“And was it only a dream, Aileen?”
“Only a dream, miss, but it
consarned me greatly. Shure an’ I never
had the taste of a sweet sound sleep since I dramed
it!”
Honor Blake laughs, and passes her
slim hand over the old woman’s ruddy tanned
cheek.
“You dear silly old thing to
bother your head about a dream! It will be time
enough to fret when we’ve something real to fret
about.”
“Ah, mavourneen, may yez never
see that day!” nurse Walsh murmurs with passionate
fondness, as she takes the girl’s hand between
her own broad palms and presses and fondles it.
“Shure it’s like yesterday I
mind it so well that yer mother, as she
lay dying beyant there, in her big grand bedroom at
Donaghmore, said to me, as I stood beside her with
you, a wee thing, in my arms, ’Ye’ll be
a mother to my little one, Aileen, and guard her from
all harm, as I would have done.’ And I knelt
down then and there, and took my solemn oath; and from
that day to this it’s the wan bit of sunshine
in a cloudy world ye’ve been to me, alanna!”
Tears come into the girl’s eyes.
There is a sad feeling in her heart this evening,
as she stands in the little cottage, and looks across
the bog at the long fields of corn beyond the river;
and at this mention of her dead mother the
fragile mother whom she has never seen the
feeling grows into passionate pain and longing.
“He’s a mighty fine gintleman
and a man of manes I’m not denying
it, darlint but he’s not the man
for you. Take an old woman’s advice, mavourneen!
He’s black of face and of heart. He’s
come of a race that ground the poor and raised the
rints, and sent poor mothers and old men and babies
on to the highway to die of hunger and cold and heart-wretchedness!”
“But Power has done none of
these things,” the girl says warmly.
“His father and his father’s
father have done them; and haven’t we the word
of the Holy Book for it the sins of the
fathers shall be visited on the children to the fourth
generation?”
Honor shudders, and her pretty color
fades. Is she thinking of the sins of the dead-and-gone
Blakes, some of which she may yet have to suffer for?
“I must go now, Aileen; the
boys will be home by this time. And when I bring
this fine Englishman to see you he is only
half an Englishman after all, for his mother was one
of the Blakes of Derry you’ll give
him a welcome?”
“That I will, asthore, though
it’s little the welcome of an old woman will
be to him while he has your swate face to look on.”
The girl laughs and gathers her fur
cape about her as she steps out on to the bog road,
for a keen wind blows from the mountains. As she
turns to leave the cottage, a man, who has been smoking
in the shelter of one of the heaps of turf, straightens
himself and walks after her. His steps fall noiselessly
on the peaty soil; but some instinct makes Honor turn
her head, and at sight of him her face flushes.
“Ah, what brings you here, Power?
I thought you were away at Drum with Launce?”
“I went part of the way but
turned back. Sure they’d nothing better
to do! I had!”
“And have you done it?” the girl asks
shyly.
“I am doing it now,” he says, with a smile.
She does not answer him in words,
but her eyes are filled with a sudden glow and sweetness.
“You will find your visitor
at Donaghmore,” he tells her, as they walk together
across the yielding bog; “I met him at Garrick
Station, and drove him over. Your father could
not go, as he had to run off at the last minute to
take the deposition of poor Rooney, who is dying, I’m
afraid. The Englishman seemed to think nothing
of it, when I told him how the poor fellow had been
badly hurt in a fight. He evidently imagines
it is the custom for one man to shoot another every
week or so in the ordinary Irish village.”
“Oh, Power, don’t talk
like that!” the girl says. “Sure,
we all know these dreadful things occur only too often.
Don’t let us talk about them at all. Tell
me what he is like.”
“Like an ordinary mortal!
He is gray as to his clothes, a trifle pasty as to
his complexion, and more than a trifle fine in his
manners. But you’ll get on with him all
right girls like mashers.”
“You know that I hate that word,
Power! Why will you use it?”
“Because it describes your cousin to a nicety.”
“Goodness! A masher!”
the girl cries in dismay. “How will such
a creature live at Donaghmore? He should have
gone to Aunt Julia’s in Dublin he
would have felt at home there.”
Whereat they both laugh, natural hearty
laughter that dies away in musical echoes.
Aunt Julia is one of the bugbears
of the Blake family, her gentility and general fineness
being altogether too much for them.
“Oh, hang it, the fellow’s
man enough to prefer Donaghmore and you to Merrion
Square!”
“And Aunt Julia,” the girl finishes slyly.
“Yes,” he says. And
then, with sudden passion “Is this
man to come between us, Honor? To-day as I looked
at him I felt, if it was so, I could find it in my
heart to shoot him dead!”
It is getting dusk here on the lower
quarry road, which leads them by a short cut to Donaghmore.
On one side stretches the bog, on the other the grim
gray rocks shut out the sky. To Honor’s
nervous fancy it almost seems as if the rocks catch
up his vengeful words, and echo them mockingly.
More than one ghastly story is connected with this
lonely spot; and, spoken here, the cruel words have
double meaning.
“You are changed already,”
the man says more calmly, seeing the expression of
horror on her face. “You and Launce have
never been the same to me since that affair at Boyne.
It is only Horace who remains my friend.”
“And am I not your friend, Power?”
“There can be no friendship
between you and me, Honor. There can be but one
of two things love or hatred. I love
you as better men would tell you they love their own
souls. I want you for my wife no friend,
but my very own, until death us do part! Honor,
my darling Honor, my own love, will you
come to me?”
His arms close round her in the darkness,
and with a low sob she yields to their masterful pressure,
while his words half fierce in their passion seem
to reach her like words heard in a dream.
Suddenly, out from the middle of the
bog, comes a plaintive cry like the call of some night-bird.
It is answered half a mile away, in the direction
of Donaghmore, and then again there is silence.
But it is no bird-call, Honor knows; and she raises
her face from her lover’s breast with a little
sigh of fear.
“Don’t sigh, my darling!
Sure no harm could touch you with me,” the man
says tenderly.
But a chill has fallen upon the girl;
her brief thrill of happiness has left a vague unrest
behind it.
“I must go in now, Power.
What will they say to me? I have never been out
so late before!”
“And I have never kissed you
before, nor held you in my arms,” he answers
almost incoherently. “Sure love like ours
takes no heed of the clock!”
“My father will take heed of
it, though,” the girl rejoins, smiling, and
hurrying, fast as the uneven path will let her, toward
the lights that are gleaming now from all the lower
windows of her home.
Donaghmore stands on a slight hill
overlooking the river on one side and the woods of
Colonel Frenche’s estate on the other. It
is a stone house, with deep-set windows and stout
doors, that have withstood hard blows in their day.
Save for Glen Doyle, Colonel Frenche’s place,
there is no house of equal size for miles around,
and several visitors have remarked the loneliness
of the situation; but to that the Blakes never give
a thought. The solid old house, which faces all
the winds that blow, is very dear to them. In
its very isolation there is a charm that any other
dwelling would lack.
“Honor,” the young fellow
says, as they reach the house, “will you speak
a word of warning to your father and Launce? They
won’t listen to me, I know. But it is not
safe to speak as they have been doing lately.
This affair of poor Rooney’s may show you the
temper of the people. No man was better liked,
but he couldn’t keep a still tongue in his head,
and he lies at death’s door this night.”
“And are we not to speak, Power?
Have we not as much right to our opinion as other
people? There never yet was a Blake who was a
rebel or a coward!”
“There is a time to speak and
a time to keep silent,” he answers, taking her
face between his hands, and looking down, his dark
eyes softening, at the pretty flushed cheeks and lips
just curved into a pout. “My own love,
trust me! I would not have you or yours bring
a stain upon the old name but silence can
hurt no one.”
From where they stand they can hear
the sounds of voices and men’s laughter and
the chink of glass, which come through the open windows
of the dining-room.
“Those windows ought to be securely
fastened before the dusk falls, Honor. Your father
is really too too confident.”
“What a prophet of evil you
are, Power!” the girl answers lightly; but,
all the same, her heart is filled with the vague fear
that has been troubling her for weeks past, ever since
her brother Launce got into a dispute with some farmers
at Boyne Fair, and was threatened by them. “It’s
enough to make the old abbot walk again,” she
added, half smiling, half scornfully, “to hear
you talk of danger threatening Donaghmore! Didn’t
he frighten the rebels away in ’98, so that ours
was the only safe house, lonely as it is?”
“The rebels of to-day are not
to be so easily frightened or kept at bay,”
he answers meaningly. “Good-night, my darling,
and remember my words!”
“Good-night,” she says
softly; and presently the great doors close behind
her, and he is alone.
“Come in here, my girl, and
give an account of yourself,” her father’s
voice calls to her, as she is slipping past the open
dining-room door. “Launce here thought
we had lost you, but I knew there was no such luck.”
The next moment she is standing in
the brilliantly-lighted room, before the little knot
of gentlemen her father, her brothers, and
their guest gathered about one end of the
long table.
“This is my little girl, Beresford;
and, if she had been a boy, Heaven bless her, your
uncle would have adopted her, and left her all the
money he had hoarded! But it wasn’t to be,
I suppose.”
The man he calls Beresford smiles
slightly at this speech, and Honor sees the smile
and resents it. Her gray eyes darken, her face
turns suddenly pale and cold as she moves slowly forward
to her father’s side.
“By Jove, what a grand air!”
Brian Beresford says to himself, eyeing her critically.
“Where on earth did she learn to carry herself
in that fashion?’
“You did not expect to find
your cousin safe at home before you, Honor?”
“Yes, papa; I met Power, and
he told me. He was saying too” with
a faint smile at Launce “that he
was afraid Mr. Beresford would find Donaghmore dull.
He thought he would have felt more at home at Aunt
Julia’s.”
The new-comer does not in the least
understand the point of this speech, but he is perfectly
conscious that there is a cut in it somewhere; and
this consciousness is not lessened by the way it is
received. Her father turns red in the face and
says, “Tut tut! How absurd!” Horace
smiles, and Launce breaks into open laughter.
“I am sorry if I am intruding,”
Mr. Beresford says stiffly. “I accepted
your father’s invitation as frankly as it was
offered; but ”
“There, my boy, not another
word,” his host interrupts him, still red in
the face, still frowning at Honor in a covert way.
“I should have been cut to the heart if your
father’s son had refused or misunderstood me.
But these younger people are full of their chaff; you’ll
understand each other in a day or so.”
“I understand him perfectly
as it is,” Honor says to herself, as she walks
out for the room, very erect and stately, and altogether
on her dignity; “and I don’t like him
a bit. Power was wrong there we shall
never get on together.”
As she is crossing the hall she sees
that the front door stands open. She turns a
little out of her way to close it, and as she does
so she sees the shadows of two figures sharply outlined
on the smooth gravel.
One man is bare-headed he
has just stepped out the house evidently the
other wears a low hat pulled down over his brows.
It is nothing out of the common for
a servant to step out of the house to speak to a friend domestic
rule is not very strict at Donaghmore yet
a strange fear assails Honor. The window by the
side of the door is open, and by standing close to
it she can hear every word they say; but their words
are meaningless they are talking Irish.
Suddenly one of the men it
is their new groom, whom Launce hired at Boyne says
distinctly in English:
“He’s no more from the
Castle than you are. How soft ye are, to be sure!
He’s the masther’s nephew from London.
And sure, if the worst comes to the worst, he’d
not count at all, at all; he’s little better
than a fine young woman in breeches. Faix, and
I’d take half a dozen of his make as my own
share of a good night’s work; but be aisy he’ll
be gone before even ye need raise a finger!”
While their hands are meeting and
they are bending toward each other as if for a parting
whisper, the girl flies swiftly up-stairs and into
her own room.
Her heart is beating painfully, her
cheeks are pale with fear and anger, and yet she cannot
help laughing aloud as the man’s words come
back to her “He’s little better
than a fine young woman in breeches!”
“Could anything be funnier or
truer?” she says to herself with malicious satisfaction.
“Oh, how I wish he could have heard them!
It would take a bit of his starch out, I fancy, and
teach him how little mashers are thought of at Donaghmore.”