who now sat very erect in her chair, holding her
cup and saucer firmly. “I am not going to
be present at your wedding, so I shall not want a
dress.”
“Violet!” cried Mrs. Tempest,
beginning to tremble. “You cannot mean
what you say. You have been very unkind, very
undutiful. You have made me perfectly miserable
for the last seven weeks; but I cannot believe that
you would-grossly insult me-by
refusing to be present at my wedding.”
“I do not wish to insult you,
mamma. I am very sorry if I have pained you;
but I cannot and will not be present at a marriage
the very idea of which is hateful to me. If my
presence could give any sanction to this madness of
yours, that sanction shall not be given.”
“Violet, have you thought what
you are doing? Have you considered what will
be said-by the world?”
“I think the world-our
world-must have made up its mind about your
second marriage already, mamma,” Vixen answered
quietly. “My absence from your wedding
can make very little difference.”
“It will make a very great difference;
and you know it!” cried Mrs. Tempest, roused
to as much passion as she was capable of feeling.
“People will say that my daughter sets her face
against my marriage-my daughter, who ought
to sympathise with me, and rejoice that I have found
a true friend and protector.”
“I cannot either sympathise
or rejoice, mamma. It is much better that I should
stop away from your wedding. I should look miserable,
and make other people uncomfortable.”
“Your absence will humiliate
and lower me in the sight of my friends. It will
be a disgrace. And yet you take this course on
purpose to wound and injure me. You are a wicked
undutiful daughter.”
“Oh, mamma!” cried Vixen,
with grave voice and reproachful eyes-eyes
before whose steady gaze the tearful widow drooped
and trembled, “is duty so one-sided? Do
I owe all to you, and you nothing to me? My father
left us together, mother and daughter, to be all the
world to each other. He left us mistresses of
the dear old home we had shared with him. Do
you think he meant a stranger to come and sit in his
place-to be master over all he loved?
Do you think it ever entered his mind that in three
little years his place would be filled by the first-comer-his
daughter asked to call another man father?”
“The first-comer!” whimpered
Mrs. Tempest. “Oh, this it too cruel!”
“Violet!” exclaimed Mrs.
Scobel reprovingly, “when you are calmer you
will be sorry for having spoken so unkindly to your
dear mamma.”
“I shall not be sorry for having
spoken the truth,” said Violet. “Mamma
has heard the truth too seldom in her life. She
will not hear it from Captain Winstanley-yet
awhile.”
And after flinging this last poisoned
dart, Vixen took up the muddy skirt of her habit and
left the room.
“It was rather a pity that Arion
and I did not go to the bottom of that bog and stay
there,” she reflected. “I don’t
think anybody wants us above ground.”
“Did you ever know anything
so humiliating, so shameful, so undutiful?”
demanded Mrs. Tempest piteously, as the door closed
on her rebellious daughter. “What will
people say if Violet is not at my wedding?”
“It would be awkward, certainly;
unless there were some good reason for her absence.”
“People are so ill-natured.
Nobody would believe in any excuse that was made.
That cruel girl will disgrace me.”
“She seems strongly prejudiced
against Captain Winstanley. It is a great pity.
But I daresay she will relent in time. If I were
you, dear Mrs. Tempest, I should order the dress.”
“Would you really, Fanny?”
“Yes; I should order the dress,
and trust in Providence for the result. You may
be able to bring her round somehow between now and
the wedding.”
“But I am not going to humiliate
myself. I am not going to be trampled on by my
daughter.”
“Of course not; but you must have her at your
wedding.”
“If I were to tell Captain Winstanley
what she has said this afternoon -”
“He would be very angry, no
doubt. But I would not tell him if I were you.”
“No, I shall not say anything about it.”
Yet, before night, Captain Winstanley
had heard every syllable that Vixen had said; with
some trifling and unconscious exaggerations, hardly
to be avoided by a woman of Mrs. Tempest’s character,
in the narration of her own wrongs.