PART I
When the world’s asleep,
I awake and weep,
Deeply sighing,
say,
“Come, O
break of day,
Lead my feet in my beloved’s
way.”
MARGARET L. WOODS.
When first I knew Aunt Emmy I suppose
she was about twenty-eight. I was ten, and I
thought her old, but still an agreeable companion,
infinitely pleasanter than her father and her brother,
with whom she lived. She was not my real aunt,
but her father was my great-uncle, and I always called
her Aunt Emmy. Great-uncle Thomas and Uncle Tom
were persons to be avoided, stout, heavy, bullet-headed,
bull-necked, throat-clearing men, loud nose-blowers,
loud soup-eaters, who reeked of tobacco when it was
my horrid duty to kiss them, and who addressed me in
jocular terms when they remembered my existence, of
which I was always loth to remind them. With
these two horrors, whom she loved, Aunt Emmy lived.
She was wrapped up in them. I have actually seen
her kiss Uncle Thomas when it was not necessary, when
he was asleep; and she admired Uncle Tom very much
too, though she seldom kissed him, I believe by his
wish. He used to say something about sister’s
kisses being like cold veal. I don’t suppose
he invented that himself. He was always picking
up things like that out of a rose-coloured paper,
and firing them off as his own. Uncle Tom was
tall and portly, and a wag out of office hours, with
a moustache that, in spite of all his efforts, would
not turn up, but insisted on making a melancholy inner
semicircle just a size smaller than the rubicund circle
of his face. How I hated kindly, vulgar Uncle
Tom! I used to pray that he might die before
the holidays. But he never did. I see now
that Uncle Tom was far, far worse than Uncle Thomas,
who had had a stroke, and was a kind of furious invalid
who could not speak clearly, or eat anything except
things that were bad for him. But when I was a
child, and first began to spend my holidays in Pembridge
Square, I regarded them both with the same repulsion.
Aunt Emmy was different. I know
now that she must have been a remarkably pretty woman,
but I did not notice that at the time. But a faint,
indefinable fragrance seemed to envelop her. I
loved to stroke her soft white hand, and to turn the
emerald ring on her third finger, and to lean against
her soft shoulder. Aunt Emmy’s cheek was
very soft too, and so was her full, silky hair, which
she wore parted all her life, though it was never
the fashion to do so that I can remember, though I
am told it is now the dernier cri among the
debutantes. Aunt Emmy had a beautifully
shaped head, and the whitest brow and neck that I have
ever seen. And she had a low voice, and was very
dignified. I do not think that she was a very
wise woman, or that she had ever wrestled with the
deeper problems of life, or that the mystery of pain
had ever caused her faith to totter. But she
was very good to live with. She devoted herself.
She never had her own way in anything
that I can remember. The house never represented
her. The furniture was leathern and velvet and
stout-looking, the kind of furniture which seems to
aim at being more or less exact moulds of the forms
of middle-aged men. The armchairs were like commodious
hip-baths in plush. Aunt Emmy and I were lost
in them. I remember once walking as a child through
the wilderness of armchairs at Maple’s and thinking
they all looked like Uncle Tom. A good deal of
Utrecht velvet had gone to the upholstering of that
house in Pembridge Square. It was comfortable,
airless, flowerless, with gravy-coloured walls.
As I grew older I wondered why it was all so ugly and
dreary. But I found there were less means than
I had supposed, and though the cooking remained excellent,
flowers and new chintzes were dispensed with as unnecessary.
Aunt Emmy opened a window surreptitiously now and then,
but Uncle Thomas and Uncle Tom hated draughts, and
they did not get off to sleep so quickly after dinner
if the drawing-room had been aired during the meal.
The dining-room windows were never opened at all,
except when Uncle Thomas was too unwell to come in
and Uncle Tom was away.
Many men had wished to marry Aunt
Emmy; not only sedentary professional men in long
frock-coats, full to the brim of the best food, like
Uncle Tom; but nice, lean, hungry-looking, open-air
men who were majors, or country squires, or something
interesting of that kind, whose clothes sat well on
them, and who drew up in the Row on little skittish,
curveting polo-ponies when Aunt Emmy and I walked there.
I once asked her, after a certain good-looking Major
Stoddart had ridden on, why she did not marry, but
she only said reprovingly, with great dignity:
“You don’t understand
such matters, my dear, or you would know that I could
not possibly leave your Uncle Thomas.”
I was silenced. I felt with bitterness
that this could not be her whole reason for celibacy,
but that, owing to the purely superficial fact that
my hair was still in a pigtail, she supposed I was
unable to comprehend “lots of things”
that I felt I understood perfectly, and on which my
mind was already working with an energy which would
have surprised her had she guessed it.
By this time I worshipped Aunt Emmy,
who represented in my somewhat colourless orphaned
existence the beautiful and romantic side of life.
Aunt Emmy looked romantic, and the contrast between
her refined, gentle self-effacement and the commonplace
egotism of her two men was of the glaring nature which
appeals to a young girl’s imagination.
I never forgot Major Stoddart, and
when I was eighteen, and had left school and was living
in Pembridge Square, I had the good fortune to come
in for the remains of a scene between Aunt Emmy and
Uncle Tom the very day after I had turned
up my hair.
It was at luncheon, to which I came
in late. Uncle Thomas was in bed with gout, and
Uncle Tom did not consider me of enough consequence
to matter. He had not realised even now
that I was a grown-up woman. Looking back after
all these years, I am not sure that he was not astute
enough to hope that I might prove an ally.
“What you have got to do, Emmy,
is to think of the future,” he was saying, scooping
all the visible eggs out of an aspic pie. “It’s
no manner of use living only in the present.
You think this comfortable home will go on for ever,
where you have lived in luxury. It won’t.
It can’t. It’s not in the nature
of things. I saw Blackett yesterday (Blackett
was the doctor), and he told me that if the governor’s
gout rises and nothing he can do can keep
it down he won’t last more than a
year at longest. In the nature of things,”
Uncle Tom continued, bolting half an egg, “I
shall then marry. In fact in short ”
“Has Miss Collett accepted you?”
said Aunt Emmy tremulously.
Miss Collett was a person of means,
and of somewhat bulged attractions for those who admire
size, of whom Uncle Tom had often spoken as a deuced
fine woman.
“She has,” said Uncle
Tom. “I made pretty sure of that before
I said anything myself. Nothing immediate, you
understand; but eventually when the old
governor goes I don’t want to hurry
him, Lord knows; but when the old man does pop off,
I shall bring her here.”
I looked round the room. I had
seen Miss Collett, and the mahogany and ormolu dining-room,
with its great gilt mirrors, seemed a fitting background
for her.
“I am very glad, dear Tom,”
said Aunt Emmy. “I think you and she will
be very well suited, and I am sure she is very lucky,
though I suppose I should never think any one quite
good enough.”
“Oh! that’s all right,”
said Uncle Tom. “And as for the luck, it’s
all on my side.”
He did not really think this, I knew,
but it was the right thing to say, so he said it.
“But I am not thinking only
of myself,” he continued. “There is
you to be considered.”
Aunt Emmy dropped her eyes.
“You mean, where I shall live,” she said
faintly.
“Just so. Just so.
You speak like a sensible woman. We must not forget
you.” Uncle Tom was becoming visibly uneasy.
“And I may as well tell you now, old girl prepare
your mind beforehand, don’t you know that
the governor has not been able to leave you as much
as he wished, as we both wished. The truth
is, what with one thing and another, and nearly all
his capital tied up in the business, and this house
on a long lease and expensive to keep up, with the
best will in the world the poor old pater can’t
do much for you.”
“It will be enough,” said Aunt Emmy.
“It will be the interest of
seven thousand pounds at three and a half per cent.,”
said Uncle Tom brutally, because he was uncomfortable,
“about two hundred and thirty pounds a year.”
“It will be ample,” said
Aunt Emmy. I knew by the faint colour in her
cheeks that the conversation was odious to her.
“Dear Tom, let us talk of something else.”
“We will,” said Uncle
Tom, with unexpected mental agility, and with the
obvious relief of a man who has got safely round a
difficult corner. “We will. Now, how
about Colonel Stoddart?”
My heart beat suddenly. I was
beginning to see life at last.
“There is nothing to say about him,” said
Aunt Emmy.
“A good chap, and a gentlemanly
chap,” said Uncle Tom urbanely, leaning back
in his chair. “Eton, the ’varsity,
and all that sort of thing. Quite one of ourselves.
Old family, and a warm man. And suitable in age.
My age. Thirty-nine. (Uncle Tom was really
forty-one.) You’re no chicken yourself, you
know, Emmy. Thirty-eight, though I own you don’t
look it, my dear. Well, what’s the matter
with Colonel Stoddart, I should like to know?”
“Nothing.”
“Well, I’m glad to hear
it, for he tells me you refused him again only last
week. Now, look here. One moment, please.
Don’t speak. I call it Providence, downright
Providence,” and Uncle Tom rapped the table with
a thick finger. “And yet you won’t
look at him. I don’t say marry him out
of hand. Of course,” Uncle Tom added hurriedly,
“you can’t leave the old pater while he
is above ground. There’s no question of
that. But I do say, Give the fellow a
chance. He’s been dangling after you for
years. Tell him that some day ”
Aunt Emmy rose from the table, and laid down her napkin.
“Now, look here, old girl,”
said Uncle Tom, not unkindly, “don’t get
your feathers up with me. Think better of it.
You know this sort of first-class opportunity may
not occur again. It really may not. If it
isn’t Providence, I’m sure I don’t
know what it is. And I believe your only reason
for refusing him is because of Bob Kingston. Now,
don’t fly in the face of Providence just out
of a bit of rotten sentiment which you ought to be
ashamed of at your age.”
My brain reeled. I had never
heard of Bob Kingston. I said “Good God!”
to myself, not because it was natural to me to use
such an expression, but because I felt it was suitable
to the occasion and to a person whose hair was done
up.
“Tom,” said Aunt Emmy,
her soft eyes blazing, “I desire that you will
never allude to Mr. Kingston again.”
She left the room, and I did the same,
with what I hope was a withering glance at the open-mouthed
Uncle Tom, who for days afterwards interlarded his
conversation with the refrain that he was blessed if
he could understand women.
But I dared not follow Aunt Emmy to
her little sitting-room at the top of the house.
She who was almost never alone, clung, I knew, to that
tiny refuge, and it was an understood thing between
us that I might creep in and sit with her a little
after tea, but not before.
So I raged up and down the empty gilded
and mirrored drawing-room, finding myself quite unable
to reconcile the situation with my faith in a beneficent
Deity; and then consoled myself by chronicling my tottering
faith in my diary. I wrote a diary until I married.
Then, I suppose, I became more interested in life
than in recording my own feelings. At any rate,
I discontinued it.
At last, when Aunt Emmy did not come
down for tea, I took her a cup.
She was sitting in a low chair with
her back to the light. I could see that she had
been crying, but she was quite calm. She had a
suspiciously clean pocket-handkerchief in her hand.
Her sitting-room was a small north chamber under the
roof, but it was the place I liked best in the house.
On her rare expeditions abroad, before Uncle Thomas
had become too ill to be left, she had picked up some
quaint pieces of pottery and a few old Italian mirrors.
The little white room with its pale blue linen coverings
had an atmosphere and a refinement of its own.
It was spring, and there was a bunch of daffodils
near the open window in a blue-and-white oil-jar with
Ole Scorpio on it.
Aunt Emmy drank some tea, and remarked
that I made it better than she did.
“Your Uncle Tom has a very kind
heart,” she said, looking a little pugnaciously
at me. “It is so like him, just when he
might naturally be taken up with his own affairs,
to be anxious about me.”
We each knew the other was not deceived.
I longed to say, “Why not marry Colonel Stoddart?”
I had only seen him on horseback.
I did not know how he looked on the ground, but I
would have married him myself in a second if he had
asked me, partly no doubt because he was a little
like Lord K , the hero of my teens
to whom I had never spoken, and partly because he was
the exact opposite of Uncle Tom. How Miss Collett
could! How anybody could! Yet Uncle
Tom always talked as if he had only to choose among
the flower of English womanhood, and the stouter and
more repellent he grew the more communicative and
conscientious he became about his fear of raising
expectations in female bosoms which he might not be
able to gratify. How I scorned Uncle Tom when
he talked like that, knowing as I did but
neither he nor Aunt Emmy knew I knew (it was always
like that, they always thought I did not know things) knowing
as I did that Miss Rose Delaine and Miss Wright had
both refused him. I did not realise in my intolerant
youth that the anxiety of some middle-aged bachelors
still to appear eligible, the way their minds hover
round imaginary conquests, has its pathetic side.
Looking back, I believe now that Miss Collett was
not by any means poor Uncle Tom’s first choice,
but his last chance. And perhaps he was her last
chance too.
“I know father is dying.
I have known it some time,” said Aunt Emmy, and
her face became convulsed. “He spoke so
beautifully about it only yesterday. And I have
known for a long time that Tom and Miss Collett were
likely to come to an arrangement.”
She had not a grain of irony in her,
but no word could have been more applicable to Uncle
Tom and Miss Collett than an arrangement. One
felt that each had measured the other by avoirdupois
weight, and had found the balance even.
“Is Uncle Thomas opposed to
your marrying?” I ventured to say, with the
tact of eighteen.
“No, my dear; that is what is
so wonderful. He was so dreadfully against it
long ago once indeed, until quite
lately. But it’s no use speaking of that.
But now he is quite anxious for it, so long as I don’t
leave him. He wants me to promise Colonel Stoddart,
but to tell him that I could not leave my father during
his lifetime, which of course I couldn’t.”
“Won’t Colonel Stoddart
wait?” I said, waxing bolder. I had slipped
down on the floor beside her and was stroking her
white hand. I hoped I was saying the right thing.
I was adoringly fond of her, but I was also eighteen,
and this was my first introduction to a real romance.
I was feverishly anxious to rise to the occasion,
to have nothing to regret in retrospect.
“I daresay he would. I
think he said something about it,” she said
apathetically.
I remembered a beautiful sentence
I had read in a novel about confidences being mutual,
and I said reproachfully, “Aunt Emmy, I have
told you all about Lord K ;
won’t you tell me, just me, no one else about
Mr. Kingston?”
And she told me. I think it was
a relief to speak to some one. I held my cheek
against her hand all the time. It seemed that
a sort of demigod of the name of Kingston had alighted
in her life when she was nineteen (I felt with a pang
that I had still a whole year to wait) and he was
twenty-one. Aunt Emmy waxed boldly eloquent in
her description of his unique and heroic character,
shyly eloquent in her dispassionate indication of
his almost terrifying beauty.
I think Aunt Emmy became a girl in
her teens again for a few minutes, carried away by
her memory, and by the idolising sympathy of the other
girl in her teens at her feet in a seventh heaven at
being a confidant. But in one sense, on the sentimental
plane, she had never ceased to be a girl. She
and I viewed the situation almost from the same standpoint.
“Aunt Emmy, was he tall?”
“He was, my love.”
“And slender?”
My whole life hung in the balance.
I had all a young girl’s repulsion towards stout
men.
“He was thin and wiry, and very athletic, a
great rider.”
I gave a sigh of relief.
“Did his it does
not really matter” (I felt the essentials were
all right and that I must not ask too much of life) “but
did his hair curl?”
Aunt Emmy drew out of her bosom a
little locket, hanging by a thin gold chain, with
a forget-me-not in blue enamel on it, and opened it.
Inside was a curl of chestnut hair. It was not
tied in the shape of a curl. It was a real curl.
I looked at it with awe.
Aunt Emmy answered my highest expectations
at every point. I had never seen that enamel
locket before. Yet I divined at once that she
had worn it under her clothes as indeed
she had, day and night for how many years! I
felt that I would not care how it ended, happily or
unhappily, if only I might have a romance and a locket
like that.
“He gave it me when we parted
eighteen years ago,” she said, her voice quivering
a little.
I knew well that lovers always did
part. They invariably severed, “severed
for years.” I was not the least surprised
to hear he was gone, for I was already learning “In
the Gloaming,” and trilled it forth in a thin,
throaty voice which Aunt Emmy said was remarkably like
what hers had been at my age.
“Why were you parted?” I asked.
“He had not any money, and he
had his way to make. And he had an uncle out
there who wanted him to go to him. It was a good
opening, though he would not have taken it if it had
not been for me, for though he was so fond of horses
he was not the kind of person for that kind of life,
sheep and things. He cared so much for books and
poetry. And your Uncle Thomas was very much against
my marrying at that time, in fact, he positively forbade
it. You see, mother was dead, and your Uncle Thomas
had become more dependent on me than he was quite aware
until there was a question of my leaving him.
Men are like that, my love. They need a woman
all the time to look after them, and listen to their
talk, and keep vexatious things away. And he
was always a most tender father. He said he could
not bear the thought of his only daughter roughing
it in Australia. He said he would withdraw his
opposition if if Bob (Bob was
his name) came home with a sufficient fortune to keep
me in comfort in England.”
“And he never did?”
“He went out to try. I
felt sure he would, and he felt sure he would.
At twenty-two it seems as if fortunes can be made
if it is really necessary. And I promised to
wait for him, and he was to work to win me.”
I could not refrain from shedding
a tear. It was all so beautiful, so far beyond
anything I could have hoped. I pressed Aunt Emmy’s
hand in silence, and she went on:
“But there were bad seasons,
and though he worked and worked, and though he did
get on, still, you could not call it a fortune.
And after five years had passed he wrote to say that
he was making a living, and his uncle had taken him
into partnership, and could not I come out to him.
He had built an extra room on purpose for me.
Your Uncle Thomas was terribly angry when the letter
came, because he had always been against my emigrating,
and he forbade any further correspondence. Men
are very high-handed, my love, when you come to live
with them. We were not allowed to write after
that. Do you know, my dear, I became so distressed
that I had thoughts I actually contemplated
running away to Australia?”
“Oh! why didn’t you?”
I groaned. That, of course, was the obvious solution
of the difficulty.
“Very soon after that your Uncle
Thomas had his stroke, and after that of course I
could not leave him.”
“Could not we do it still?”
I suggested. Of course I took for granted that
I should be involved in the elopement, as the confidential
friend who carries a little reticule with jewels in
it, and sustains throughout the spirits of the principal
eloper.
“Now!” said Aunt
Emmy, and for a moment a violent emotion disfigured
her sweet face. “Now. Oh! my child,
all this happened fifteen years ago, when you were
a toddling baby.”
“I wish to Heaven I had been
as old then as I am now,” I said with clenched
hands. I felt that I could have vanquished Uncle
Thomas and Uncle Tom, and all this conspiracy against
my darling Aunt Emmy’s happiness.
“And is he still still ?”
I ventured.
“I don’t know whether
he is still free. I have not heard
from him for fifteen years. Uncle Thomas was
very firm about the correspondence. He is a very
decided character, especially since his stroke, and
I have ceased to hear anything at all about him since
his mother died twelve years ago.”
To me twelve years ago was as in the
time of Noah. Yet here was Aunt Emmy, to whom
it was all as fresh as yesterday.
“When she died,” said
Aunt Emmy, “she was ill for a long time before,
and I used to go and sit with her. She was fond
of me, but she never quite did your Uncle Thomas justice.
When she died she sent me this ring.” She
touched the beautiful emerald ring she always wore.
“She said she had left it to him, and he had
asked that she would send it to me. It had been
her own engagement ring.”
“Why don’t you wear it on your engaged
finger?”
“I did at first. It was
a kind of comfort to me. But Uncle Tom was constantly
vexed with me about it. He said it might keep
things off. He is a very practical person, Uncle
Tom, a very shrewd man of business, I’m told.
So, to please him, I wear it in the daytime on my right
hand.”
By this time I was shedding tears of sheer sensibility.
“I have thought of him day and
night; there has not been a night I have not remembered
him in my prayers for nearly twenty years. It
will be twenty years next April. How could I
begin to think of any one else now, Colonel
Stoddart or any one? Uncle Tom is very clever,
and so is your Uncle Thomas, but I don’t think
they have ever quite understood what I feel
about Mr. Kingston.”
An electric bell in a little box over
the door rang in a furious manner.
Aunt Emmy was on her feet in a second,
smoothing her fair hair at the Venetian mirror.
“Your Uncle Thomas is awake,”
she said, “and is ready to be read to. He
never likes being kept waiting.”
This seemed to be the case, for as
she left the room the electric bell rang again more
furiously than before, and I shook my fist at it.
PART II
If some star of heaven
Led him by at even,
If
some magic fate
Brought
him, should I wait,
Or fly within and bid them
close the gate?
MARGARET L. WOODS.
The following year I suddenly married
a soldier, the only young man I knew, and I knew him
very slightly, and went out to India with him.
I did not forget Aunt Emmy, we corresponded regularly;
but I was young and my life was a very full one.
I had seen nothing of the world till I married.
I had a child. The years rushed past, joyful,
miserable, vivid, surprising, happy years, in spite
of the fact that my husband was not remarkably like
Lord K in appearance, and not in
the least like the “plaister saint” with
whom I had hurried to the altar on such slight provocation.
During these years Uncle Thomas died,
and Uncle Tom married, and Aunt Emmy wrote to me that
she had taken a little cottage in Abinger Forest against
her brother’s advice, and how, in spite of his
opposition how much it must have cost her
to oppose him he had forgiven her and presented
her with the most expensive mahogany bedstead and bedding
that Maple could supply “so like
him.”
I wondered vaguely once or twice whether
there had been any question of her marrying Mr. Kingston,
but there was no mention of him in her letters, and
I did not like to ask. I knew that she was very
poor, but presently my heart was gladdened by hearing
from her that a distant relation had left her a legacy,
and that she was now comfortably off.
Then suddenly our life was darkened.
Our child died. I struggled with my grief, became
ill, and was sent home. Aunt Emmy urged me to
go straight to her. She and Uncle Tom were my
only near relations in England. He also offered
to take me in for a time. He wrote with real
kindness. He had a child himself. And his
wife wrote too. But I need hardly say that I
took my sore heart and my broken health straight to
Aunt Emmy.
It was late in August when I arrived.
The honeysuckle was still in bloom on Aunt Emmy’s
white cottage, standing in its little orchard in a
clearing in the forest. She was waiting for me
in the porch, and I ran feebly to her up the narrow
brick path between the tall clumps of hollyhocks and
Michaelmas daisies; and she drew me into the little
parlour and held me closely to her. And the years
rolled away, and I was a child again, and she was
comforting me for my broken doll.
With the egotism of youth I fear I
had not given a thought to Aunt Emmy’s new home
until I entered it. I knew that she was happy
in it, and that it had once been a gamekeeper’s
cottage, but that was about all. Nowadays every
one has a cottage it is the fashion; and
literary men and women, tired of adulatory crowds,
weary of their own greatness, flee from the metropolis,
and write exquisite articles about their gardens,
and the peace that lurks under a thatched roof, and
the simple life, lived far from shrilling crowds but
near to nature, and very near to the Deity.
Fortunate Deity!
But in the days of which I am writing
cottages and their floral and spiritual appurtenances
were not the rage.
I never realised until I saw Aunt
Emmy in a home of her own how much taste she possessed,
or how pretty a cottage could be. It did not try
to look like a house. It was just a cottage,
standing amid its apple-trees, now red with apples,
with its old well half hidden in clumps of lavender.
The little dwelling itself, with its low ceilings and
long oak beams and dim colouring and quaint furniture,
had a certain austere charm, a quiet dignity of its
own. The sunny air came softly in through wide-open
latticed windows, bringing with it the scent of mignonette.
There had never been a breath of air in the house in
Pembridge Square. Ole Scorpio, that friend
of my youth, looked peaceful and complacent in a little
recess in which his soft colouring and perfect figure
showed to great advantage against a white-washed wall
in shadow.
Aunt Emmy herself, in a gown of some
dull white material, with a little grey in her rippling,
parted hair, seemed at home for the first time in
her life. She looked a shade older, a shade thinner
in the face, her sweet eyes a little sunk inwards.
But her tall figure had retained all its old soft
dignity and beauty of line. Looking at her as
she poured out my tea for me, I suddenly felt years
older than she.
This bewildering impression deepened
as the days went on, and a protecting, wondering compassion
became part of my affection for her.
During the years I had spent in India
I had seen a good deal of both sides of that motley,
amazing fabric which we call life. I had felt
the throbbing of its great loom. I had touched
with my own shrinking hand the closeness of the texture,
had marked the interweaving of the alien strands,
had marvelled and been dismayed, had marvelled and
been awed, had seen the dye of my own blood on one
dim thread, the gold of my own joy on another.
The sheltered life had not been mine.
But Aunt Emmy had not moved mentally
by a hair’s-breadth. All her expansion,
if expansion it could be called, had taken form in
her house and garden. I had not been a week under
her roof before I found that Mr. Kingston occupied
exactly the same position in her life as he had done
in Pembridge Square. She had brought down her
romance to adorn her new home just as she had brought
down Ole Scorpio, in cotton wool. Each
had their niche. Perhaps it was unreasonable in
me to expect to find her different. I had not
expected it. But I had become such a totally
different person myself that her attitude to life,
which had appeared to me so romantic and natural when
I was eighteen, now appeared irremediably pathetic,
visionary, out of touch with reality. Perhaps,
however, it was I who had become disillusioned and
matter-of-fact. I saw with a kind of pitying
wonder that her youthful romance still supplied to
her, as it had done since she was nineteen, a certain
atmosphere of pensive, prayerful resignation, a background
for ethereal day-dreams. Her peaceful days were
passed in a kind of picturesque haze, like the mist
that, seeming in itself a rosy light, sometimes veils
a tranquil September sunset.
She was evidently very happy, but
it was equally evident that she did not know it.
From words she let drop now and then I saw that she
still imagined she was bearing the heavy cross of
her mutilated youth. But to me it seemed as if
some tender hand had lifted it from her shoulder.
“Aunt Emmy,” I said, yielding
to an ignoble curiosity in the second week of my visit,
as we were picking the lavender together, “when
Uncle Thomas died, I had thought I should hear of
your marrying Mr. Kingston.”
“I also hoped it, my dear,”
said Aunt Emmy, snipping the lavender into a little
basket, held in a loose white-gloved hand.
I dared not look at her.
“Mr. Kingston has not written,” she said
after a moment.
“But did you write and tell
him you were free, and still in the same mind?”
“I did not. I thought it
might be awkward for him in case he were after
all these years contemplating some other
possibility. I did not want to embarrass him.
But your Uncle Thomas’s death was in all the
papers, and many of his relations are acquainted with
us. I have no doubt the news reached him.”
Of course it had. I had felt
that it was hardly to be expected that Mr. Kingston
should have kept after twenty years, more than twenty
years, the same vivid memory of his early love that
she had done. His silence proved that he had
not done so. I looked at Aunt Emmy. How pretty
and graceful and remote she looked, and how young
her face was under the shadow of her charming garden
hat, tied with a soft black ribbon under her chin.
As long as she was not confronted with any one really
young, she had no look of age. It was difficult
to believe that she was forty-four. And he must
be forty-six. It was too late. Middle-aged
marriages are risky affairs enough, when the Rubicon
of forty is within sight. But when it has been
passed !
As I looked at her I hoped with all
my heart that he would not come back to disturb her
peace of mind and dislocate her life afresh.
But, astonishing to say, he did come
back; and there was some adequate reason, I have forgotten
exactly what, for his not coming earlier. At
any rate, it was adequate.
When I came down to breakfast a few
days later, Aunt Emmy held a letter towards me with
a shaking hand. Her lips trembled. She could
not articulate.
“Am I really to read it?”
She nodded.
It was a charming letter, written
in a delicate, refined hand. Mr. Kingston had
not heard of her father’s death till the day
before he wrote. He had been away up-country
for a year, broken shoulder, etc. He was
starting for England at once. He should travel
almost as quickly as his letter. He should present
himself at Pembridge Square and learn her address
directly he landed. His ship was the Sultana.
I took up the morning paper.
“The Sultana arrived yesterday,”
I said.
I looked at the envelope. It was directed on
from Pembridge Square.
“Tom will give him my address,”
said Aunt Emmy faintly. “I wonder how he
knows I am not living there now. He will arrive
here to-day.”
She looked straight in front of her
through the open windows to the hollyhocks basking
in the still September sunshine. A radiance lit
up her face, like that which perhaps shone on Christian’s
when at last across the river he saw the pearl gates
of the New Jerusalem.
“At last!” she said.
“After all these years! After all these
dreadful, dreadful years!”
An unbearable pain went through me.
It was not new to me. I had known it once before,
when I had seen my child sicken. Why did it return
now?
The radiance passed. A pitiful
trembling shook her like a leaf. Her eyes turned
helplessly to mine, frightened and dimmed.
“I forgot I am an old woman,” she said.
I kissed her hand. I told her
that she was handsomer than any one. She was
very dignified and gentle.
“You are very kind to me, my
dear, and it is sweet of you to feel as you do.
I believe, as you say, that I am still nice-looking.
But the fact remains that it is nearly twenty-five
years since we have seen each other. I was nineteen
then. And oh! I suppose I ought not to say
it, but I was pretty. People turned to
look at me in the street. And now I am forty-four.”
“But he is older than you, isn’t he?”
“Two years. What is two
years! We were the same age when we were young.
But a man of forty-six is younger than a woman of forty-four.”
I was silent. There was no contradicting
that obvious fact.
“He will probably come by the
4.12 train,” said Aunt Emmy, rising. “If
you don’t mind, as there are so many preparations
to make, I will leave you to finish your breakfast.
I have had mine.”
She left the room, and I stared at
her empty plate. I was not hungry either.
I was frightened for my dear Aunt Emmy.
And yet, she was so yielding, so selfless,
so absolutely uncritical, that if any woman could
marry late she was the woman. She could have
lived with a monster of egotism without finding it
out. Had she not devoted herself to two such
monsters most of her life? And perhaps Mr. Kingston
was not a monster. Aunt Emmy arranged the flowers
early as she only could arrange them. I was only
allowed to fetch the water and clean the glasses.
A certain pony-cart was sent to Muddington with the
cook in it to buy a tongue, and a Stilton cheese,
and a little barrel of anchovies, and various other
condiments which Uncle Tom approved. Uncle Tom’s
tastes represented those of his whole sex for Aunt
Emmy.
I insisted on her eating some luncheon,
but this was barely possible, as in the midst of it
a telegram was brought in from Mr. Kingston to say
he should arrive by the 4.12 train.
After luncheon Aunt Emmy went to her
room. I followed her there half an hour later
to give her a note, and found her standing in the middle
of the floor, looking at all her gowns laid out on
chairs.
“I am afraid you can only think
me very silly, my dear,” she said, with a sort
of humble dignity. “I wished to consult
you, but I did not like to; but as you are
here, and if you don’t mind my asking you a
relation can often judge best what is advantageous which
gown do you think suits me best, the grey voile,
or the lilac delaine, or the white serge?”
I decided on the white serge, and
long before the dogcart ordered to meet him could
possibly arrive, Aunt Emmy was sitting, paler than
I had ever seen her, beside a wood fire in the parlour
in the soft white gown I loved her best in, pretending
to read. She had lit the fire, though we were
not in the habit of having it till later in the day,
because she thought Australians might feel chilly.
“I don’t know how it is,”
she said at last, laying down the book, “but
I seem quite blind. I can’t see the print.”
I could not see the needle-work I
was bending over either. But that was because
senseless tears kept on rising to my eyes, do what
I would. Aunt Emmy’s eyes had no tears
in them.
“It is very petty of me, I know,
but I do hope he has not grown stout,” she said
presently. “But of course it is to be expected,
and if it is so I must try to bear it. It could
not make any real difference. Your Uncle
Tom is the same age, and of course he is not he
really is not as thin as he was.”
“Was he ever thin?”
“N-no. But Mr. Kingston
was, at least, not thin, but very spare and agile-looking.”
At last the sound of wheels reached
us. Aunt Emmy clasped the arms of her chair convulsively.
“I daresay he has not come,” she said
almost inaudibly.
The wheels stopped. I went into the tiny hall.
A tall, spare, distinguished-looking
man, with weather-beaten face and peculiarly intent,
hawklike eyes, was at the gate, and I went out to
greet him. As he took off his cap his crisp hair
showed a little grey in it. He was delightful
to look at.
I don’t know what I said, but
I mumbled something as I shook hands with him, and
pointed to the parlour door. He nodded gravely
and went in, hitting his tall head against the low
lintel. Then he closed the door gently.
And I went to my room, and locked myself in.
When I went into the parlour an hour
later at tea-time I found them sitting one on each
side of the fire. I wished with all my heart that
they could have been sitting together at this moment
after the marriage of their daughter. Both had
cried a little, I could see. He certainly had.
They got up when I came in, and stood together on the
hearth, a splendid-looking couple, dwarfing the white
room with its low ceiling.
What they must have been in youth I could well imagine.
I was reintroduced to him, and I am
not sure, though they were both smiling at each other,
that they were not relieved by my entrance with the
tea. He handed her her cup and waited on her with
the deferential awkwardness of a man who has not been
in women’s society for years.
“I am a rough fellow, Emmy,”
he said once or twice. But he was not rough.
He was charming. He did not fit in at all with
my preconceived ideas of “Colonials.”
And it was quickly evident to me that his tender admiration
of Aunt Emmy still survived. I was partly reassured.
Perhaps, after all, he had brought happiness with
him.
Saint Luke’s summer was glorious
that year, and it was nowhere more wonderful than
in the forest. One still golden day followed another,
the gossamer-threaded sunshine flooding the glades
of yellowing and amber trees, spilling itself headlong
amid the rusting bracken, and losing itself in the
tiny foliage of the whortleberry, which, all its little
oval leaves, ruddy as a robin’s breast, was imitating
the trees, like a miniature autumn forest underfoot.
Aunt Emmy and Mr. Kingston walked
daily in the marvel of the forest, and it seemed as
if the autumn sun shone kindly on them. Sometimes
on her return there was a bewildered look in her face
which I did not understand, and I wondered whether
indeed all was well; but I put the thought away, for
his love for her was beyond the possibility of doubt,
and had not her love for him coloured her whole life?
And yet
Once I saw him take up Ole Scorpio
with a careful hand, and then replace it in its recess
with its spout pointing towards the room. Presently,
when he had gone, she gently moved it back to its former
position, exactly en profile, and the senseless
idea darted through my mind as I watched her do it
that if her romance were moved from its niche, she
would instinctively wish to do the same, to readjust
it to the angle from which she had looked at it so
long.
As the days passed and the first shyness
between them wore off, the primitive life he had led
for so many years showed itself in a certain slowness
of speech, a disinclination to make acquaintance with
the neighbours, and an increasing tendency to long,
tranquil silences with a pipe in the garden.
But, wonderful to say, it had not apparently blunted
him mentally. And he actually cared for books.
Unfortunately, there were almost no books in the cottage.
How he had kept it I cannot imagine, but he certainly
had retained a quickness of apprehension which made
him half-unconsciously adapt himself to Aunt Emmy and
her little habits in a way that astonished me.
It was she who showed herself less perceptive as regarded
him. But this she never divined. She had
got it rooted into her small, graceful head that he
would naturally wish to converse principally about
his farm. And, in spite of scant encouragement,
she continually “showed an interest,” as
she herself expressed it, in sheep, and water creeks,
and snakes, and bush fires. He was always perfectly
good-natured, and ready to answer; but I sometimes
wondered how it was she did not realise that she asked
the same questions over and over again.
“Uncle Bob does not seem to
care to talk much about his farming,” I ventured
one day. “Perhaps he wishes to forget it
for a little while.”
“My dear,” said Aunt Emmy
rebukingly, “when you are as old as I am, you
will know that the only thing men really care to talk
of is their business. My dear father always
talked of stocks, and shares, and and bonuses.
He said I could not understand about them, as indeed
I could not, but it interested me very much to listen.
And your Uncle Tom, as you may remember” I
did indeed “did the same. It
is natural that Mr. Kingston’s mind should dwell
on agricultural subjects.”
Presently wicked men began to mow
the bracken with great scythes, and to carry it away
in carts which tilted and elbowed their way down the
mossy, heather-fringed tracks. Here and there
the down-stretched arms of the firs caught the topmost
fronds of bracken and swept them from their murdered
brethren, and held them precariously suspended, only
to drop them when the first wind went by.
I left the cottage for a week to visit
my husband’s relations, and when I returned
the forest was bare. An indefinable sadness seemed
to brood over it, and to have reached Aunt Emmy as
well. Mr. Kingston had also been away to visit
his relations, and had returned, and was staying at
the little inn on the edge of the forest, from which
he could more readily run up daily to town to have
his shoulder massaged, which still troubled him.
Aunt Emmy told me all this in her
garden, where she was dividing her white pinks.
I knew she intended to make a fresh border, but the
action filled me with consternation.
“But Aunt Emmy,” I said
(the foolish words jolted out of me by sudden anxiety),
“will you will you be here
next spring?”
I could have struck myself the moment
the words were out of my mouth.
The trowel dropped from her hand.
“Oh no!” she said confusedly.
“Neither I shall. I was forgetting.
I shall be in Australia.”
She looked round the little garden
which she had made with her own hands, and back to
the white cottage, up to its eyes in Michaelmas daisies,
which had become such an ideal home, and in which,
poor dear! she had taken a deeper root than she knew,
and a bewildered pain passed for a moment over her
face. It was as if she had been walking in her
sleep, and had suddenly come in contact with some obstacle,
and had waked up and was not for the first moment
certain of her surroundings.
“He is more to me than any cottage,”
she said, recovering herself with a little gasp.
“I had hoped perhaps he would have come and lived
here, and let me take care of him, after all his years
of hard work. But it was a selfish idea.
He has told me that he cannot leave his work or his
uncle, who has been so kind to him, and who is very
infirm now partially paralysed, and needing
the greatest care. I shall let the
cottage.”
“What is the place in Australia
like?” I said with duplicity, for of course
I knew by this time exactly what it was like.
But I wanted to change her thoughts.
She led the way indoors, and pointed
to a sheaf of unmounted photographs. I took them
up, and examined them as if for the first time.
My heart sank as I looked at the inoffensive figure
of the poor old uncle in the verandah, whom Aunt Emmy
was of course to nurse. The house which that
hard-working old man had built himself stood nakedly
upon a piece of naked ground. There was not a
tree near it. Beyond were the great cattle-yards
and farm buildings, and what looked like an endless,
shrubless field. And on the right was the new
two-windowed room, no longer very new, which Mr. Kingston
had built seventeen years ago for Aunt Emmy.
I knew how much labour that hideous addition meant,
which was a sort of degraded cousin many times removed
from the pert villa drawing-rooms, peering over portugal
laurels on the road to Muddington. I knew that
Mr. Kingston had papered and painted that room with
his own hands. I knew also, but Aunt Emmy did
not, that he had repapered and repainted it several
times while it waited for her. And yet by no
wildest effort of the imagination could I picture Aunt
Emmy living there, though her heart had been there
all her life.
A sudden rage rose within me against
the deceased Uncle Thomas, and against this other
decrepit uncle, waiting to be nursed.
I laid down the photographs, and went
a turn in the forest, leaving Aunt Emmy sitting idle
in her gardening gloves. My foolish words had
stopped her happy activity. I was angry with
myself, with Fate, with Australia, with everything,
and not least with Mr. Kingston.
Everywhere in the bare glades little
orphaned families of bracken held their arched necks
a few inches from the ground. Even in their bereavement
they too had remembered that it was autumn, and their
tiny curled fronds protecting their downcast faces
were golden and ruddy. As I turned a corner I
suddenly caught sight of Mr. Kingston a few paces
from me, looking earnestly at one of these little groups.
I did not want to meet him just then, and I half turned
aside; but he had already seen me, and he gave a gesture
of welcome, and I had to stop.
My anger subsided somewhat as he came
up. He looked harassed, and as if he had not
slept.
“And so you are back,”
he said. “I was just wishing that you were
at the moment I caught sight of you. If you think
it possible that a word or two could be dragged out
of such a silent enigmatical person as yourself, I
should like to have a little talk with you.”
I could not help liking him.
His keen eyes were kindly, though his face was grave.
“What do you want to talk about?” I said
bluntly.
“What an unnecessary question.
What can I want to talk about except Emmy?”
I was silent. I felt more uncomfortable
about the whole affair than I had done yet, and that
was saying a good deal.
Mr. Kingston led the way down a little
track to a place where the trees grew so close together
that the murderous scythes had not been able to get
in among them. Here the bracken had been unmolested,
and was going unharassed through all its most gorgeous
pageant. Great fronds of ivory white, of palest
gold, of brownest gold, of reddest gold upreared themselves
among the purple waves of the heather, wearing the
stray flecks of the sunshine like jewels on their
breasts. We sat down on a fallen tree round which
the bracken had wrapped its splendour.
“How extraordinarily beautiful
it is!” he said, more to himself than to me,
putting out his long, artistic hand, gnarled and hardened
with work, and touching a pale frond with a reverent
finger. “I am glad to have seen it once
more. It is twenty-five years since I have seen
an English autumn.”
There was a moment’s silence,
and then he went on without any change of tone:
“And you are thinking, you sad-faced,
downright little woman who are so afraid that I am
going to make your dear Aunt Emmy unhappy, you are
thinking that you did not take a precarious seat on
this trunk in order to hear a possible enemy descant
on the beauties of nature.”
I was astonished at his penetration.
My own experience, gleaned entirely from the genial
little egotist whose wife I was, had taught me that
men never noticed anything. I had had no idea
that I had shown the fear of him which I felt.
“And yet you are my only possible
ally,” he went on, “my only helper, if
you are willing to help me, in the somewhat difficult
task which I have in hand.”
“You mean, marrying my aunt?” I said.
“No,” he said, looking
at me with a kindness which made me ready to sink
into the ground with shame. “I can do that
without assistance. Emmy, God bless her! has
been ready to marry me any time these twenty-five
years, and, poor soul, she is ready now. She has
not the faintest idea what she would be in for if
she did, but she is ready to risk it.”
I was silent. I was bewildered
for one thing, and I did not want “to put my
foot in it” again immediately for another.
And there was really no need for me to speak, for
he went on slowly, looking full at me:
“What I have to do, if I can,
is to save Emmy’s romance for her.”
I could only stare at him.
“For twenty-five years,”
he went on, “that dear woman has lived on her
love for me. It has coloured her whole life.
I know what I know. It has been her support in
all the endless years she nursed that cruel old egoist
her father, who would not let her marry me, when we
could have married, seventeen years ago.
But it is not me that she wants now, though
she did want me for many years; it is the thought of
me if you can’t understand without
my saying it, I can’t make you it’s
her romance which is important to her, and which I
want her to keep, at all costs.”
“My darling Emmy,” he
said, and there were tears in his hawk eyes, “the
most unselfish and devoted, the sweetest, the humblest,
and the most beautiful creature I have ever known.
And she has given up everything out of constancy to
me, home, children, everything; no, not for me exactly,
but for a dream, for an ideal, for something of which
I was to her the symbol, but which I no more resemble
than I resemble that frond of bracken.”
He turned his face away.
“It would have been all right
if they would have let us marry when we were both
still young, and I had got a home together,”
he went on; “but now it would be inhuman to
root her out of her little home and drag her across
the world, and try to transplant her into my rough
place. How rough it is I see, now that I have
been back in England. I did not know it was so
uncouth when I lived in it. It’s the only
life I’m accustomed to, the only life I’m
fit for now, though it was sorely against the grain
at first. I don’t think I could have stuck
to it, except for the hope of marrying her some day.
But I see now the only life I’m fit for is not
fit for her. And I can’t give it up.
I can’t desert my poor old uncle, who is growing
infirm and depends on me entirely.”
“Why did you come back?” I groaned.
“I came back,” he said,
“because I have cared for her and worked for
her all my life. And because I heard that her
beast of a father had left her almost penniless, and
that fat Tom had married and turned her out. And
until I saw her again from day to day I did not realise
the nature of her feeling for me. I came back
to offer her what I had, not that it was much, hoping
to marry her and take her back with me.... But
that is not what would make my Emmy happy now.
What she needs is to go on in this perfect little
doll’s house, this little haven, thinking of
me, and praying for me, and tending her flowers, and
mourning like a dove in its tree because we are parted.”
It was exactly what Aunt Emmy needed.
I could not have put it into words, but this strange
man had done so.
“You will not speak,”
he said, “but you agree with me for all that.
I had to make sure you agreed. Your confirmation
is all I wanted, and now I have it.”
It was not that I would not speak.
I could not speak. I was thinking of the room
in that horrid wooden house which he had built for
her.
After a few minutes he went on quietly:
“I think the thing for me to
do is to be ruined, only partially, of course, not
enough to make her miserable, and to hurry back to
Australia without her at once for the time being,
and from there to write regularly by every mail, nice
letters (they cannot be forbidden now); but never
to come back any more. A bank has just failed
in Australia in which I had money. The situation
can be arranged.”
I looked away from him.
“I owe it to her,” he said.