’And when God
found in the hollow of His hand
This ball of Earth among
His other balls,
And set it in His shining
firmament,
Between the greater
and the lesser lights,
He chose it for the
Star of Suffering.’
UgoBassi.
It is better to draw a veil over the
scene that followed Audrey’s abrupt announcement.
As Captain Burnett said afterwards, ’Geraldine’s
attitude was superb; she was grand, absolutely grand.’
Mrs. Ross was, as usual, a little plaintive.
‘If you had only mentioned where
you were going, Audrey,’ she said quietly; ’but
you are so impulsive, my dear. Geraldine would
have accompanied you with pleasure a little later,
and you could have left my card, and a civil message
for Mrs. Blake; that would have been far nicer, would
it not, my love?’ with an appealing look at her
young adviser.
‘You can send the message by
Mr. Blake this evening,’ replied Audrey.
She never argued with her mother if
she could possibly help it. In the first place,
it was not filial, and in the second, it was perfectly
useless, as there was always a mental reservation in
Mrs. Ross’s mind, and she could seldom be induced
to decide any question without reference to Geraldine.
’I think father might have consulted
Percival before he asked another guest,’ observed
Mrs. Harcourt in rather a dubious tone, for she was
exceedingly jealous of her husband’s dignity.
’Percival was told that we were to be quite
alone. I was not going home to change my dress.
But if this young man be invited ’
‘My darling,’ interrupted
her mother, ’you must not think of walking back
all that way that gown is lovely, is it
not, Audrey? and one more person does not
signify. No doubt your father was anxious that
Percival should see Mr. Blake and give him his opinion;
he thinks so much of Percival’s judgment, does
he not, Audrey?’
Now here was the opportunity for a
douceur, for a nicely-adjusted compliment, to smooth
her sister’s ruffled brow; but Audrey was far
too blunt and truthful for such finesse.
’Father told me that he wanted
Michael to see Mr. Blake I don’t believe
he was thinking of Percival because of course
the lower school has nothing to do with Hillside.
There is not the least need of changing your gown,
Gage, for of course we are only a family party.
Will you come up with me to my room now, or will you
go with mother presently?’
‘I will come with you,’ returned Mrs.
Harcourt.
Audrey was inclined to be contumacious,
but she would not yield the matter so meekly.
Audrey was always more contradictory when Michael was
in the background; they seemed to play into each other’s
hand somehow, and more than once Geraldine was positive
she had heard a softly-uttered ‘Bravo!’
at some of Audrey’s ridiculous speeches.
‘Come along, then,’ returned
Audrey good-humouredly; and as they left the room
together, Captain Burnett laid down his book.
’I am afraid she is going to
catch it, Cousin Emmeline; it will be a case of survival
of the fittest Geraldine is strong, but
Audrey can hold her own. I back Audrey.’
‘My dear,’ remonstrated
Mrs. Ross, as she put away her knitting, ’you
talk as though my girls were likely to quarrel.
Geraldine is far too sweet-tempered to quarrel with
anyone; she will only give Audrey a little advice dear
Audrey is dreadfully careless, she takes after her
father in that; John is always doing imprudent things.
Geraldine has made me most uncomfortable this afternoon;
I am quite sure that Mrs. Blake will be an undesirable
friend for Audrey.’
‘Do you always see through other
people’s spectacles?’ he asked quietly.
’I have a habit of judging things for myself I
never take anything second-hand; it is such an unpleasant
idea, airing other people’s opinions. Fancy
a sensible human being turning himself into a sort
of peg or receptacle for other folks’ theories!
No, thank you, my dear cousin; my opinions are all
stamped with “Michael Burnett, his mark."’
‘Men are different,’ she
replied tranquilly; and then she left him to go in
search of her husband.
‘What a world we live in, Booty!’
observed Captain Burnett, as he walked to the window
and his four-footed favourite followed him. ’Oh,
you want a run, do you?’ as the little animal
looked at him wistfully. ’You think your
master uncommonly lazy this afternoon you
don’t happen to have a pain in your leg, do
you, old fellow a nasty gnawing, grumbling
sort of pain? there is nothing like neuralgia
for making a man lazy. Well, I’ll make
an effort to oblige you, my friend so off
you go’; and Captain Burnett threw a stone,
and there was a delighted bark and an excited patter
of the short legs, and Booty vanished round a corner,
while his master followed him more slowly.
The garden of Woodcote was the best
in Rutherford; even the Hill houses could not compete
with it: an extensive lawn lay before the house,
with a shrubbery on one side, and the trees and shrubs
were exceedingly rare; a little below the house the
ground sloped rather steeply, and a succession of
terraces and flower-beds led down to a miniature lake
with a tiny island; here there were some swans and
a punt, and the tall trees that bordered the water
were the favourite haunt of blackbirds and thrushes.
Captain Burnett sat down on a bench
facing the water, and Booty stood and barked at the
swans. How sweet and peaceful everything looked
this evening! The water was golden in the evening
sunshine; a blue tit was flashing from one tree to
another; some thrushes were singing a melodious duet;
the swans arched their snowy necks and looked proudly
at him; some children’s voices were audible
in the distance. There was a thoughtful expression
in Captain Burnett’s eyes, a concentrated melancholy
that was often there when he found himself utterly
alone.
Captain Burnett had one confidant his
cousin John. Not that he often called him by
that name, their ages were too dissimilar to permit
such easy familiarity; but he had once owned to Dr.
Ross, to the man who loved him as a father, that his
life had been a failure.
’Only a failure in the sense
that you are no longer fit for active duty,’
had been the reply. ’You must not forget
the Victoria Cross, Michael.’
’Oh, that was nothing; any other
man would have done the same in my place,’ Michael
had retorted with some heat, for he hated to be reminded
of his good deeds.
Perhaps he was right: hundreds
of brave young Englishmen would have acted in the
same way had they been placed in the same circumstances.
The English army is full of heroes, thank God!
Nevertheless, Michael Burnett had earned his Victoria
Cross dearly.
It was in one of the Zulu skirmishes.
A detachment of the enemy had surprised them at night;
but the little handful of men had repulsed them bravely.
Captain Burnett knew help was at hand; they had only
to hold out until a larger contingent should join
them. He hoped things were going well. They
had just driven the Zulus backwards, when, in the dim
light of the flickering watch-fires, he saw dusky figures
moving in the direction of a hut where a few sick
and wounded men had been placed. There was not
a second to lose; in another moment the poor fellows
would have been butchered. Calling out to some
of his men to follow him, and not perceiving that
he was alone, he tore through the scrub, and entered
the hut by a hole that served as a window. Michael
once owned that he fought like a demon that night;
but the thought of the few helpless wretches writhing
in terror on their pallet beds behind him seemed to
give him the force of ten men. ’They shall
pass only over my body! God save my poor fellows!’
was his inward cry, as he blocked up the narrow doorway
and struck at his dusky foes like a madman.
More than one poor lad lived to look
back on that day, and to bless their gallant deliverer.
‘No one else could have done it, sir,’
observed one of them; ’but the Captain never
knew how to give in. I was watching them, and
I thought the devils would have finished him.
He staggered back once, and Bob Jaggers gave a groan,
for we thought it was all up with us; and though I
would have made shift to fight before I would be killed
like a rat in a hole, one could not do much with a
broken arm. When our men rushed in, he was pretty
nearly finished; one of the savages had him by the
knees. Of course they gave him the Cross.
For the matter of that, he ought to have had it before.
’Did you ever hear how he saved
little Tom Blatchley’s life? Well, I will
tell you’; and hereupon followed one of those
touching incidents which are so frequent, and which
gild with glory even the bloody annals of war.
Yes, they gave him the Victoria Cross;
but as he lay on his bed of suffering, disabled by
cruel wounds, Michael knew that he had won it at the
expense of all that men count dear. ’Greater
love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his
life for his friends.’ There were times
when, in his anguish, Michael could have prayed that
his life his useless, broken life might
have been taken too. How gladly, how thankfully
would he have yielded it! how willingly would he have
turned his face to the wall, and ended the conflict,
sooner than endure the far bitterer ordeal that lay
before him! for he was young, and he knew his career
was ended, and that, brave soldier as he was, he could
no longer follow the profession that he loved.
It was doubtful for a long time how far he would recover
from the effects of that terrible night; his wounds
were long in healing. The principal injuries were
in the head and thigh. One or two of his physicians
feared that he would never walk again; the limb seemed
to contract, and neuralgic pains made his life a misery.
To add to his troubles, his nerves were seriously
affected, and though he was no coward, depression
held him at times in its fell grip, and mocked him
with delusive pictures of other men’s happiness.
Like Bunyan’s poor tempted Christian, he, too,
at times espied a foul fiend coming over the field
to meet him, and had to wage a deadly combat with many
a doubt and hard, despairing thought. ‘You
are a wreck, Michael Burnett!’ the grim tempter
seemed to say to him. ’Better be quit of
it all! Before you are thirty your work is over;
what will you do with the remainder of your life?
You are poor perhaps crippled; no woman
will look at you. You have your Cross a
little bit of rusty iron but does such empty
glory avail? You have aches and pains in plenty;
your future looks promising, my fine fellow!
A hero! In truth those ten minutes have cost you
dearly! no wonder you repent of your rash gallantry!’
‘I repent of nothing,’
Michael would rejoin, in that dumb inward argument
so often renewed. ’If it were to come over
again, I would do just the same. “Greater
love hath no man than this";’ for in his semi-delirious
hours those Divine words seemed to set themselves to
solemn music, and to echo in his brain with ceaseless
repetition. ’A life given, a life laid
down, a life spent in suffering is it not
all the same a soldier’s duty?
Shall I shirk my fate? Would it not be better
to bear it like a man?’ and Michael would set
his teeth hard, and with an inward prayer for patience for
in the struggle the man was learning to pray girded
himself up again to the daily fight.
Once, when there had been a fresh
outbreak of mischief, and they had brought him down
to Woodcote, that he might be more carefully nursed
than in the town lodgings which was all Michael Burnett
called home, Audrey, who, after her usual pitiful
fashion, wore herself out in her efforts to soothe
and comfort the invalid, once read to him some beautiful
lines out of a poem entitled ‘The Disciples.’
Michael, who was in one of his dark
moods, made no comment on the passage which she had
read in a trembling voice of deep feeling; but when
she left the room on some errand, he stretched out
his hand, and read it over again:
’But if, impatient,
thou let slip thy cross,
Thou wilt not find it
in this world again,
Nor in another; here,
and here alone,
Is given thee to suffer
for God’s sake.’
When Audrey returned the book was
in its place, and Michael was lying with his eyes
closed, and the frown of pain still knitting his temples.
He was not asleep, but she dare not disturb him by
offering to go on with the poem. She sat down
at a little distance and looked out of the window,
rather sorrowfully. How strong she was! how full
of health and enjoyment! and this poor Michael, who
had acted so nobly Audrey’s
eyes were full of tears. And all the time Michael
was saying to himself, ’After all, I am a coward.
What if I must suffer? Life will not last for
ever.’
By and by Michael owned that even
his hard lot had compensations. He became used
to his semi-invalid existence. Active work of
any sort was impossible that is, continuous
work. He had tried it when his friends had found
an easy post for him, and had been obliged to give
it up. He still suffered severely from neuralgic
headaches that left him worn and exhausted. His
maimed leg often troubled him; he could not walk far,
and riding was impossible.
’You must make up your mind
to be an idle man at least, for the present,
Captain Burnett,’ one of his doctors had said
to him, and Michael had languidly acquiesced.
To be a soldier had been his one ambition, and he
cared for little else. He had enough to keep him
in moderate comfort as a bachelor, and he had faint
expectations from an uncle who lived in Calcutta;
but when questioned on this point, Michael owned he
was not sanguine.
‘My Uncle Selkirk is by no means
an old man,’ he would say. ’Any insurance
office would consider his the better life of the two.
Besides, he might marry he is not sixty
yet; even old men make fools of themselves by taking
young wives. It is ill waiting for dead men’s
shoes at the best of times. In this case it would
be rank stupidity.’
‘Then you will never be able
to marry, Michael;’ for it was to Mrs. Ross
that this last speech was addressed.
’My dear cousin, do you think
any girl would look at a sickly, ill-tempered fellow
like me?’ was the somewhat bitter reply; and
Mrs. Ross’s kind heart was troubled at the tone.
’You should not call yourself
names, my dear. You are not ill-tempered.
No one minds a little crossness now and then.
Even John can say a sharp word when he is put out.
I think you are wrong, Michael. You are rather
morbid on this point. They say pity is akin to
love.’
‘But I object to be pitied,’
he returned somewhat haughtily; ’and what is
more, I will commend myself to no woman’s toleration.
I will not be dominated by any weaker vessel.
If I should ever have the happiness of having a wife but
there will be no Mrs. Michael Burnett, Cousin Emmeline I
should love her as well as other men love their wives,
but I should distinctly insist on her keeping her
proper place. Just imagine’ working
himself up to nervous irritation ’being
at the mercy of some healthy, high-spirited young
creature, who will insult me every day with her overplus
of pure animal enjoyment. The effect on me would
be crushing absolutely crushing.’
’Audrey is very high-spirited,
Michael, but I am sure she sympathises with you as
nicely as possible.’
‘We were not speaking of Audrey,
were we?’ he replied, with a slight change of
expression. ’I think it is the Ross idiosyncrasy
to wander hopelessly from any given subject; I imagined
that we were suggesting an impossible wife for your
humble servant. Far be it from me to deny myself
comfort in the shape of feminine cousins or friends.’
’Yes, of course; and Geraldine
and Audrey are just like your sisters, Michael.’
‘Are they?’ a little dryly.
’Well, as I never had a sister, I cannot be
a good judge; but from what other fellows tell me,
I imagine Audrey bullies me enough to be one.
Anyhow, I take the brotherly prerogative of bullying
her in return.’
And with this remarkable statement
the conversation dropped.
Captain Burnett spent half his time
with his cousins, oscillating between Woodcote and
his lodgings in town. Dr. Ross wished him to live
with them entirely; he had a great respect and affection
for his young kinsman, and, as he often told his wife,
Michael helped him in a hundred ways.
’He has the clearest head and
the best common-sense I ever knew in any man.
I would trust Mike’s judgment before my own.
Poor fellow! he has gone through so much himself,
that I think he sees deeper into things than most
people. It is wonderful what knowledge of character
he has. The boys always say there is no cheating
the Captain.’
Michael owned himself grateful for
his cousin’s kindness, but he declined to call
Woodcote his home.
‘I must have my own diggings,’
was his answer ’a burrow where I can
run to earth when my pet fiend tries to have a fling
at me. Seriously, there are times when I am best
alone and, then, in town one sees one’s
friends. For a sick man, or whatever you like
to call me, my taste is decidedly gregarious.
“I would not shut me from my kind.”
Oh dear no! There is no study so interesting
as human nature, and I am avowedly a student of anthropology;
London is the place for a man with a hobby like mine.’
Nevertheless, the chief part of Captain
Burnett’s time had been spent latterly at Woodcote.