Phillis might have spared herself
that little outburst to which she had given vent on
the day of her cousin’s arrival. For, in
spite of the lordly way in which he had claimed his
prerogative as the only male Challoner, Sir Harry
took no further steps to interfere with her liberty:
indeed, as the days and even the weeks passed away,
and nothing particular happened in them, she was even
a little disappointed.
For it is one thing to foster heroic
intentions, but quite another when one has no choice
in the matter. The heroism seemed lost, somehow,
when no one took the trouble to combat her resolution.
Phillis began to tire of her work, nay,
more, to feel positive disgust at it. The merry
evenings gave her a distaste for her morning labors,
and the daylight seemed sometimes as though it would
never fade into dark, so as to give her an excuse
for folding up her work.
These fits of impatience were intermittent,
and she spoke of them to no one: in other respects
the new cousin brought a great deal of brightness
and pleasure into their daily life.
They all grew very fond of him.
Mrs. Challoner, indeed, was soon heard to say that
she almost loved him like a son, a speech
that reached Dick’s ears by and by and made
him excessively angry. “I should like to
kick that fellow,” he growled, as he read the
words. But then Dick never liked interlopers.
He had conceived a hatred of Mr. Drummond on the spot.
Sir Harry took up his quarters at the same hotel where
Dick and his father had spent that one dreary evening.
He gave lavish orders and excited a great deal of
attention and talk by his careless munificence.
Without being positively extravagant he had a free-handed
way of spending his money: as he often said, “he
liked to see things comfortable about him.”
And, as his notions of comfort were somewhat expensive,
his host soon conceived a great respect for him, all
the more that he gave himself no airs, never talked
about his wealth except to his cousins, and treated
his title as though it were not of the slightest consequence
to himself or any one else; indeed, he was decidedly
modest in all matters pertaining to himself.
But, being a generous soul, he loved
to give. Every few days he went up to London,
and he never returned without bringing gifts to the
Friary. Dulce, who was from the first his chief
favorite, revelled in French bonbons; hampers
of wine, of choice game, or fruit from Covent Garden,
filled the tiny larder to overflowing. Silks and
ribbons, and odds and ends of female finery, were
sent down from Marshall & Snelgrove’s, or Swan
& Edgar’s. In vain Mrs. Challoner implored
him not to spoil the girls, who had never had so many
pretty things in their lives, and hardly knew what
to do with them. Sir Harry would not deny himself
this pleasure; and he came up evening after evening,
overflowing with health and spirits, to join the family
circle in the small parlor and enliven them with his
stories of colonial life.
People began to talk about him.
He was too big and too prominent a figure to pass
unnoticed in Hadleigh. The Challoners and their
odd ways, and their cousin the baronet who was a millionaire
and unmarried, were canvassed in many a drawing-room.
“We always knew they were not just ‘nobodies,’”
as one young lady observed; and another remarked,
a little scornfully, “that she supposed Sir Henry
Challoner would put a stop to all that ridiculous
dressmaking now.” But when they found that
Nan and Phillis went about as usual, taking orders
and fitting on dresses, their astonishment knew no
bounds.
Sir Harry watched them with a secret
chuckle. “He must put a stop to all that
presently,” he said; but just at first it amused
him to see it all. “It was so pretty and
plucky of them,” he thought.
He would saunter into the work-room
in the morning, and watch them for an hour together
as he sat and talked to them. After the first
they never minded him, and his presence made no difference
to them. Nan measured and cut out, and consulted
Phillis in her difficulties, as usual. Dulce
sang over her sewing-machine, and Phillis went from
one to the other with a grave, intent face. Sometimes
she would speak petulantly to him, and bid him not
whistle or tease Laddie: but that was when one
of her fits of impatience was on her. She was
generally gracious to him, and made him welcome.
When he was tired of sitting quiet,
he would take refuge with Aunt Catherine in her little
parlor, or go into the vicarage for a chat with Mattie
and her brother: he was becoming very intimate
there. Sometimes, but not often, he would call
at the White House; but, though the Cheynes liked
him, and Magdalene was amused at his simplicity, there
was not much in common between them.
He had taken a liking to Colonel Middleton
and his daughter, and would have found his way to
Brooklyn over and over again, only the colonel gave
him no encouragement. They had met accidentally
in the grounds of the White House, and Mr. Cheyne
had introduced them to each other; but the colonel
bore himself very stiffly on that occasion and ever
after when they met on the Parade and in the reading-room.
In his heart he was secretly attracted by Sir Harry’s
blunt ways and honest face; but he was a cousin of
those Challoners, and intimacy was not to be desired:
so their intercourse was limited to a brief word or
two.
“Your father does not want to
know me,” he said once, in his outspoken way,
to Miss Middleton, when they met at the very gate of
Brooklyn, and she had asked him, with some little
hesitation, if he were coming in. “It is
a pity,” he added, regretfully, “for I
have taken a fancy to him: he seems a downright
good sort, and we agree in politics.”
Elizabeth blushed; for once her courtesy
and love of truth were sadly at variance.
“He does like you very much,
Sir Harry,” she said; and then she hesitated.
“Only my cousins sew gowns,”
he returned, with a twinkle of amusement in his eyes,
“so he must not encourage me, eh,
Miss Middleton? as we are all in the same
boat. Well, we must allow for prejudice.
By and by we will alter all that.” And
then he gave her a good-natured nod, and sauntered
away to tell his old friend Mattie all about it; for
he had a kindly feeling towards the little woman,
and made her his confidante on these occasions.
Phillis still called him Alcides,
to his endless mystification: but she privately
wondered when his labors were to begin. After
that first afternoon he did not speak much of his
future intentions: indeed, he was a little reserved
with the girls, considering their intimacy; but to
his aunt he was less reticent.
“Do you know, Aunt Catherine,”
he said one day to her, “that that old house
of yours Glen Cottage, is it not? will
soon be in the market? Ibbetson wants to get
off the remainder of the lease.”
Mrs. Challoner leaned back in her
chair and put down her knitting:
“Are you sure, Harry? Then
Adelaide was right: she told me in her last letter
that Mrs. Ibbetson’s health was so bad that they
thought of wintering at Hyeres, and that there was
some talk of giving up the house.”
“Oh, yes, it is true,”
he returned, carelessly; “Ibbetson told me so
himself. It is a pretty little place enough, and
they have done a good deal to it, even in a few months:
they want to get off the lease, and rid themselves
of the furniture, which seems to be all new. It
appears they have had some money left to them unexpectedly;
and now Mrs. Ibbetson’s health is so bad, he
wants to try travelling, and thinks it a great pity
to be hampered with a house at present. I should
say the poor little woman is in a bad way, myself.”
“Dear me, how sad! And
they have been married so short a time, not
more than six months. She comes of a weakly stock,
I fear. I always said she looked consumptive,
poor thing! Dear little Glen Cottage! and to
think it will change hands so soon again!”
“You seem fond of it, Aunt Catherine,”
for her tone was full of regret.
“My dear,” she answered,
seriously, “I always loved that cottage so!
The drawing-room and the garden were just to my taste;
and then the girls were so happy there.”
“Would you not like a grander
house to live in?” he asked, in the same indifferent
tone. “I do not think it is half good enough
for you and the girls.”
Mrs. Challoner opened her eyes rather
widely at this: but his voice gave her no clue
to his real meaning, and she thought it was just his
joking way with her.
“It would seem a palace after
this!” she returned, with a sigh. “Somehow,
I never cared for great big houses, they are so much
expense to keep up; and when one has not a man in
the house ”
“Why, you have me, Aunt Catherine!”
speaking up rather briskly.
“Yes, my dear; and you are a
great comfort to us all. It is so nice to have
some one to consult; and, though I would not say so
to Nan for the world, Dick is so young that I never
could consult him.”
“By the bye, that reminds me
I must have a look at that young fellow,” returned
her nephew. “Let me see, the Oxford term
is over, and he will be home again. Suppose I
run over to Oldfield it is no distance from
town and leave my card on Mr. Mayne senior?”
“You, Harry!” And Mrs.
Challoner looked quite taken aback at the proposition.
“Well,” he remarked, candidly,
“I think it is about time something was done:
Nan looks awfully serious sometimes. What is the
good of being the head of one’s family, if one
is not to settle an affair like that? I don’t
feel inclined to put up with any more nonsense in that
quarter, I can tell you that, Aunt Catherine.”
“But, Harry,” growing
visibly alarmed, “you do not know
Mr. Mayne: he can make himself so excessively
disagreeable.”
“So can most men when they like.”
“Yes; but not exactly in that
way. I believe he is really very fond of Dick;
but he wants to order his life in his own way, and
no young man will stand that.”
“No, by Jove! that is rather
too strong for a fellow. I should say Master
Dick could not put up with that.”
“It seems my poor Nan is not
good enough for his son, just because she had no money
and has been obliged to make herself useful. Does
it not seem hard, Harry? my beautiful Nan!
And the Maynes are just nobodies: why, Mr. Mayne’s
father was only a shopkeeper in a very small way, and
his wife’s family was no better!”
“Well, you must not expect me
to understand all that,” replied her nephew,
in a puzzled tone. “In the colonies, we
did not think much about that sort of thing:
it would not have done there to inquire too narrowly
into a man’s antecedents. I knew capital
fellows whose fathers had been butchers, and bakers,
and candlestick-makers; and, bless me! what does it
matter if the fellow is all right himself?” he
finished; for the last Challoner was a decided Radical.
But Mrs. Challoner, who was mildly
obstinate in such matters, would not yield her point:
“You would think differently
if you had been educated at Eton. In England,
it is necessary to discriminate among one’s acquaintances.
I find no fault with Dick: he is as nice and
gentlemanly as possible; but his father has not got
his good-breeding; possibly he had not his advantages.
But it is they the Maynes who
would be honored by an alliance with one of my daughters.”
And Mrs. Challoner raised her head and drew herself
up with such queenly dignity that Sir Harry dared not
argue the point.
“Oh, yes; I see,” he returned,
hastily. “Well, I shall let him know what
you think. You need not be afraid I shall lower
your dignity, Aunt Catherine. I meant to be rather
high and mighty myself, that is, if I could
manage it.” And he broke into one of his
huge laughs.
Mrs. Challoner was very fond of her
nephew; but she was not a clever woman, and she did
not always understand his hints. When they were
alone together, he was perpetually making this sort
of remarks to her in a half-serious, half-joking way,
eliciting her opinions, consulting her tastes, with
a view to his future plans.
With the girls he was provokingly
reticent. Phillis and Dulce used to catechise
him sometimes; but his replies were always evasive.
“Do you know, Harry,”
Phillis said to him once, very gravely, “I think
you are leading a dreadfully idle life? You do
nothing absolutely all day but walk to and fro between
the hotel and the Friary.”
“Come, now,” retorted
her cousin, in an injured tone, “I call that
confoundedly hard on a fellow who has come all these
thousands of miles just to cultivate his relations
and enjoy a little relaxation. Have I not worked
hard enough all my life to earn a holiday now?”
“Oh, yes,” she returned,
provokingly, “we all know how hard you have
worked; but all the same it does not do to play at
idleness too long. You are very much improved,
Harry. Your tailor has done wonders for you;
and I should not be ashamed to walk down Bond Street
with you any afternoon, though the people do stare,
because you are so big. But don’t you think
it is time to settle down? You might take rooms
somewhere. Lord Fitzroy knows of some capital
ones in Sackville Street; Algie Burgoyne had
them.”
“Well, no, thank you, Phillis:
I don’t think I shall go in for rooms.”
“Well, then, a house: you
know you are so excessively rich, Harry,” drawling
out her words in imitation of his rather slow pronunciation.
“Oh, of course I shall take
a house; but there is plenty of time for that.”
And when she pressed him somewhat
eagerly to tell her in what neighborhood he meant
to live, he only shrugged his shoulders, and remarked,
carelessly, that he would have a look round at all
sorts of places by and by.
“But do you mean to take a house
and live all alone?” asked Dulce. “Won’t
you find it rather dull?”
“What’s a fellow to do?”
replied her cousin, enigmatically. “I suppose
Aunt Catherine will not undertake the care of me? I
am too big, as you call it, for a houseful of women!”
“Well, yes; perhaps you are,”
she replied, contemplating him thoughtfully.
“We should not know quite what to do with you.”
“I wish I could get rid of a
few of my superfluous inches,” he remarked,
dolorously; “for people seem to find me sadly
in the way sometimes.”
But Dulce said, kindly,
“Oh, no, Harry; we never find
you in the way: do we, mammie? We should
be dreadfully dull without you now. I can hear
you whistling a quarter of a mile off, and it sounds
so cheerful. If there were only a house big enough
for you next door, that would do nicely.”
“Oh. I dare say I shall
not be far off: shall I, Aunt Catherine?”
for, to his aunt’s utter bewilderment, he had
established a sort of confidence between them, and
expected her to understand all his vague hints.
“You will not speak about this to the girls;
this is just between you and me,” he would say
to her, when sometimes she had not a notion what he
meant.
“I don’t understand you,
Harry,” she said, once. “Why did you
stop me just now when I was going to tell Phillis
about the Ibbetsons leaving Glen Cottage? She
would have been so interested.”
“You must keep that to yourself
a little while, Aunt Catherine: it will be such
a surprise to the girls, you know. Did I tell
you about the new conservatory Ibbetson has built?
It leads out of the drawing-room, and improves the
room wonderfully, they say.”
“My dear Harry! what an expense!
That is just what Mr. Mayne was always wanting us
to do; and Nan was so fond of flowers. It was
just what the room needed to make it perfect.”
And Mrs. Challoner folded her hands, with a sigh at
the remembrance of the house she had loved so dearly.
“They say Gilsbank is for sale,”
remarked her nephew, rather suddenly, after this.
“What! Gilsbank, where
old Admiral Hawkins lived? Nan saw the announcement
of his death the other day, and she said then the place
would soon be put up for sale. Poor old man!
He was a martyr to gout.”
“I had a look at it the other
day,” he replied, coolly. “Why, it
is not a hundred yards from your old cottage.
There is a tidy bit of land, and the house is not
so bad, only it wants doing up; but the furniture that
is for sale too is very old-fashioned and
shabby.”
“Are you thinking of it for
yourself?” asked his aunt, in surprise.
“Why, Gilsbank is a large place; it would never
do for a single man. You would find the rooms
Phillis proposed far handier.”
“Why, Aunt Catherine!”
in a tone of strong remonstrance. “You don’t
mean to condemn me to a life of single blessedness
because of my size?”
“Oh, Harry, of course not! My dear boy,
what an idea!”
“And some one may be found in
time who could put up even with red hair.”
“Oh, yes; that need not be an
obstacle.” But she looked at him with vague
alarm. Of whom could he be thinking?
He caught her expression, and threw
back his head with one of his merry laughs:
“Oh, no, Aunt Catherine; you
need not be afraid. I am not going to make love
to one of my cousins; I know your views on the subject,
and that would not suit my book at all. I am
quite on your side there.”
“Surely you will tell me, my dear, if you are
serious?”
“Oh, yes, when I have anything
to tell; but I think I will have a good look round
first.” And then, of his own accord, he
changed the subject. He was a little sparing
of his hints after that, even to his aunt.
It was shortly after this that he
came into the Friary one evening and electrified his
cousins by two pieces of news. He had just called
at the vicarage, he said; but he had not gone in,
for Miss Mattie had run downstairs in a great bustle
to tell him her sister Grace had just arrived.
Her brother had been down to Leeds and brought her
up with him. Phillis put down her work; her face
had become suddenly rather pale.
“Grace has come,” she
half whispered to herself. And then she added
aloud, “Poor Mattie will be glad, and sorry too!
She will like to have her sister with her for the
New Year; but in a few weeks she will have to pack
up her own things and go home. And she was only
saying the other day that she has never been so happy
in her life as she has been here.”
“Why can’t she stay, then?”
asked Sir Harry, rather abruptly. “I don’t
hold with people making themselves miserable for nothing:
that does not belong to my creed.”
“Oh, poor Mattie has not a choice
in the matter,” returned Nan, who had grown
very fond of her little neighbor. “Though
she is thirty, she must still do as other people bid
her. They cannot both be spared from home, at
least, I believe not, and so her mother
has recalled her.”
“Oh, but that is nonsense!”
replied Sir Harry, rather crossly for him. “Girls
are spared well enough when they are married.
And I thought the Drummonds were not well off.
Did not Phillis tell me so?”
“They are very badly off; but
then, you see, Mr. Drummond does not want two sisters
to take care of his house; and, though he tries to
be good to Mattie, he is not so fond of her as he
is of his sister Grace; and they have always planned
to live together, and so poor Mattie has to go.”
“Yes, and I must say I am sorry
for the poor little woman,” observed Mrs. Challoner.
“There is a large family of girls and boys, I
think Mr. Drummond told us he had seven sisters, and
Mattie seems left out in the cold among them all:
they laugh at her oddities, and quiz her most unmercifully;
even Mr. Drummond does, and Nan scolds him for it;
but he has not been so bad lately. It is rather
hard that none of them seem to want her.”
“You forget Grace is very good
to her, mother,” broke in Phillis, somewhat
eagerly. “Mattie always says so.”
“By the by, I must have a look
at this paragon. Is not her name among those
in my pocket-book?” returned her cousin, wickedly.
“I saw Miss Sartoris at Oldfield that day, and
she was too grand for my taste. Why, a fellow
would never dare to speak to her. I have scored
that one off the list, Phillis.”
“My dears, what have you been saying to Harry?”
“Oh, nothing, mammie,”
returned Dulce, hastily, fearing her mother would
be shocked. “Phillis was only in her nonsense-mood;
but Harry is such a goose, and will take things seriously.
I wish you would let me have your pocket-book a moment,
and I would tear out the page.” But Sir
Harry returned it safely to his pocket.
“What was your other piece of
news?” asked Nan, in her quiet voice, when all
this chatter had subsided.
“Oh, I had almost forgotten
it myself! only Miss Middleton charged me to tell
you that ‘son Hammond’ has arrived by the
P. and O. Steamer the ‘Cerberus,’ and
that she and her father were just starting for Southampton
to meet him.”