When Bertram Devereux, who had waited
patiently for the chatelaine’s appearance, received
the intimation that she would not appear again that
night, that Miss Pollie being indisposed, he was requested
to order in dinner, he was considerably astonished.
He addressed himself mechanically to his solitary
meal, but after an absent, desultory fashion and with
less than his ordinary appetite. He failed to
understand or account for the sudden seizure.
She had walked with him to the outer gate in the morning,
had patted his horse’s neck, apparently as well
and handsome as ever she was in her life. Why
then this astonishing change for the worse? The
whole thing was vexatious and disappointing in the
last degree. He would go over to the barracks,
smoke his cigar, and read his letters. A chat
with old Gateward would be better than a solitary
evening in the drawing-room.
Carrying over his mails, the young
man lit a cigar and wended his way to the barrack-room.
Mr. Gateward was out; the storekeeper was in the store
writing up his accounts; so he threw his letters upon
the large dining-room table and commenced to sort
them with a strong sense of ill-treatment.
The first that attracted his notice
was like the one which he had described as a cousin’s
to his unsuspecting fiancee. He opened
it hastily; his brow clouded and his face grew dark
as he commenced to devour rather than read the contents.
‘Confound the woman!’ he said with a fierce
oath, before he had read half a dozen lines; ’she
was born to be my ruin, I believe, and by !
she has managed it this time.’
This was her letter.
WYNTON HALL, 9th
August 188-.
BERTRAM DEVEREUX When you
learn that I have written by this mail to Miss
Devereux explaining all, and that she has received
my letter, your wrath will be bitter against me.
N’importe. I know you as well, aye,
better than you know yourself. The wound to
your vanity will be sore, your spirit will chafe, nay,
agonise for a time, but your ultimate good will
result directly from this éclaircissement.
Now look me in the face, mentally,
and say, what is this thing that you have been
proposing to do? To marry an innocent, unsophisticated
girl, partly for her beauty, partly for her money;
to desert and betray me, who have loved you long, truly,
wildly well; and to pretend to yourself that you
were going to be happy yes, happy!
ha! ha!
No, Bertram Devereux, it is not in
you. You have deceived yourself as well
as her. You would have cheated me, but the attempt
has failed. You know in your heart, or
rather in your inmost consciousness, that you
are incapable of love, pure, unsullied, constant such
as the poets sing of; such as this young girl,
doubtless, has brought to you. In the maelstrom
of London life, under the spell of old associations,
you would have fallen as you have fallen before,
and dragged others with you. In that hour
I am the only one who has power over you. Is
it not so? And my hand withdrawn from the
helm, your bark and its inmates would have gone
down into depths unfathomable. Angel or
demon, I, and I alone, am qualified to act as your
guardian. Elude my power, and you are lost,
irrevocably and eternally.
I see from the papers that old Walter
Devereux is dead, and has left you an income,
which, though not large, ought to suffice for
your reasonable needs. So take my advice once
more; soyez bon enfant; quit the wild
country of your banishment; make your adieux
with the best grace you may to these Arcadian relatives;
and return to a society where you have been missed strange
to say and to a civilised life amid people
that understand you. Among those who are
ready to welcome the returned wanderer will most
likely be your true friend as of yore,
SYBIL DE WYNTON.
He went patiently through his letters
after reading this one, with a countenance which gave
but little clue to the nature of the communications.
One business-appearing epistle in round, legal handwriting
he put aside and re-read. He then lighted a fresh
cigar, and for nearly an hour remained in deep meditation
before he sought his room. There he employed
a portion of the night in arranging his effects, so
as to be ready for that departure on the morrow upon
which he had determined.
Mrs. Devereux did not appear at the
breakfast table, but as he walked to and fro along
the lagoon path, smoking the matutinal cigar, he saw
her come into the garden. He threw down his cigar,
and at once went to meet her.
She stopped a few paces ere she came
to him, and looking at him with a sad, reproachful
gaze, said, ’Oh, Bertram, what is this you have
done to us? Did we deserve this at your hands?’
‘My dearest Aunt Mary,’
he said, advancing and taking her hand with a show
of natural feeling which she could not resent, ’I
cannot justify myself wholly, but it is due to me
that I should be permitted to explain. All is
over, I know, between your daughter and myself; still
I do not wish her to think worse of me than is needful.
When I won her love I pledged my word to her in good
faith and sincerity to do all that a man might to
promote her happiness. Whether I should have kept
that resolution God knows, but I should have given
my whole being to the task.
’By a fatal mischance she has
been made acquainted with a dark chapter in my life.
I do not excuse it, but it is such as many men who
show fairly before the world keep locked away in secret
cabinets. No doubt I deceived Pollie in denying
the existence of former passages of so compromising
a nature; but I thought myself justified in keeping
the whole thing from her pure mind. I think so
still. And now,’ he said, with a return
to his old charm of manner, ’I fear that nothing
remains but to thank you fervently for the kindness
with which you have always treated me, in sickness
and in health. I owe my life to your tender nursing.
Corindah will be amongst my purest, happiest memories
to my life’s end.’
By this time they had reached the
house. Entering the old dining-room, Bertram
threw himself into a chair, and Mrs. Devereux took
her seat near him.
‘No words can describe, Bertram,’
said Mrs. Devereux, with softened air, ’how
grieved I feel that we should part in this manner.
I have always looked upon you as a near relative;
latterly I have regarded you as a son. It is
unspeakably sad to me to think that all is over that
henceforth we must be as complete strangers, as if
we had never met.’
’And how little I thought yesterday
that this would be my last day at Corindah!’
he said half musingly. ’And yet it is best
so. As if in mockery of my position, I have just
been left an income by an old grand-uncle which will
enable me to return to England and more or less take
my former place in society.’
‘I am sincerely glad for your
sake,’ she said warmly, ’and I know Pollie
will be so also. We could not have borne that
you should leave Corindah to go we knew not where.
Now we shall have no fear on that score.’
’I should like to see her once
before we part for ever, if you would consent,’
he said pleadingly ’if it were but
to hear her say that she forgives me.’
‘No, Bertram!’ said the
matron firmly, if sorrowfully. ’Such a meeting
would answer no good end. You have had forgiveness.
She will never harbour a bitter thought, believe me.
She has overcome her first natural feeling of resentment,
such as any woman would feel who had been deceived
by the man she loved. But she will grieve over
the circumstances which led to your estrangement;
she will pity and forgive one so near her heart as
you have been.’
’If I may not see her, will
you let her read a farewell letter which I will leave
with you? Surely it is not necessary to debar
me from the humblest felon’s privilege that
of defence before condemnation.’
’She shall have your letter.
I have no intention of being in the least degree harsh,
Bertram, but it is by her own wish that I decline an
interview. Our paths will henceforth lie separate.
We shall pray for your welfare. You have a powerful
will. Oh, may God guide you to use it aright!
Your welfare will always concern us; but in this world
we shall meet no more. And now farewell!
May God bless and keep you, and forgive you even as
you are forgiven by me and my poor child!’
He wrung the kindly, high-souled matron’s
hand in silence. An unwonted glistening in his
dark eyes showed the depth to which his feelings were
stirred, and if there ever was a moment in which Bertram
Devereux truly repented of the sins of the past and
vowed amendment of life in the future, that was the
hour and the minute.
It was shortly after this interview
that he held a colloquy with Mr. Gateward, and rode
over to Wannonbah, with a black boy behind him, who
duly led back Guardsman. He had apparently arranged
for the transmission of his luggage, inasmuch as the
portmanteaux, three in number, were taken on by the
coach when that indispensable vehicle arrived in due
course. Next morning it was announced by Mr. Gateward
to the storekeeper and other employees of the station
generally that Mr. Devereux had been left a fortune,
which he had to go ‘home’ to claim, owing
to law matters and other details not comprehensible
by ordinary intelligence.
‘He’ll be back afore next
shearing,’ quoth one of the boundary riders.
‘Leastways I know I should if I was in his place.’
‘He’ll be back,’
replied Mr. Gateward oracularly, with an expression
of countenance at once severe and impenetrable, ’when
he does come back. If he shouldn’t
turn up at all, I don’t know as it’s any
business of ours. There’s as good men left
behind, and would be if there were a dozen like him
off by the next mail-steamer.’
Those who are of opinion that provincial
gossip, along with all other British traditionary
institutions, is not faithfully reproduced in British
colonies, underrate the vivacious ardour of bush society
when presented with a brand-new topic. No sooner
was it definitely announced that Mr. Devereux had
been seen on his way to the metropolis, en route
to England, with all his portmanteaux the
same with which he had arrived than a perfect
flood of conjecture and assertion arose.
’He had come into a title and
a fortune. Of course he was not going to marry
in the colonies now, so he broke off his engagement
at once.’
’It was Pollie’s temper nothing
else that did it; everybody knew how ungovernable
that was. He couldn’t stand it any longer,
though Mrs. Devereux went down on her knees to him.’
’He wanted Mrs. D. to settle
twenty thousand on Polly on her wedding-day, which
she refused to do. He declared off at once.’
’Pollie flirted so with that
Mr. Atherstone; no man could stand it. He found
them walking by moonlight or something, and gave her
notice at once.’ ‘Mr. Atherstone
was in Queensland.’ ’Oh, was he?
Then it was some one else. It came to the same
thing.’
Finally the torrent of popular criticism
subsided, to settle down into a trickling rill of
authentic information. It ran to the effect that
Bertram Devereux had been bequeathed money by a relative,
and had for some reason or other left suddenly for
England.
It was neither the next day nor the
next week after Bertram’s departure that Pollie
reappeared in her accustomed place, to lead her old
life at Corindah. A weary time of illness supervened,
and when the girl crept down to the drawing-room sofa
to be shawled, and nursed, and petted for being graciously
pleased to be better, she was but the shadow of her
former self. As marked a mental change had apparently
taken place, for she was mild and patient, piteously
subdued in tone and bearing. How different from
the wilful spoilt beauty who had turned so many heads,
and who paid so little heed to good advice!
‘You will have a better daughter
in the time to come, mother,’ she said, as she
clasped the matron’s neck with arms that were
sadly shrunken from their former lovely roundness.
’I have had time to think over my past folly,
to know who are my truest friends;’ and then
both wept and embraced each other, as is the way of
women the mother thankful to Heaven for
the recovery of her child, the child softened by suffering
and chastened by the near approach of the Death Angel.
Harold Atherstone had been far away
in Northern Queensland during this eventful time.
He had apparently needed stronger excitement than the
everyday life of a prosperous, long-settled station;
so he had elected to report upon an immense tract
of country west of the ‘Red Barcoo,’ which,
taken up by a pioneer squatter some years back, had
passed into the hands of a syndicate, of which he
was a shareholder.
So, from one cause or another, it
fell out that Corindah seemed to be more solitary,
not to say monotoned, than it had ever been before.
The visitors who came were of the occasional, transitory
sort; all their old friends seemed to have mysteriously
vanished. The Rev. Cyril Courtenay was the only
one of their habitues who did not fail them.
He made his monthly visitation, when, indeed, Mrs.
Devereux was more than usually glad to see him.
He was sympathetic in his manner,
as divining that something unusual had affected his
friends. With tact, as well as sincerity, he drew
forth an admission of grief. This done, he essayed
to lead their thoughts to the Healer of all mortal
sorrow, the Bearer of burdens, the Consoler in time
of trouble. He dwelt upon the unsatisfactory nature
of all earthly pleasures, the disappointment inseparably
connected with mere worldly aspirations, the only
sure hope of forgiveness of sins, the need of repentance,
the certainty of peace.
As at the time of pain and anguish,
of fear and danger, the physician attains a status
which in the heedless hours of health is withheld,
so, in the hour of the mind’s sickness, the
physician of souls is welcomed and revered. Urged
to lengthen his stay, the Rev. Cyril gladly consented
to remain over the ensuing Sunday. His ministrations,
he thought, had never been so appreciated before at
Corindah. And when he quitted the locality his
heart beat high with the consciousness that he had
aided the consolation of the dearest friends and best
supporters of the Church in sicco, while a
yet more daring thought caused his colourless cheek
to burn and his pulses to throb with unwonted speed.
The summer days grew longer and longer.
The fever heat of the season waxed more and more intense.
The still air grew tremulous with the quivering, ardent
sun-rays. Yet no suggestion was made by Pollie
to go to the sea-side or to call the ocean breezes
to aid her recovered health. Her mother would
have rushed off directly the great event of the year
was over, but the girl would not hear of it.
‘No, mother dear,’ she
said, ’I have sinned and suffered. I have
been wilful and headstrong. Let me remain and
mortify the flesh for a season. You do not mind
the heat, I know, and I am strong enough now to bear
it in the dear old place where I was born. We
may have many a year to live here together yet, and
I may as well commence to accustom myself to it.’
So the two women laid their account
to remain patiently at home till the following summer,
and Pollie set resolutely to work to utilise all her
resources, natural and acquired. She commenced
to be more methodical in the appointment of her time.
She rose early and took exercise in the fresh morning
air, before the sun had gained power the
truest hygienic rule in the torrid zone. She
read and did needlework at appointed hours, and resolutely
set herself to perfect her knowledge of French and
German. She ‘kept up’ her music, vocal
and instrumental, though it was long ere her voice
recovered from a certain tremulous tendency, far different
from the rich, full tones soaring upwards like the
skylark to perilous altitudes unharmed. She rode
regularly, or drove her mother out in the light American
carriages which no station is now without. She
visited the wives and children of the employees, showing
a more considerate and intelligent interest in their
welfare than had been before observable.
‘Mother,’ said the girl,
as they sat together on the verandah in the waning
summer-time, when a south wind speeding from the coast
had unexpectedly cooled the air, ’I won’t
say that I was never so happy before; but I don’t
think I ever was so fully occupied. There is,
no doubt, a sense of relief and satisfaction to be
gained when one does what one can; I never thought
I should feel like this again.’
‘Let us have faith and patience,
my darling,’ said the mother, looking into her
child’s eyes with the measureless fondness of
earlier days, ’and happiness will still come
to us. Only persevere in the duties that lie
nearest to you. In His own good time God will
reward and bless you. After all, there are many
good things in this life yet remaining.’
It was the late autumn when Harold
Atherstone returned from his far, wild journeyings.
A long-practised and trained bushman ’to the
manner born,’ he was familiar with all the exigencies
of the wildest woodcraft. But from his appearance
this expedition had been no child’s play.
Tanned and swart, almost to Indian darkness, both
mother and daughter gazed at him in astonishment.
He had been down with fever and ague, and was haggard
and worn of aspect. He had even had a brush with
the blacks, he said, on one of the far out-stations,
and had managed to drop in for a spear wound.
He was becoming quite a scarred veteran, he averred.
However, save for a cicatrix to mark the trifling occurrence,
he was unharmed. Altogether, though he had enjoyed
the chances and adventures of his pioneer life, he
was very glad to find himself within hail of Corindah
again.
‘And we are so glad to have
our old Harold back, I can tell you,’ said Mrs.
Devereux. ’We missed him dreadfully all
the summer, didn’t we, Pollie? To be ill,
and weak, and lonely at the same time, is hard to
bear.’
Pollie made an inaudible reply to
her mother’s query, but as her eyes rested upon
the bronzed, athletic frame, and met the frank gaze
of the Australian, it may be that a comparison, not
wholly to his disadvantage, passed through her mind.
’It is the first time when there
was trouble at Corindah that I have been absent, I
think,’ he said gently. ’You must
manage to have me more available in future.’
’What reason is there for your
risking your life in that terrible Never Never country?’
said Mrs. Devereux. ’It is not as if you
needed to make any more money, or had no one to care
for you.’
‘One must do something with
one’s life,’ he said simply. ’I
don’t know that it greatly mattered if that
Myall’s spear had gone through me, as
it did through poor Williamson. I had got very
tired of an easy life at Maroobil. I needed a
strong change, and I got it, I must say.’
‘It’s positively wicked
to talk in that way,’ said his hostess.
’However, now you have come back, your friends
must take care of you and keep you among them.
You look dreadfully thin; but I suppose you’re
not ill, are you?’ And then the kind creature
looked at him with the same anxiety in her face that
he remembered so well when he was a boy, over whose
accidents and offences she had always mourned maternally.
‘If it comes to that, it seems
to me that no one looks very pink,’ he returned
playfully. ’Pollie’s not what she
used to be. You look as if you had gone through
another night attack. And Bertram Devereux has
gone home? What has happened? I feel abroad.’
’You are going to stay to-night,
and your old room is ready for you, of course,’
Mrs. Devereux answered. ’Do not allude to
it when Pollie comes down. (This young lady had retired
temporarily to her room.) I will tell you all about
it after tea.’
Harold Atherstone looked searchingly
at her, but held his peace. In a minute afterwards
Pollie appeared, looking, in spite of her illness,
so delicately lovely and overpowering, after his long
sojourn in the desert, that all doubts and conjectures
were put to flight or lost in the regained pleasure
of seeing her smile of welcome and hearing the well-remembered
tones of her voice.
It was a happy evening. Apart
from ‘love and love’s sharp woe’
there is such a thing as friendship, pure and
unalloyed, between people of differing sexes.
The sentiment of these friends was deep and sincere founded
upon sympathy, congenial tasks, and the long experience
of mutual truth, loyalty, and affection. They
were honestly glad to see each other again. Love
temporarily divides friends, and, as it were, elbows
out all other claimants. But as its fervour declines,
the purer flame burns with a deeper glow. As
the years advance, the fires of passion wax dim; the
altar reared to friendship regains its votaries; while
the more ornate and ephemeral edifice is too often
deserted, empty, and ungarnished.
Thus, at their pleasant evening meal,
all was mirthful interchange of news and adventures
since last the little party had met. Harold’s
favourite wine of the remembered brand was brought
out as of old; then Pollie was persuaded to sing some
of her oldest songs, while Mrs. Devereux and their
guest talked confidentially in the verandah. It
seemed as if the happy old Corindah days had come again,
when no malign influence intervened; when, in Mrs.
Devereux’s eyes, all things were peacefully
tending towards the cherished aspiration of her life.
Finally, when the parting hour later than
usual arrived, each secretly confessed
to a sensation so nearly akin to the joy long since
departed from their lives, that not only wonder but
even a soupçon of hope was commingled with
its formation.
Harold Atherstone had been placed
fully in possession of facts by Mrs. Devereux, as
they sat on the verandah in the hushed southern night,
while Pollie’s sweet voice trilled nightingale-like
through the odorous breath of the rose and the orange
bloom. He heard how she had been deceived, wounded
in her tenderest feelings, and was now deserted and
left desolate. When he thought of her lying wearily
on a bed of sickness, wan and wasted, heart-sore and
despairing, he could not repress a malediction upon
the head of the man who had received such unstinted
kindness at the hands of the speaker, and had thus
repaid it.
When the tale was finished he took
her hand and pressed it silently. ‘The
poor child has suffered deeply,’ he said; ’but
matters are best as they are. Who knows but that
deeper, more irrevocable misery might have been her
lot had she not been warned in time? I mourn over
the change in her, but she is returning to her old
ways, and the memory of her sorrow will become yet
more faint. Her youth and pride, with the resources
at her command, will enable her to divest herself
of all trace of what was one of the inevitable mistakes
of youth.’
‘You think then that she acted
rightly in refusing to see him again?’
’Unquestionably; no other course
was possible. I never thought him worthy of her.
But he was her choice, and as a man of honour I could
not disparage him, even had I any other grounds than
those of mere taste and prejudice, which I had not.
The event has proved that my instinctive distrust
was correct. I need not tell you how I rejoice
that she is again free and unfettered.’
He said no more. The summer had
passed. The nights became longer, colder.
The calm, peaceful, autumnal season, which in this
south land brings no fall of the leaf, commenced to
herald the mild but well-marked winter of the plains.
It was the Indian summer of their old, peaceful Corindah
life. They rode, and walked, and drove together,
the three friends, much as in the old days before
the advent of the disturbing stranger from beyond
the sea. Then Harold Atherstone had been the
favourite companion of the girl, the trusted friend
and counsellor of the elder woman. The bon
vieux temps had returned. Once more the heavens
were bright, and the storm-cloud had disappeared with
the tempest which had so nearly wrecked the frail
bark of a woman’s happiness.
And yet both were changed. The
girl, mild and pensive, was almost humble in mien.
All her wilfulness and obstinacy had departed.
A deeper, more reasoning spirit of advance and inquiry
seemed to possess her, to mould her every action and
thought. He, on the other hand, had acquired
broader views of life, and had seriously modified many
of his earlier opinions.
But their parting was near. Harold
received a telegram, without warning or notice, which
necessitated instant action. His presence was
again required at the far North, where everything
was going on as badly as could be imagined. The
chief manager lay dying of fever, the blacks were
troublesome, and becoming emboldened, had commenced
to scatter off the cattle. To mend matters, a
drought of unprecedented severity had set in.
‘If Mr. Atherstone did not go out,’ the
telegram stated, ’the whole enterprise might
be wrecked, and ruinous loss accrue to shareholders.’
At first he rebelled, swore stoutly,
indeed, that he would not go. He would let things
take their course. He was happy where he was,
and there was no reason why he should risk his life
and tempt again the dangers of the Waste. However,
cooler reflection decided him to take the field as
a duty to his comrades in the enterprise, as well
as to the shareholders, who had risked their money
perhaps on the guarantee of his known judgment and
reputation for management.
He made his preparations quickly,
as was his wont, bade farewell to Corindah and its
inmates, and set off on the long, hazardous journey.
Somehow Corindah seemed more lonely
than ever. He had been very kind and thoughtful
as a brother, but no word of warmer admiration had
passed his lips. Pollie pursued her tasks and
occupations with accustomed regularity, but was more
unequal in her spirits than ever. One day her
mother surprised her in tears. A letter had been
received from Harold, and the tone of it had aroused
her from habitual indifferentism.
‘Why is he always so studiously
cool and brotherly?’ she said, with something
of her old impetuosity. ’Does he think that
I am likely to misconstrue his feelings? That
he requires to keep a guard over his expressions?
But I know how it is. He has met some one else
in that far country. He spoke of some English
families settled there. I have lost his love,
which once was so truly mine. I despised it then.
Now I am rightly punished by contempt and desertion.’
Mrs. Devereux gained from this little
speech a fresh and accurate insight into the state
of her daughter’s heart. It went to confirm
the suspicion which she had lately entertained that
the recent companionship of Harold Atherstone, the
daily experience of his strong, true character, had
not been without its effect. He had come most
opportunely to cheer their loneliness. His manner
had somewhat altered, too, of late, they had remarked;
had become more gay and carelessly mirthful, more
easy and conventional. His travels and adventures
had supplied him with a larger field of observation,
had added to his conversational powers, or else he
had exerted himself exceptionally for their entertainment.
His sense of humour seemed to have
developed, and withal there were occasional touches
of tenderness and deep feeling which, always latent,
had been rarely exhibited. Both women confessed
that they had never done justice to the versatile
force of his character; never had they dreamed he
could exert fascination in addition to his power of
compelling respect.
And now he was gone thousands of miles
away the true friend, the gallant gentleman,
the loyal lover to brave the risks of the
Waste, perhaps die there, as had done many a brave
man before him; perhaps to be attracted by some newer,
fresher face, never to return to his old allegiance.
The thought was bitter. No wonder that Pollie’s
tears flowed fast.
Harold Atherstone had exhibited his
habitual self-control in quitting Corindah for a long
absence without making sign or giving expression to
his feelings. He had carefully considered the
situation, had come to certain conclusions, had decided
upon his course of action. His feelings were
unchanged with respect to Pollie. It had been
hard to bear, almost unendurably torturing, to know
that she preferred another; to witness her bright
glances and hear her tender tones directed towards
one whom in his heart he deemed unworthy of her.
In his chivalric generosity he felt this to be the
crowning bitterness of the whole. Unable to bear
it longer, he elected to join this dangerous enterprise,
reckless of life and health, hoping only for ‘surcease
of sorrow’ in peril and privation.
But on his return he found that the
enchanted portal had been opened, the captive princess
liberated. The glamour had fallen from her eyes.
The magic fetters had been unloosed. He could
picture the scorn and indignation with which she had
renounced Bertram Devereux for ever. From his
lifelong knowledge of her character he believed that
she had freed herself from the memory of his treason
as from something foul and revolting; that it had
fallen from her pure soul as earth from a golden robe;
that she had returned instinctively to the simple loyalty
and freedom of her youth. From his experience
of life and woman’s nature he foresaw that she
would turn to him as to one of the lost ideals of her
girlhood, if only he were not precipitate and premature.
These were not the faults with which men charged Harold
Atherstone. So he returned silent and self-contained
to the far North.
His unswerving courage and iron will
stood him in good stead in this supreme hazard.
When Harold returned from the far
country, his friends at Corindah were unaffectedly
glad to see him. Pollie especially was so radiant
in renewed health and beauty that he felt irresistibly
impelled to ask the momentous question.
He chose an appropriate time and place one
of the star-bright, cloudless nights which in the
southern hemisphere so glorify the majestic solitude
of nature. Low-toned and musical was the whispering
breeze which, stealing over the ‘lone Chorasmian
waste,’ stirred the slumbering lemon sprays
and murmured to the love-fraught roses as they walked
by the margin of the lakelet, all silver-bright in
the wondrous transparent atmosphere. It seemed
as though, after the rude experiences of his desert
life, he had re-entered paradise. He was so delighted
to return, so charmed with the warm welcome accorded
to him, that he would never more return to the wilderness.
He would indeed promise and guarantee to do so, but
on one condition only. Need we say what that
was, or that the concession was made?
’Are you sure that you think
me worthy of your love, after all my folly?’
murmured she. ’But I have suffered you
will know how much. I have repented, and, dearest
Harold, I will try to be the woman you would have
me to be.’
‘There has been but one woman
in the world for me,’ he said, clasping her
to his heart. ’She is mine now for ever;
life holds no other prize henceforth that I will stretch
out my hand to seize.’
What more remains to tell? Pollie’s
probation was ended. Her wayward, errant woman’s
heart, ’with feelings and fancies like birds
on the wing,’ had found rest, relief, and safety
on the manly breast of Harold Atherstone. Henceforth
there was no fear, uncertainty or anxiety. She
felt a wavering dread at times lest he, requiring so
much love (as she had gauged his temperament), would
find her nature unequal to the demand. But, as
generally happens in similar cases, this proved to
be a groundless apprehension.
As for Mrs. Devereux, she was prepared
to sing ‘Nunc dimittis.’ Her cherished
hope had been realised. Maroobil and Corindah
in conjunction would make a princely property, no
matter how many there might be to inherit it.
In every relation of life Harold was a tower of strength.
Now she had a son whom she had loved since the days
of his fearless childhood. Now was she proud,
happy, thankful. Providence did sometimes
settle affairs of mortals aright. She had only
to thank God humbly on her bended knees that night,
to pray with tears and sobs for her darling’s
happiness, believing in her inmost heart that it was
now assured and lasting.
And she was happy perfectly,
utterly, completely, if there be such a thing in this
world below. They lived for the greater part of
the year at Maroobil or Corindah, choosing by preference
the quiet home life, where they had full enjoyment
of each other’s society, varied only by the
ordinary demands upon their hospitality, which they
were careful to recognise fully as of old. Maroobil
was voted to be the pleasantest visiting-place in
the West, and Mrs. Harold Atherstone the most perfect
hostess.
’What a fortunate thing that
you were able to sell out of that horrid Queensland
country so advantageously!’ said Mrs. Atherstone
a month after their marriage, when, resting under
the shadows of Mount Wellington, they absorbed rather
than admired the charms of the varied Tasmanian landscape.
’I shall never forget my fears on your account
during that last journey.’
‘I take great credit for not
committing myself before I started,’ he said.
’It grieved me sore, but I held out. I was
mortally afraid, too, that you might have another
proposal in my absence. I suppose you hadn’t?’
‘Well, not quite a proposal, only from Mr. .’
’Why, you insatiable woman,
you don’t mean to say that? Tell me this
moment who it was. Why didn’t I know before?’
’Don’t look so fierce,
and I’ll confess everything. It is not much.
But Mr. Courtenay, the Rev. Cyril, did call
while you were away.’
‘Confound him! The smooth-faced
humbug!’ growled Harold, twirling his moustache.
‘However, “Better men than he,” etc.
Well, go on, Circe ’
’None of your heathen innuendoes,
or I stop. But really, love, the poor fellow
said he had been left a competence by an uncle, and
that as he could not now be accused of mercenary feelings,
he wished me to know, etc.; we should be able
to do so much good with his means and those Providence
had gifted me with. Of course I explained gently
that it could not be. I felt quite clever, I
assure you. I had only to alter what I said to
Mr. MacCallum a very little. It would have served
you right, sir, if I had taken him after your leaving
me in that way.’
’H m, you won’t
be left much in future, madam, as you are not to be
trusted.’
Brian Devereux Atherstone and Harold
the second were respectively three years and one year
old when, the season being a good one, and wool above
the average, it was decided by the collective wisdom
of the family that a suitable opportunity had occurred
for the long-promised visit to Europe. Mrs. Devereux
had no objection to offer, except that the dear children
might not in all respects be benefited. But this
was overruled. Statistics were quoted to the
effect that on board the P. and O. and Messageries
steamers children were stronger, happier, and
longer lived than on shore. Finally the project
was carried out, Mr. Gateward being left in full possession
of the station for the three years which it was intended
that the tour should embrace.
Why attempt to portray here with what
supreme, almost unutterable, delight two cultured
persons of congenial tastes and fresh, unworn mental
palates savoured the intellectual banquets placed before
them? Again and again did Mrs. Atherstone declare
that her cup of happiness was filled to the brim,
even running over.
On one of those elysian days, as Pollie
sat dreamily under the columns of the Temple of Poseidon,
while around them stretched the green plain of Paestum,
Harold, who had been reading Galignani with a Briton’s
never-failing interest, handed the paper to her with
a pencil-marked paragraph.
Her cheek paled for an instant, then
glowed more brightly, her eye flashed, her head was
raised, as she ran over the following extract from
a society paper: ’We observe with
regret that the demise of Sir Ralph de Wynton at his
seat, Wynton Hall, Herefordshire, took place on Thursday
last. The announcement will not surprise many
who were acquainted with the sombre family history
of the last male heir of this ancient race. The
deceased baronet had been for many years a hopeless
invalid. It was believed, indeed, that he was
placed in confinement at those periods when he was
supposed to be travelling abroad. Owing to differences
which had arisen at an early period of their union,
it was generally supposed that Lady de Wynton, who
resided chiefly at Florence, had arranged a virtual
separation. The estates, with all property, real
and personal, excepting only her ladyship’s ample
jointure, pass to Colonel de Wynton of the Life Guards.’
‘So, poor thing, she has been
freed from her fetters at last!’ said the fair
reader, as she handed back the paper with a smile of
loving content and absolute trust to her husband.
’She will now be free to marry Bertram, and
I trust sincerely they will be happy. I always
pitied her from my heart, and thought it a case of
cruel wrong and injustice.’
‘H m!’ replied
Harold, with cautious non-committal. ’I
suppose very probable. “More sinned against,”
etc. But I don’t wonder at your sympathy.
You are under greater obligations to Sybil, Lady de
Wynton, than to any living woman, the grandmum only
excepted.’
‘Obligations indeed! Why?’
she demands, in much astonishment. ’Oh!
I know though it’s like your cool
audacity to say so because but for her
I should have gone through the wood, and through the
wood, and taken as I fully believe and
acknowledge now “The Crooked
Stick” at last.’