I.
Captain De Stancy was a changed man.
A hitherto well-repressed energy was giving him motion
towards long-shunned consequences. His features
were, indeed, the same as before; though, had a physiognomist
chosen to study them with the closeness of an astronomer
scanning the universe, he would doubtless have discerned
abundant novelty.
In recent years De Stancy had been
an easy, melancholy, unaspiring officer, enervated
and depressed by a parental affection quite beyond
his control for the graceless lad Dare the
obtrusive memento of a shadowy period in De Stancy’s
youth, who threatened to be the curse of his old age.
Throughout a long space he had persevered in his system
of rigidly incarcerating within himself all instincts
towards the opposite sex, with a resolution that would
not have disgraced a much stronger man. By this
habit, maintained with fair success, a chamber of his
nature had been preserved intact during many later
years, like the one solitary sealed-up cell occasionally
retained by bees in a lobe of drained honey-comb.
And thus, though he had irretrievably exhausted the
relish of society, of ambition, of action, and of his
profession, the love-force that he had kept immured
alive was still a reproducible thing.
The sight of Paula in her graceful
performance, which the judicious Dare had so carefully
planned, led up to and heightened by subtle accessories,
operated on De Stancy’s surprised soul with a
promptness almost magical.
On the evening of the self-same day,
having dined as usual, he retired to his rooms, where
he found a hamper of wine awaiting him. It had
been anonymously sent, and the account was paid.
He smiled grimly, but no longer with heaviness.
In this he instantly recognized the handiwork of Dare,
who, having at last broken down the barrier which De
Stancy had erected round his heart for so many years,
acted like a skilled strategist, and took swift measures
to follow up the advantage so tardily gained.
Captain De Stancy knew himself conquered:
he knew he should yield to Paula had indeed
yielded; but there was now, in his solitude, an hour
or two of reaction. He did not drink from the
bottles sent. He went early to bed, and lay tossing
thereon till far into the night, thinking over the
collapse. His teetotalism had, with the lapse
of years, unconsciously become the outward and visible
sign to himself of his secret vows; and a return to
its opposite, however mildly done, signified with
ceremonious distinctness the formal acceptance of
delectations long forsworn.
But the exceeding freshness of his
feeling for Paula, which by reason of its long arrest
was that of a man far under thirty, and was a wonder
to himself every instant, would not long brook weighing
in balances. He wished suddenly to commit himself;
to remove the question of retreat out of the region
of debate. The clock struck two: and the
wish became determination. He arose, and wrapping
himself in his dressing-gown went to the next room,
where he took from a shelf in the pantry several large
bottles, which he carried to the window, till they
stood on the sill a goodly row. There had been
sufficient light in the room for him to do this without
a candle. Now he softly opened the sash, and the
radiance of a gibbous moon riding in the opposite
sky flooded the apartment. It fell on the labels
of the captain’s bottles, revealing their contents
to be simple aerated waters for drinking.
De Stancy looked out and listened.
The guns that stood drawn up within the yard glistened
in the moonlight reaching them from over the barrack-wall:
there was an occasional stamp of horses in the stables;
also a measured tread of sentinels one or
more at the gates, one at the hospital, one between
the wings, two at the magazine, and others further
off. Recurring to his intention he drew the corks
of the mineral waters, and inverting each bottle one
by one over the window-sill, heard its contents dribble
in a small stream on to the gravel below.
He then opened the hamper which Dare
had sent. Uncorking one of the bottles he murmured,
‘To Paula!’ and drank a glass of the ruby
liquor.
‘A man again after eighteen
years,’ he said, shutting the sash and returning
to his bedroom.
The first overt result of his kindled
interest in Miss Power was his saying to his sister
the day after the surreptitious sight of Paula:
’I am sorry, Charlotte, for a word or two I
said the other day.’
‘Well?’
‘I was rather disrespectful to your friend Miss
Power.’
‘I don’t think so were you?’
’Yes. When we were walking
in the wood, I made a stupid joke about her....
What does she know about me do you ever
speak of me to her?’
‘Only in general terms.’
‘What general terms?’
’You know well enough, William;
of your idiosyncrasies and so on that you
are a bit of a woman-hater, or at least a confirmed
bachelor, and have but little respect for your own
family.’
‘I wish you had not told her that,’ said
De Stancy with dissatisfaction.
‘But I thought you always liked
women to know your principles!’ said Charlotte,
in injured tones; ’and would particularly like
her to know them, living so near.’
‘Yes, yes,’ replied her
brother hastily. ’Well, I ought to see her,
just to show her that I am not quite a brute.’
‘That would be very nice!’
she answered, putting her hands together in agreeable
astonishment. ’It is just what I have wished,
though I did not dream of suggesting it after what
I have heard you say. I am going to stay with
her again to-morrow, and I will let her know about
this.’
’Don’t tell her anything
plainly, for heaven’s sake. I really want
to see the interior of the castle; I have never entered
its walls since my babyhood.’ He raised
his eyes as he spoke to where the walls in question
showed their ashlar faces over the trees.
‘You might have gone over it at any time.’
’O yes. It is only recently
that I have thought much of the place: I feel
now that I should like to examine the old building
thoroughly, since it was for so many generations associated
with our fortunes, especially as most of the old furniture
is still there. My sedulous avoidance hitherto
of all relating to our family vicissitudes has been,
I own, stupid conduct for an intelligent being; but
impossible grapes are always sour, and I have unconsciously
adopted Radical notions to obliterate disappointed
hereditary instincts. But these have a trick of
re-establishing themselves as one gets older, and the
castle and what it contains have a keen interest for
me now.’
‘It contains Paula.’
De Stancy’s pulse, which had
been beating languidly for many years, beat double
at the sound of that name.
‘I meant furniture and pictures
for the moment,’ he said; ’but I don’t
mind extending the meaning to her, if you wish it.’
‘She is the rarest thing there.’
‘So you have said before.’
’The castle and our family history
have as much romantic interest for her as they have
for you,’ Charlotte went on. ’She
delights in visiting our tombs and effigies and
ponders over them for hours.’
‘Indeed!’ said De Stancy,
allowing his surprise to hide the satisfaction which
accompanied it. ’That should make us friendly....
Does she see many people?’
’Not many as yet. And she
cannot have many staying there during the alterations.’
’Ah! yes the alterations.
Didn’t you say that she has had a London architect
stopping there on that account? What was he old
or young?’
’He is a young man: he
has been to our house. Don’t you remember
you met him there?’
‘What was his name?’
‘Mr. Somerset.’
‘O, that man! Yes, yes, I remember....
Hullo, Lottie!’
‘What?’
‘Your face is as red as a peony.
Now I know a secret!’ Charlotte vainly endeavoured
to hide her confusion. ’Very well not
a word! I won’t say more,’ continued
De Stancy good-humouredly, ’except that he seems
to be a very nice fellow.’
De Stancy had turned the dialogue
on to this little well-preserved secret of his sister’s
with sufficient outward lightness; but it had been
done in instinctive concealment of the disquieting
start with which he had recognized that Somerset,
Dare’s enemy, whom he had intercepted in placing
Dare’s portrait into the hands of the chief constable,
was a man beloved by his sister Charlotte. This
novel circumstance might lead to a curious complication.
But he was to hear more.
‘He may be very nice,’
replied Charlotte, with an effort, after this silence.
‘But he is nothing to me, more than a very good
friend.’
‘There’s no engagement, or thought of
one between you?’
‘Certainly there’s not!’
said Charlotte, with brave emphasis. ’It
is more likely to be between Paula and him than me
and him.’
De Stancy’s bare military ears
and closely cropped poll flushed hot. ‘Miss
Power and him?’
’I don’t mean to say there
is, because Paula denies it; but I mean that he loves
Paula. That I do know.’
De Stancy was dumb. This item
of news which Dare had kept from him, not knowing
how far De Stancy’s sense of honour might extend,
was decidedly grave. Indeed, he was so greatly
impressed with the fact, that he could not help saying
as much aloud: ‘This is very serious!’
‘Why!’ she murmured tremblingly,
for the first leaking out of her tender and sworn
secret had disabled her quite.
‘Because I love Paula too.’
‘What do you say, William, you? a
woman you have never seen?’
’I have seen her by
accident. And now, my dear little sis, you will
be my close ally, won’t you? as I will be yours,
as brother and sister should be.’ He placed
his arm coaxingly round Charlotte’s shoulder.
‘O, William, how can I?’ at last she stammered.
’Why, how can’t you, I
should say? We are both in the same ship.
I love Paula, you love Mr. Somerset; it behoves both
of us to see that this flirtation of theirs ends in
nothing.’
’I don’t like you to put
it like that that I love him it
frightens me,’ murmured the girl, visibly agitated.
’I don’t want to divide him from Paula;
I couldn’t, I wouldn’t do anything to separate
them. Believe me, Will, I could not! I am
sorry you love there also, though I should be glad
if it happened in the natural order of events that
she should come round to you. But I cannot do
anything to part them and make Mr. Somerset suffer.
It would be too wrong and blamable.’
’Now, you silly Charlotte, that’s
just how you women fly off at a tangent. I mean
nothing dishonourable in the least. Have I ever
prompted you to do anything dishonourable? Fair
fighting allies was all I thought of.’
Miss De Stancy breathed more freely.
’Yes, we will be that, of course; we are always
that, William. But I hope I can be your ally,
and be quite neutral; I would so much rather.’
’Well, I suppose it will not
be a breach of your precious neutrality if you get
me invited to see the castle?’
‘O no!’ she said brightly;
’I don’t mind doing such a thing as that.
Why not come with me tomorrow? I will say I am
going to bring you. There will be no trouble
at all.’
De Stancy readily agreed. The
effect upon him of the information now acquired was
to intensify his ardour tenfold, the stimulus being
due to a perception that Somerset, with a little more
knowledge, would hold a card which could be played
with disastrous effect against himself his
relationship to Dare. Its disclosure to a lady
of such Puritan antecedents as Paula’s, would
probably mean her immediate severance from himself
as an unclean thing.
’Is Miss Power a severe pietist,
or precisian; or is she a compromising lady?’
he asked abruptly.
’She is severe and uncompromising if
you mean in her judgments on morals,’ said Charlotte,
not quite hearing. The remark was peculiarly
apposite, and De Stancy was silent.
He spent some following hours in a
close study of the castle history, which till now
had unutterably bored him. More particularly did
he dwell over documents and notes which referred to
the pedigree of his own family. He wrote out
the names of all and they were many who
had been born within those domineering walls since
their first erection; of those among them who had
been brought thither by marriage with the owner, and
of stranger knights and gentlemen who had entered the
castle by marriage with its mistress. He refreshed
his memory on the strange loves and hates that had
arisen in the course of the family history; on memorable
attacks, and the dates of the same, the most memorable
among them being the occasion on which the party represented
by Paula battered down the castle walls that she was
now about to mend, and, as he hoped, return in their
original intact shape to the family dispossessed, by
marriage with himself, its living representative.
In Sir William’s villa were
small engravings after many of the portraits in the
castle galleries, some of them hanging in the dining-room
in plain oak and maple frames, and others preserved
in portfolios. De Stancy spent much of his time
over these, and in getting up the romances of their
originals’ lives from memoirs and other records,
all which stories were as great novelties to him as
they could possibly be to any stranger. Most
interesting to him was the life of an Edward De Stancy,
who had lived just before the Civil Wars, and to whom
Captain De Stancy bore a very traceable likeness.
This ancestor had a mole on his cheek, black and distinct
as a fly in cream; and as in the case of the first
Lord Amherst’s wart, and Bennet Earl of Arlington’s
nose-scar, the painter had faithfully reproduced the
defect on canvas. It so happened that the captain
had a mole, though not exactly on the same spot of
his face; and this made the resemblance still greater.
He took infinite trouble with his
dress that day, showing an amount of anxiety on the
matter which for him was quite abnormal. At last,
when fully equipped, he set out with his sister to
make the call proposed. Charlotte was rather
unhappy at sight of her brother’s earnest attempt
to make an impression on Paula; but she could say nothing
against it, and they proceeded on their way.
It was the darkest of November weather,
when the days are so short that morning seems to join
with evening without the intervention of noon.
The sky was lined with low cloud, within whose dense
substance tempests were slowly fermenting for the
coming days. Even now a windy turbulence troubled
the half-naked boughs, and a lonely leaf would occasionally
spin downwards to rejoin on the grass the scathed multitude
of its comrades which had preceded it in its fall.
The river by the pavilion, in the summer so clear
and purling, now slid onwards brown and thick and
silent, and enlarged to double size.
II.
Meanwhile Paula was alone. Of
anyone else it would have been said that she must
be finding the afternoon rather dreary in the quaint
halls not of her forefathers: but of Miss Power
it was unsafe to predicate so surely. She walked
from room to room in a black velvet dress which gave
decision to her outline without depriving it of softness.
She occasionally clasped her hands behind her head
and looked out of a window; but she more particularly
bent her footsteps up and down the Long Gallery, where
she had caused a large fire of logs to be kindled,
in her endeavour to extend cheerfulness somewhat beyond
the precincts of the sitting-rooms.
The fire glanced up on Paula, and
Paula glanced down at the fire, and at the gnarled
beech fuel, and at the wood-lice which ran out from
beneath the bark to the extremity of the logs as the
heat approached them. The low-down ruddy light
spread over the dark floor like the setting sun over
a moor, fluttering on the grotesque countenances of
the bright andirons, and touching all the furniture
on the underside.
She now and then crossed to one of
the deep embrasures of the windows, to decipher
some sentence from a letter she held in her hand.
The daylight would have been more than sufficient
for any bystander to discern that the capitals in
that letter were of the peculiar semi-gothic type
affected at the time by Somerset and other young architects
of his school in their epistolary correspondence.
She was very possibly thinking of him, even when not
reading his letter, for the expression of softness
with which she perused the page was more or less with
her when she appeared to examine other things.
She walked about for a little time
longer, then put away the letter, looked at the clock,
and thence returned to the windows, straining her
eyes over the landscape without, as she murmured, ’I
wish Charlotte was not so long coming!’
As Charlotte continued to keep away,
Paula became less reasonable in her desires, and proceeded
to wish that Somerset would arrive; then that anybody
would come; then, walking towards the portraits on
the wall, she flippantly asked one of those cavaliers
to oblige her fancy for company by stepping down from
his frame. The temerity of the request led her
to prudently withdraw it almost as soon as conceived:
old paintings had been said to play queer tricks in
extreme cases, and the shadows this afternoon were
funereal enough for anything in the shape of revenge
on an intruder who embodied the antagonistic modern
spirit to such an extent as she. However, Paula
still stood before the picture which had attracted
her; and this, by a coincidence common enough in fact,
though scarcely credited in chronicles, happened to
be that one of the seventeenth-century portraits of
which De Stancy had studied the engraved copy at Myrtle
Villa the same morning.
Whilst she remained before the picture,
wondering her favourite wonder, how would she feel
if this and its accompanying canvases were pictures
of her own ancestors, she was surprised by a light
footstep upon the carpet which covered part of the
room, and turning quickly she beheld the smiling little
figure of Charlotte De Stancy.
‘What has made you so late?’
said Paula. ’You are come to stay, of course?’
Charlotte said she had come to stay.
’But I have brought somebody with me!’
‘Ah whom?’
‘My brother happened to be at home, and I have
brought him.’
Miss De Stancy’s brother had
been so continuously absent from home in India, or
elsewhere, so little spoken of, and, when spoken of,
so truly though unconsciously represented as one whose
interests lay wholly outside this antiquated neighbourhood,
that to Paula he had been a mere nebulosity whom she
had never distinctly outlined. To have him thus
cohere into substance at a moment’s notice lent
him the novelty of a new creation.
‘Is he in the drawing-room?’ said Paula
in a low voice.
‘No, he is here. He would follow me.
I hope you will forgive him.’
And then Paula saw emerge into the
red beams of the dancing fire, from behind a half-drawn
hanging which screened the door, the military gentleman
whose acquaintance the reader has already made.
‘You know the house, doubtless,
Captain De Stancy?’ said Paula, somewhat shyly,
when he had been presented to her.
‘I have never seen the inside
since I was three weeks old,’ replied the artillery
officer gracefully; ’and hence my recollections
of it are not remarkably distinct. A year or
two before I was born the entail was cut off by my
father and grandfather; so that I saw the venerable
place only to lose it; at least, I believe that’s
the truth of the case. But my knowledge of the
transaction is not profound, and it is a delicate point
on which to question one’s father.’
Paula assented, and looked at the
interesting and noble figure of the man whose parents
had seemingly righted themselves at the expense of
wronging him.
‘The pictures and furniture
were sold about the same time, I think?’ said
Charlotte.
‘Yes,’ murmured De Stancy.
’They went in a mad bargain of my father with
his visitor, as they sat over their wine. My father
sat down as host on that occasion, and arose as guest.’
He seemed to speak with such a courteous
absence of regret for the alienation, that Paula,
who was always fearing that the recollection would
rise as a painful shadow between herself and the De
Stancys, felt reassured by his magnanimity.
De Stancy looked with interest round
the gallery; seeing which Paula said she would have
lights brought in a moment.
‘No, please not,’ said
De Stancy. ’The room and ourselves are of
so much more interesting a colour by this light!’
As they moved hither and thither,
the various expressions of De Stancy’s face
made themselves picturesquely visible in the unsteady
shine of the blaze. In a short time he had drawn
near to the painting of the ancestor whom he so greatly
resembled. When her quick eye noted the speck
on the face, indicative of inherited traits strongly
pronounced, a new and romantic feeling that the De
Stancys had stretched out a tentacle from their genealogical
tree to seize her by the hand and draw her in to their
mass took possession of Paula. As has been said,
the De Stancys were a family on whom the hall-mark
of membership was deeply stamped, and by the present
light the representative under the portrait and the
representative in the portrait seemed beings not far
removed. Paula was continually starting from
a reverie and speaking irrelevantly, as if such reflections
as those seized hold of her in spite of her natural
unconcern.
When candles were brought in Captain
De Stancy ardently contrived to make the pictures
the theme of conversation. From the nearest they
went to the next, whereupon Paula as hostess took
up one of the candlesticks and held it aloft to light
up the painting. The candlestick being tall and
heavy, De Stancy relieved her of it, and taking another
candle in the other hand, he imperceptibly slid into
the position of exhibitor rather than spectator.
Thus he walked in advance holding the two candles
on high, his shadow forming a gigantic figure on the
neighbouring wall, while he recited the particulars
of family history pertaining to each portrait, that
he had learnt up with such eager persistence during
the previous four-and-twenty-hours. ’I
have often wondered what could have been the history
of this lady, but nobody has ever been able to tell
me,’ Paula observed, pointing to a Vandyck which
represented a beautiful woman wearing curls across
her forehead, a square-cut bodice, and a heavy pearl
necklace upon the smooth expanse of her neck.
‘I don’t think anybody knows,’ Charlotte
said.
‘O yes,’ replied her brother
promptly, seeing with enthusiasm that it was yet another
opportunity for making capital of his acquired knowledge,
with which he felt himself as inconveniently crammed
as a candidate for a government examination.
’That lady has been largely celebrated under
a fancy name, though she is comparatively little known
by her own. Her parents were the chief ornaments
of the almost irreproachable court of Charles the
First, and were not more distinguished by their politeness
and honour than by the affections and virtues which
constitute the great charm of private life.’
The stock verbiage of the family memoir
was somewhat apparent in this effusion; but it much
impressed his listeners; and he went on to point out
that from the lady’s necklace was suspended a
heart-shaped portrait that of the man who
broke his heart by her persistent refusal to encourage
his suit. De Stancy then led them a little further,
where hung a portrait of the lover, one of his own
family, who appeared in full panoply of plate mail,
the pommel of his sword standing up under his elbow.
The gallant captain then related how this personage
of his line wooed the lady fruitlessly; how, after
her marriage with another, she and her husband visited
the parents of the disappointed lover, the then occupiers
of the castle; how, in a fit of desperation at the
sight of her, he retired to his room, where he composed
some passionate verses, which he wrote with his blood,
and after directing them to her ran himself through
the body with his sword. Too late the lady’s
heart was touched by his devotion; she was ever after
a melancholy woman, and wore his portrait despite
her husband’s prohibition. ‘This,’
continued De Stancy, leading them through the doorway
into the hall where the coats of mail were arranged
along the wall, and stopping opposite a suit which
bore some resemblance to that of the portrait, ’this
is his armour, as you will perceive by comparing it
with the picture, and this is the sword with which
he did the rash deed.’
‘What unreasonable devotion!’
said Paula practically. ’It was too romantic
of him. She was not worthy of such a sacrifice.’
’He also is one whom they say
you resemble a little in feature, I think,’
said Charlotte.
‘Do they?’ replied De
Stancy. ‘I wonder if it’s true.’
He set down the candles, and asking the girls to withdraw
for a moment, was inside the upper part of the suit
of armour in incredibly quick time. Going then
and placing himself in front of a low-hanging painting
near the original, so as to be enclosed by the frame
while covering the figure, arranging the sword as
in the one above, and setting the light that it might
fall in the right direction, he recalled them; when
he put the question, ‘Is the resemblance strong?’
He looked so much like a man of bygone
times that neither of them replied, but remained curiously
gazing at him. His modern and comparatively sallow
complexion, as seen through the open visor, lent an
ethereal ideality to his appearance which the time-stained
countenance of the original warrior totally lacked.
At last Paula spoke, so stilly that
she seemed a statue enunciating: ‘Are the
verses known that he wrote with his blood?’
‘O yes, they have been carefully
preserved.’ Captain De Stancy, with true
wooer’s instinct, had committed some of them
to memory that morning from the printed copy to be
found in every well-ordered library. ’I
fear I don’t remember them all,’ he said,
’but they begin in this way:
“From one that
dyeth in his discontent,
Dear Faire, receive
this greeting to thee sent;
And still as oft
as it is read by thee,
Then with some
deep sad sigh remember mee!
O ’twas
my fortune’s error to vow dutie,
To one that bears
defiance in her beautie!
Sweete poyson,
pretious wooe, infectious jewell
Such is a Ladie
that is faire and cruell.
How well could
I with ayre, camelion-like,
Live happie, and
still gazeing on thy cheeke,
In which, forsaken
man, methink I see
How goodlie love
doth threaten cares to mee.
Why dost thou
frowne thus on a kneelinge soule,
Whose faults in
love thou may’st as well controule?
In love but
O, that word; that word I feare
Is hateful still
both to thy hart and eare!
Ladie, in breefe,
my fate doth now intend
The period of
my daies to have an end:
Waste not on me
thy pittie, pretious Faire:
Rest you in much
content; I, in despaire!"’
A solemn silence followed the close
of the recital, which De Stancy improved by turning
the point of the sword to his breast, resting the
pommel upon the floor, and saying:
’After writing that we may picture
him turning this same sword in this same way, and
falling on it thus.’ He inclined his body
forward as he spoke.
‘Don’t, Captain De Stancy,
please don’t!’ cried Paula involuntarily.
‘No, don’t show us any
further, William!’ said his sister. ’It
is too tragic.’
De Stancy put away the sword, himself
rather excited not, however, by his own
recital, but by the direct gaze of Paula at him.
This Protean quality of De Stancy’s,
by means of which he could assume the shape and situation
of almost any ancestor at will, had impressed her,
and he perceived it with a throb of fervour. But
it had done no more than impress her; for though in
delivering the lines he had so fixed his look upon
her as to suggest, to any maiden practised in the
game of the eyes, a present significance in the words,
the idea of any such arrière-pensee had by no
means commended itself to her soul.
At this time a messenger from Markton
barracks arrived at the castle and wished to speak
to Captain De Stancy in the hall. Begging the
two ladies to excuse him for a moment, he went out.
While De Stancy was talking in the
twilight to the messenger at one end of the apartment,
some other arrival was shown in by the side door, and
in making his way after the conference across the hall
to the room he had previously quitted, De Stancy encountered
the new-comer. There was just enough light to
reveal the countenance to be Dare’s; he bore
a portfolio under his arm, and had begun to wear a
moustache, in case the chief constable should meet
him anywhere in his rambles, and be struck by his
resemblance to the man in the studio.
‘What the devil are you doing
here?’ said Captain De Stancy, in tones he had
never used before to the young man.
Dare started back in surprise, and
naturally so. De Stancy, having adopted a new
system of living, and relinquished the meagre diet
and enervating waters of his past years, was rapidly
recovering tone. His voice was firmer, his cheeks
were less pallid; and above all he was authoritative
towards his present companion, whose ingenuity in vamping
up a being for his ambitious experiments seemed about
to be rewarded, like Frankenstein’s, by his
discomfiture at the hands of his own creature.
‘What the devil are you doing
here, I say?’ repeated De Stancy.
’You can talk to me like that,
after my working so hard to get you on in life, and
make a rising man of you!’ expostulated Dare,
as one who felt himself no longer the leader in this
enterprise.
‘But,’ said the captain
less harshly, ’if you let them discover any
relations between us here, you will ruin the fairest
prospects man ever had!’
‘O, I like that, captain when you
owe all of it to me!’
‘That’s too cool, Will.’
’No; what I say is true.
However, let that go. So now you are here on a
call; but how are you going to get here often enough
to win her before the other man comes back? If
you don’t see her every day twice,
three times a day you will not capture
her in the time.’
‘I must think of that,’ said De Stancy.
’There is only one way of being
constantly here: you must come to copy the pictures
or furniture, something in the way he did.’
‘I’ll think of it,’
muttered De Stancy hastily, as he heard the voices
of the ladies, whom he hastened to join as they were
appearing at the other end of the room. His countenance
was gloomy as he recrossed the hall, for Dare’s
words on the shortness of his opportunities had impressed
him. Almost at once he uttered a hope to Paula
that he might have further chance of studying, and
if possible of copying, some of the ancestral faces
with which the building abounded.
Meanwhile Dare had come forward with
his portfolio, which proved to be full of photographs.
While Paula and Charlotte were examining them he said
to De Stancy, as a stranger: ’Excuse my
interruption, sir, but if you should think of copying
any of the portraits, as you were stating just now
to the ladies, my patent photographic process is at
your service, and is, I believe, the only one which
would be effectual in the dim indoor lights.’
‘It is just what I was thinking
of,’ said De Stancy, now so far cooled down
from his irritation as to be quite ready to accept
Dare’s adroitly suggested scheme.
On application to Paula she immediately
gave De Stancy permission to photograph to any extent,
and told Dare he might bring his instruments as soon
as Captain De Stancy required them.
‘Don’t stare at her in
such a brazen way!’ whispered the latter to the
young man, when Paula had withdrawn a few steps.
’Say, “I shall highly value the privilege
of assisting Captain De Stancy in such a work."’
Dare obeyed, and before leaving De
Stancy arranged to begin performing on his venerated
forefathers the next morning, the youth so accidentally
engaged agreeing to be there at the same time to assist
in the technical operations.
III.
As he had promised, De Stancy made
use the next day of the coveted permission that had
been brought about by the ingenious Dare. Dare’s
timely suggestion of tendering assistance had the practical
result of relieving the other of all necessity for
occupying his time with the proceeding, further than
to bestow a perfunctory superintendence now and then,
to give a colour to his regular presence in the fortress,
the actual work of taking copies being carried on
by the younger man.
The weather was frequently wet during
these operations, and Paula, Miss De Stancy, and her
brother, were often in the house whole mornings together.
By constant urging and coaxing the latter would induce
his gentle sister, much against her conscience, to
leave him opportunities for speaking to Paula alone.
It was mostly before some print or painting that these
conversations occurred, while De Stancy was ostensibly
occupied with its merits, or in giving directions to
his photographer how to proceed. As soon as the
dialogue began, the latter would withdraw out of earshot,
leaving Paula to imagine him the most deferential young
artist in the world.
‘You will soon possess duplicates
of the whole gallery,’ she said on one of these
occasions, examining some curled sheets which Dare
had printed off from the negatives.
‘No,’ said the soldier.
’I shall not have patience to go on. I get
ill-humoured and indifferent, and then leave off.’
‘Why ill-humoured?’
’I scarcely know more
than that I acquire a general sense of my own family’s
want of merit through seeing how meritorious the people
are around me. I see them happy and thriving
without any necessity for me at all; and then I regard
these canvas grandfathers and grandmothers, and ask,
“Why was a line so antiquated and out of date
prolonged till now?"’
She chid him good-naturedly for such
views. ’They will do you an injury,’
she declared. ‘Do spare yourself, Captain
De Stancy!’
De Stancy shook his head as he turned
the painting before him a little further to the light.
‘But, do you know,’ said
Paula, ’that notion of yours of being a family
out of date is delightful to some people. I talk
to Charlotte about it often. I am never weary
of examining those canopied effigies in the church,
and almost wish they were those of my relations.’
‘I will try to see things in
the same light for your sake,’ said De Stancy
fervently.
‘Not for my sake; for your own
was what I meant, of course,’ she replied with
a repressive air.
Captain De Stancy bowed.
‘What are you going to do with
your photographs when you have them?’ she asked,
as if still anxious to obliterate the previous sentimental
lapse.
’I shall put them into a large
album, and carry them with me in my campaigns; and
may I ask, now I have an opportunity, that you would
extend your permission to copy a little further, and
let me photograph one other painting that hangs in
the castle, to fittingly complete my set?’
‘Which?’
’That half-length of a lady
which hangs in the morning-room. I remember seeing
it in the Academy last year.’
Paula involuntarily closed herself
up. The picture was her own portrait. ‘It
does not belong to your series,’ she said somewhat
coldly.
De Stancy’s secret thought was,
I hope from my soul it will belong some day!
He answered with mildness: ’There is a sort
of connection you are my sister’s
friend.’
Paula assented.
‘And hence, might not your friend’s brother
photograph your picture?’
Paula demurred.
A gentle sigh rose from the bosom
of De Stancy. ’What is to become of me?’
he said, with a light distressed laugh. ’I
am always inconsiderate and inclined to ask too much.
Forgive me! What was in my mind when I asked
I dare not say.’
’I quite understand your interest
in your family pictures and all of it,’
she remarked more gently, willing not to hurt the sensitive
feelings of a man so full of romance.
‘And in that one!’
he said, looking devotedly at her. ’If I
had only been fortunate enough to include it with
the rest, my album would indeed have been a treasure
to pore over by the bivouac fire!’
‘O, Captain De Stancy, this
is provoking perseverance!’ cried Paula, laughing
half crossly. ’I expected that after expressing
my decision so plainly the first time I should not
have been further urged upon the subject.’
Saying which she turned and moved decisively away.
It had not been a productive meeting,
thus far. ‘One word!’ said De Stancy,
following and almost clasping her hand. ’I
have given offence, I know: but do let it all
fall on my own head don’t tell my
sister of my misbehaviour! She loves you deeply,
and it would wound her to the heart.’
‘You deserve to be told upon,’
said Paula as she withdrew, with just enough playfulness
to show that her anger was not too serious.
Charlotte looked at Paula uneasily
when the latter joined her in the drawing-room.
She wanted to say, ‘What is the matter?’
but guessing that her brother had something to do
with it, forbore to speak at first. She could
not contain her anxiety long. ‘Were you
talking with my brother?’ she said.
‘Yes,’ returned Paula,
with reservation. However, she soon added, ’He
not only wants to photograph his ancestors, but my
portrait too. They are a dreadfully encroaching
sex, and perhaps being in the army makes them worse!’
‘I’ll give him a hint, and tell him to
be careful.’
’Don’t say I have definitely
complained of him; it is not worth while to do that;
the matter is too trifling for repetition. Upon
the whole, Charlotte, I would rather you said nothing
at all.’
De Stancy’s hobby of photographing
his ancestors seemed to become a perfect mania with
him. Almost every morning discovered him in the
larger apartments of the castle, taking down and rehanging
the dilapidated pictures, with the assistance of the
indispensable Dare; his fingers stained black with
dust, and his face expressing a busy attention to
the work in hand, though always reserving a look askance
for the presence of Paula.
Though there was something of subterfuge,
there was no deep and double subterfuge in all this.
De Stancy took no particular interest in his ancestral
portraits; but he was enamoured of Paula to weakness.
Perhaps the composition of his love would hardly bear
looking into, but it was recklessly frank and not
quite mercenary. His photographic scheme was
nothing worse than a lover’s not too scrupulous
contrivance. After the refusal of his request
to copy her picture he fumed and fretted at the prospect
of Somerset’s return before any impression had
been made on her heart by himself; he swore at Dare,
and asked him hotly why he had dragged him into such
a hopeless dilemma as this.
’Hopeless? Somerset must
still be kept away, so that it is not hopeless.
I will consider how to prolong his stay.’
Thereupon Dare considered.
The time was coming had
indeed come when it was necessary for Paula
to make up her mind about her architect, if she meant
to begin building in the spring. The two sets
of plans, Somerset’s and Havill’s, were
hanging on the walls of the room that had been used
by Somerset as his studio, and were accessible by
anybody. Dare took occasion to go and study both
sets, with a view to finding a flaw in Somerset’s
which might have been passed over unnoticed by the
committee of architects, owing to their absence from
the actual site. But not a blunder could he find.
He next went to Havill; and here he
was met by an amazing state of affairs. Havill’s
creditors, at last suspecting something mythical in
Havill’s assurance that the grand commission
was his, had lost all patience; his house was turned
upside-down, and a poster gleamed on the front wall,
stating that the excellent modern household furniture
was to be sold by auction on Friday next. Troubles
had apparently come in battalions, for Dare was informed
by a bystander that Havill’s wife was seriously
ill also.
Without staying for a moment to enter
his friend’s house, back went Mr. Dare to the
castle, and told Captain De Stancy of the architect’s
desperate circumstances, begging him to convey the
news in some way to Miss Power. De Stancy promised
to make representations in the proper quarter without
perceiving that he was doing the best possible deed
for himself thereby.
He told Paula of Havill’s misfortunes
in the presence of his sister, who turned pale.
She discerned how this misfortune would bear upon the
undecided competition.
‘Poor man,’ murmured Paula.
’He was my father’s architect, and somehow
expected, though I did not promise it, the work of
rebuilding the castle.’
Then De Stancy saw Dare’s aim
in sending him to Miss Power with the news; and, seeing
it, concurred: Somerset was his rival, and all
was fair. ‘And is he not to have the work
of the castle after expecting it?’ he asked.
Paula was lost in reflection.
’The other architect’s design and Mr.
Havill’s are exactly equal in merit, and we cannot
decide how to give it to either,’ explained
Charlotte.
‘That is our difficulty,’
Paula murmured. ’A bankrupt, and his wife
ill dear me! I wonder what’s
the cause.’
’He has borrowed on the expectation
of having to execute the castle works, and now he
is unable to meet his liabilities.’
‘It is very sad,’ said Paula.
‘Let me suggest a remedy for this dead-lock,’
said De Stancy.
‘Do,’ said Paula.
’Do the work of building in
two halves or sections. Give Havill the first
half, since he is in need; when that is finished the
second half can be given to your London architect.
If, as I understand, the plans are identical, except
in ornamental details, there will be no difficulty
about it at all.’
Paula sighed just a little
one; and yet the suggestion seemed to satisfy her
by its reasonableness. She turned sad, wayward,
but was impressed by De Stancy’s manner and
words. She appeared indeed to have a smouldering
desire to please him. In the afternoon she said
to Charlotte, ‘I mean to do as your brother
says.’
A note was despatched to Havill that
very day, and in an hour the crestfallen architect
presented himself at the castle. Paula instantly
gave him audience, commiserated him, and commissioned
him to carry out a first section of the buildings,
comprising work to the extent of about twenty thousand
pounds expenditure; and then, with a prematureness
quite amazing among architects’ clients, she
handed him over a cheque for five hundred pounds on
account.
When he had gone, Paula’s bearing
showed some sign of being disquieted at what she had
done; but she covered her mood under a cloak of saucy
serenity. Perhaps a tender remembrance of a certain
thunderstorm in the foregoing August when she stood
with Somerset in the arbour, and did not own that
she loved him, was pressing on her memory and bewildering
her. She had not seen quite clearly, in adopting
De Stancy’s suggestion, that Somerset would
now have no professional reason for being at the castle
for the next twelve months.
But the captain had, and when Havill
entered the castle he rejoiced with great joy.
Dare, too, rejoiced in his cold way, and went on with
his photography, saying, ‘The game progresses,
captain.’
‘Game? Call it Divine Comedy,
rather!’ said the soldier exultingly.
’He is practically banished
for a year or more. What can’t you do in
a year, captain!’
Havill, in the meantime, having respectfully
withdrawn from the presence of Paula, passed by Dare
and De Stancy in the gallery as he had done in entering.
He spoke a few words to Dare, who congratulated him.
While they were talking somebody was heard in the
hall, inquiring hastily for Mr. Havill.
‘What shall I tell him?’ demanded the
porter.
‘His wife is dead,’ said the messenger.
Havill overheard the words, and hastened away.
‘An unlucky man!’ said Dare.
‘That, happily for us, will
not affect his installation here,’ said De Stancy.
’Now hold your tongue and keep at a distance.
She may come this way.’
Surely enough in a few minutes she
came. De Stancy, to make conversation, told her
of the new misfortune which had just befallen Mr.
Havill.
Paula was very sorry to hear it, and
remarked that it gave her great satisfaction to have
appointed him as architect of the first wing before
he learnt the bad news. ’I owe you best
thanks, Captain De Stancy, for showing me such an
expedient.’
‘Do I really deserve thanks?’
asked De Stancy. ’I wish I deserved a reward;
but I must bear in mind the fable of the priest and
the jester.’
‘I never heard it.’
’The jester implored the priest
for alms, but the smallest sum was refused, though
the holy man readily agreed to give him his blessing.
Query, its value?’
‘How does it apply?’
’You give me unlimited thanks,
but deny me the tiniest substantial trifle I desire.’
‘What persistence!’ exclaimed
Paula, colouring. ’Very well, if you will
photograph my picture you must. It is really not
worthy further pleading. Take it when you like.’
When Paula was alone she seemed vexed
with herself for having given way; and rising from
her seat she went quietly to the door of the room
containing the picture, intending to lock it up till
further consideration, whatever he might think of
her. But on casting her eyes round the apartment
the painting was gone. The captain, wisely taking
the current when it served, already had it in the gallery,
where he was to be seen bending attentively over it,
arranging the lights and directing Dare with the instruments.
On leaving he thanked her, and said that he had obtained
a splendid copy. Would she look at it?
Paula was severe and icy. ‘Thank
you I don’t wish to see it,’
she said.
De Stancy bowed and departed in a
glow of triumph; satisfied, notwithstanding her frigidity,
that he had compassed his immediate aim, which was
that she might not be able to dismiss from her thoughts
him and his persevering desire for the shadow of her
face during the next four-and-twenty-hours. And
his confidence was well founded: she could not.
‘I fear this Divine Comedy will
be slow business for us, captain,’ said Dare,
who had heard her cold words.
‘O no!’ said De Stancy,
flushing a little: he had not been perceiving
that the lad had the measure of his mind so entirely
as to gauge his position at any moment. But he
would show no shamefacedness. ’Even if it
is, my boy,’ he answered, ’there’s
plenty of time before the other can come.’
At that hour and minute of De Stancy’s
remark ‘the other,’ to look at him, seemed
indeed securely shelved. He was sitting lonely
in his chambers far away, wondering why she did not
write, and yet hoping to hear wondering
if it had all been but a short-lived strain of tenderness.
He knew as well as if it had been stated in words that
her serious acceptance of him as a suitor would be
her acceptance of him as an architect that
her schemes in love would be expressed in terms of
art; and conversely that her refusal of him as a lover
would be neatly effected by her choosing Havill’s
plans for the castle, and returning his own with thanks.
The position was so clear: he was so well walled
in by circumstances that he was absolutely helpless.
To wait for the line that would not
come the letter saying that, as she had
desired, his was the design that pleased her was
still the only thing to do. The (to Somerset)
surprising accident that the committee of architects
should have pronounced the designs absolutely equal
in point of merit, and thus have caused the final
choice to revert after all to Paula, had been a joyous
thing to him when he first heard of it, full of confidence
in her favour. But the fact of her having again
become the arbitrator, though it had made acceptance
of his plans all the more probable, made refusal of
them, should it happen, all the more crushing.
He could have conceived himself favoured by Paula as
her lover, even had the committee decided in favour
of Havill as her architect. But not to be chosen
as architect now was to be rejected in both kinds.
IV.
It was the Sunday following the funeral
of Mrs. Havill, news of whose death had been so unexpectedly
brought to her husband at the moment of his exit from
Stancy Castle. The minister, as was his custom,
improved the occasion by a couple of sermons on the
uncertainty of life. One was preached in the
morning in the old chapel of Markton; the second at
evening service in the rural chapel near Stancy Castle,
built by Paula’s father, which bore to the first
somewhat the relation of an episcopal chapel-of-ease
to the mother church.
The unscreened lights blazed through
the plate-glass windows of the smaller building and
outshone the steely stars of the early night, just
as they had done when Somerset was attracted by their
glare four months before. The fervid minister’s
rhetoric equalled its force on that more romantic
occasion: but Paula was not there. She was
not a frequent attendant now at her father’s
votive building. The mysterious tank, whose dark
waters had so repelled her at the last moment, was
boarded over: a table stood on its centre, with
an open quarto Bible upon it, behind which Havill,
in a new suit of black, sat in a large chair.
Havill held the office of deacon: and he had mechanically
taken the deacon’s seat as usual to-night, in
the face of the congregation, and under the nose of
Mr. Woodwell.
Mr. Woodwell was always glad of an
opportunity. He was gifted with a burning natural
eloquence, which, though perhaps a little too freely
employed in exciting the ‘Wertherism of the uncultivated,’
had in it genuine power. He was a master of that
oratory which no limitation of knowledge can repress,
and which no training can impart. The neighbouring
rector could eclipse Woodwell’s scholarship,
and the freethinker at the corner shop in Markton
could demolish his logic; but the Baptist could do
in five minutes what neither of these had done in a
lifetime; he could move some of the hardest of men
to tears.
Thus it happened that, when the sermon
was fairly under way, Havill began to feel himself
in a trying position. It was not that he had
bestowed much affection upon his deceased wife, irreproachable
woman as she had been; but the suddenness of her death
had shaken his nerves, and Mr. Woodwell’s address
on the uncertainty of life involved considerations
of conduct on earth that bore with singular directness
upon Havill’s unprincipled manoeuvre for victory
in the castle competition. He wished he had not
been so inadvertent as to take his customary chair
in the chapel. People who saw Havill’s agitation
did not know that it was most largely owing to his
sense of the fraud which had been practised on the
unoffending Somerset; and when, unable longer to endure
the torture of Woodwell’s words, he rose from
his place and went into the chapel vestry, the preacher
little thought that remorse for a contemptibly unfair
act, rather than grief for a dead wife, was the cause
of the architect’s withdrawal.
When Havill got into the open air
his morbid excitement calmed down, but a sickening
self-abhorrence for the proceeding instigated by Dare
did not abate. To appropriate another man’s
design was no more nor less than to embezzle his money
or steal his goods. The intense reaction from
his conduct of the past two or three months did not
leave him when he reached his own house and observed
where the handbills of the countermanded sale had
been torn down, as the result of the payment made
in advance by Paula of money which should really have
been Somerset’s.
The mood went on intensifying when
he was in bed. He lay awake till the clock reached
those still, small, ghastly hours when the vital fires
burn at their lowest in the human frame, and death
seizes more of his victims than in any other of the
twenty-four. Havill could bear it no longer;
he got a light, went down into his office and wrote
the note subjoined.
’Madam, The
recent death of my wife necessitates a considerable
change in my professional arrangements and plans with
regard to the future. One of the chief results
of the change is, I regret to state, that I no longer
find myself in a position to carry out the enlargement
of the castle which you had so generously entrusted
to my hands.
’I beg leave therefore to resign
all further connection with the same, and to express,
if you will allow me, a hope that the commission may
be placed in the hands of the other competitor.
Herewith is returned a cheque for one-half of the
sum so kindly advanced in anticipation of the commission
I should receive; the other half, with which I had
cleared off my immediate embarrassments before perceiving
the necessity for this course, shall be returned to
you as soon as some payments from other clients drop
in. I beg to remain, Madam, your obedient
servant, James Havill.’
Havill would not trust himself till
the morning to post this letter. He sealed it
up, went out with it into the street, and walked through
the sleeping town to the post-office. At the
mouth of the box he held the letter long. By
dropping it, he was dropping at least two thousand
five hundred pounds which, however obtained, were
now securely his. It was a great deal to let
go; and there he stood till another wave of conscience
bore in upon his soul the absolute nature of the theft,
and made him shudder. The footsteps of a solitary
policeman could be heard nearing him along the deserted
street; hesitation ended, and he let the letter go.
When he awoke in the morning he thought
over the circumstances by the cheerful light of a
low eastern sun. The horrors of the situation
seemed much less formidable; yet it cannot be said
that he actually regretted his act. Later on
he walked out, with the strange sense of being a man
who, from one having a large professional undertaking
in hand, had, by his own act, suddenly reduced himself
to an unoccupied nondescript. From the upper
end of the town he saw in the distance the grand grey
towers of Stancy Castle looming over the leafless
trees; he felt stupefied at what he had done, and
said to himself with bitter discontent: ’Well,
well, what is more contemptible than a half-hearted
rogue!’
That morning the post-bag had been
brought to Paula and Mrs. Goodman in the usual way,
and Miss Power read the letter. His resignation
was a surprise; the question whether he would or would
not repay the money was passed over; the necessity
of installing Somerset after all as sole architect
was an agitation, or emotion, the precise nature of
which it is impossible to accurately define.
However, she went about the house
after breakfast with very much the manner of one who
had had a weight removed either from her heart or from
her conscience; moreover, her face was a little flushed
when, in passing by Somerset’s late studio,
she saw the plans bearing his motto, and knew that
his and not Havill’s would be the presiding presence
in the coming architectural turmoil. She went
on further, and called to Charlotte, who was now regularly
sleeping in the castle, to accompany her, and together
they ascended to the telegraph-room in the donjon tower.
‘Whom are you going to telegraph
to?’ said Miss De Stancy when they stood by
the instrument.
‘My architect.’
‘O Mr. Havill.’
‘Mr. Somerset.’
Miss De Stancy had schooled her emotions
on that side cruelly well, and she asked calmly, ‘What,
have you chosen him after all?’
‘There is no choice in it read
that,’ said Paula, handing Havill’s letter,
as if she felt that Providence had stepped in to shape
ends that she was too undecided or unpractised to
shape for herself.
‘It is very strange,’
murmured Charlotte; while Paula applied herself to
the machine and despatched the words:
’Miss Power, Stancy Castle,
to G. Somerset, Esq., F.S.A., F.R.I.B.A., Queen Anne’s
Chambers, St. James’s.
’Your design is accepted in
its entirety. It will be necessary to begin soon.
I shall wish to see and consult you on the matter about
the 10th instant.’
When the message was fairly gone out
of the window Paula seemed still further to expand.
The strange spell cast over her by something or other probably
the presence of De Stancy, and the weird romanticism
of his manner towards her, which was as if the historic
past had touched her with a yet living hand in
a great measure became dissipated, leaving her the
arch and serene maiden that she had been before.
About this time Captain De Stancy
and his Achates were approaching the castle, and had
arrived about fifty paces from the spot at which it
was Dare’s custom to drop behind his companion,
in order that their appearance at the lodge should
be that of master and man.
Dare was saying, as he had said before:
’I can’t help fancying, captain, that
your approach to this castle and its mistress is by
a very tedious system. Your trenches, zigzags,
counterscarps, and ravelins may be all very well,
and a very sure system of attack in the long run; but
upon my soul they are almost as slow in maturing as
those of Uncle Toby himself. For my part I should
be inclined to try an assault.’
‘Don’t pretend to give
advice, Willy, on matters beyond your years.’
’I only meant it for your good,
and your proper advancement in the world,’ said
Dare in wounded tones.
‘Different characters, different
systems,’ returned the soldier. ’This
lady is of a reticent, independent, complicated disposition,
and any sudden proceeding would put her on her mettle.
You don’t dream what my impatience is, my boy.
It is a thing transcending your utmost conceptions!
But I proceed slowly; I know better than to do otherwise.
Thank God there is plenty of time. As long as
there is no risk of Somerset’s return my situation
is sure.’
’And professional etiquette
will prevent him coming yet. Havill and he will
change like the men in a sentry-box; when Havill walks
out, he’ll walk in, and not a moment before.’
’That will not be till eighteen
months have passed. And as the Jesuit said, “Time
and I against any two."... Now drop to the rear,’
added Captain De Stancy authoritatively. And
they passed under the walls of the castle.
The grave fronts and bastions were
wrapped in silence; so much so, that, standing awhile
in the inner ward, they could hear through an open
window a faintly clicking sound from within.
‘She’s at the telegraph,’
said Dare, throwing forward his voice softly to the
captain. ’What can that be for so early?
That wire is a nuisance, to my mind; such constant
intercourse with the outer world is bad for our romance.’
The speaker entered to arrange his
photographic apparatus, of which, in truth, he was
getting weary; and De Stancy smoked on the terrace
till Dare should be ready. While he waited his
sister looked out upon him from an upper casement,
having caught sight of him as she came from Paula
in the telegraph-room.
‘Well, Lottie, what news this morning?’
he said gaily.
’Nothing of importance.
We are quite well.’.... She added with
hesitation, ’There is one piece of news; Mr.
Havill but perhaps you have heard it in
Markton?’
‘Nothing.’
‘Mr. Havill has resigned his appointment as
architect to the castle.’
‘What? who has it, then?’
‘Mr. Somerset.’
‘Appointed?’
‘Yes by telegraph.’
‘When is he coming?’ said De Stancy in
consternation.
‘About the tenth, we think.’
Charlotte was concerned to see her
brother’s face, and withdrew from the window
that he might not question her further. De Stancy
went into the hall, and on to the gallery, where Dare
was standing as still as a caryatid.
‘I have heard every word,’ said Dare.
’Well, what does it mean?
Has that fool Havill done it on purpose to annoy me?
What conceivable reason can the man have for throwing
up an appointment he has worked so hard for, at the
moment he has got it, and in the time of his greatest
need?’
Dare guessed, for he had seen a little
way into Havill’s soul during the brief period
of their confederacy. But he was very far from
saying what he guessed. Yet he unconsciously
revealed by other words the nocturnal shades in his
character which had made that confederacy possible.
‘Somerset coming after all!’
he replied. ’By God! that little six-barrelled
friend of mine, and a good resolution, and he would
never arrive!’
‘What!’ said Captain De
Stancy, paling with horror as he gathered the other’s
sinister meaning.
Dare instantly recollected himself.
’One is tempted to say anything at such a moment,’
he replied hastily.
‘Since he is to come, let him
come, for me,’ continued De Stancy, with reactionary
distinctness, and still gazing gravely into the young
man’s face. ’The battle shall be
fairly fought out. Fair play, even to a rival remember
that, boy.... Why are you here? unnaturally
concerning yourself with the passions of a man of
my age, as if you were the parent, and I the son?
Would to heaven, Willy, you had done as I wished you
to do, and led the life of a steady, thoughtful young
man! Instead of meddling here, you should now
have been in some studio, college, or professional
man’s chambers, engaged in a useful pursuit which
might have made one proud to own you. But you
were so precocious and headstrong; and this is what
you have come to: you promise to be worthless!’
’I think I shall go to my lodgings
to-day instead of staying here over these pictures,’
said Dare, after a silence during which Captain De
Stancy endeavoured to calm himself. ’I was
going to tell you that my dinner to-day will unfortunately
be one of herbs, for want of the needful. I have
come to my last stiver. You dine at the
mess, I suppose, captain?’
De Stancy had walked away; but Dare
knew that he played a pretty sure card in that speech.
De Stancy’s heart could not withstand the suggested
contrast between a lonely meal of bread-and-cheese
and a well-ordered dinner amid cheerful companions.
‘Here,’ he said, emptying his pocket and
returning to the lad’s side. ’Take
this, and order yourself a good meal. You keep
me as poor as a crow. There shall be more to-morrow.’
The peculiarly bifold nature of Captain
De Stancy, as shown in his conduct at different times,
was something rare in life, and perhaps happily so.
That mechanical admixture of black and white qualities
without coalescence, on which the theory of men’s
characters was based by moral analysis before the
rise of modern ethical schools, fictitious as it was
in general application, would have almost hit off the
truth as regards Captain De Stancy. Removed to
some half-known century, his deeds would have won
a picturesqueness of light and shade that might have
made him a fascinating subject for some gallery of
illustrious historical personages. It was this
tendency to moral chequer-work which accounted for
his varied bearings towards Dare.
Dare withdrew to take his departure.
When he had gone a few steps, despondent, he suddenly
turned, and ran back with some excitement.
’Captain he’s
coming on the tenth, don’t they say? Well,
four days before the tenth comes the sixth. Have
you forgotten what’s fixed for the sixth?’
‘I had quite forgotten!’
’That day will be worth three
months of quiet attentions: with luck, skill,
and a bold heart, what mayn’t you do?’
Captain De Stancy’s face softened with satisfaction.
’There is something in that;
the game is not up after all. The sixth it
had gone clean out of my head, by gad!’
V.
The cheering message from Paula to
Somerset sped through the loophole of Stancy Castle
keep, over the trees, along the railway, under bridges,
across four counties from extreme antiquity
of environment to sheer modernism and finally
landed itself on a table in Somerset’s chambers
in the midst of a cloud of fog. He read it and,
in the moment of reaction from the depression of his
past days, clapped his hands like a child.
Then he considered the date at which
she wanted to see him. Had she so worded her
despatch he would have gone that very day; but there
was nothing to complain of in her giving him a week’s
notice. Pure maiden modesty might have checked
her indulgence in a too ardent recall.
Time, however, dragged somewhat heavily
along in the interim, and on the second day he thought
he would call on his father and tell him of his success
in obtaining the appointment.
The elder Mr. Somerset lived in a
detached house in the north-west part of fashionable
London; and ascending the chief staircase the young
man branched off from the first landing and entered
his father’s painting-room. It was an hour
when he was pretty sure of finding the well-known
painter at work, and on lifting the tapestry he was
not disappointed, Mr. Somerset being busily engaged
with his back towards the door.
Art and vitiated nature were struggling
like wrestlers in that apartment, and art was getting
the worst of it. The overpowering gloom pervading
the clammy air, rendered still more intense by the
height of the window from the floor, reduced all the
pictures that were standing around to the wizened
feebleness of corpses on end. The shadowy parts
of the room behind the different easels were veiled
in a brown vapour, precluding all estimate of the
extent of the studio, and only subdued in the foreground
by the ruddy glare from an open stove of Dutch tiles.
Somerset’s footsteps had been so noiseless over
the carpeting of the stairs and landing, that his
father was unaware of his presence; he continued at
his work as before, which he performed by the help
of a complicated apparatus of lamps, candles, and
reflectors, so arranged as to eke out the miserable
daylight, to a power apparently sufficient for the
neutral touches on which he was at that moment engaged.
The first thought of an unsophisticated
stranger on entering that room could only be the amazed
inquiry why a professor of the art of colour, which
beyond all other arts requires pure daylight for its
exercise, should fix himself on the single square
league in habitable Europe to which light is denied
at noonday for weeks in succession.
‘O! it’s you, George,
is it?’ said the Academician, turning from the
lamps, which shone over his bald crown at such a slant
as to reveal every cranial irregularity. ’How
are you this morning? Still a dead silence about
your grand castle competition?’
Somerset told the news. His father
duly congratulated him, and added genially, ’It
is well to be you, George. One large commission
to attend to, and nothing to distract you from it.
I am bothered by having a dozen irons in the fire
at once. And people are so unreasonable. Only
this morning, among other things, when you got your
order to go on with your single study, I received
a letter from a woman, an old friend whom I can scarcely
refuse, begging me as a great favour to design her
a set of theatrical costumes, in which she and her
friends can perform for some charity. It would
occupy me a good week to go into the subject and do
the thing properly. Such are the sort of letters
I get. I wish, George, you could knock out something
for her before you leave town. It is positively
impossible for me to do it with all this work in hand,
and these eternal fogs to contend against.’
‘I fear costumes are rather
out of my line,’ said the son. ’However,
I’ll do what I can. What period and country
are they to represent?’
His father didn’t know.
He had never looked at the play of late years.
It was ‘Love’s Labour’s Lost.’
‘You had better read it for yourself,’
he said, ‘and do the best you can.’
During the morning Somerset junior
found time to refresh his memory of the play, and
afterwards went and hunted up materials for designs
to suit the same, which occupied his spare hours for
the next three days. As these occupations made
no great demands upon his reasoning faculties he mostly
found his mind wandering off to imaginary scenes at
Stancy Castle: particularly did he dwell at this
time upon Paula’s lively interest in the history,
relics, tombs, architecture, nay, the very
Christian names of the De Stancy line, and her ‘artistic’
preference for Charlotte’s ancestors instead
of her own. Yet what more natural than that a
clever meditative girl, encased in the feudal lumber
of that family, should imbibe at least an antiquarian
interest in it? Human nature at bottom is romantic
rather than ascetic, and the local habitation which
accident had provided for Paula was perhaps acting
as a solvent of the hard, morbidly introspective views
thrust upon her in early life.
Somerset wondered if his own possession
of a substantial genealogy like Captain De Stancy’s
would have had any appreciable effect upon her regard
for him. His suggestion to Paula of her belonging
to a worthy strain of engineers had been based on
his content with his own intellectual line of descent
through Pheidias, Ictinus and Callicrates, Chersiphron,
Vitruvius, Wilars of Cambray, William of Wykeham, and
the rest of that long and illustrious roll; but Miss
Power’s marked preference for an animal pedigree
led him to muse on what he could show for himself
in that kind.
These thoughts so far occupied him
that when he took the sketches to his father, on the
morning of the fifth, he was led to ask: ’Has
any one ever sifted out our family pedigree?’
‘Family pedigree?’
’Yes. Have we any pedigree
worthy to be compared with that of professedly old
families? I never remember hearing of any ancestor
further back than my great-grandfather.’
Somerset the elder reflected and said
that he believed there was a genealogical tree about
the house somewhere, reaching back to a very respectable
distance. ‘Not that I ever took much interest
in it,’ he continued, without looking up from
his canvas; ’but your great uncle John was a
man with a taste for those subjects, and he drew up
such a sheet: he made several copies on parchment,
and gave one to each of his brothers and sisters.
The one he gave to my father is still in my possession,
I think.’
Somerset said that he should like
to see it; but half-an-hour’s search about the
house failed to discover the document; and the Academician
then remembered that it was in an iron box at his banker’s.
He had used it as a wrapper for some title-deeds and
other valuable writings which were deposited there
for safety. ‘Why do you want it?’
he inquired.
The young man confessed his whim to
know if his own antiquity would bear comparison with
that of another person, whose name he did not mention;
whereupon his father gave him a key that would fit
the said chest, if he meant to pursue the subject
further. Somerset, however, did nothing in the
matter that day, but the next morning, having to call
at the bank on other business, he remembered his new
fancy.
It was about eleven o’clock.
The fog, though not so brown as it had been on previous
days, was still dense enough to necessitate lights
in the shops and offices. When Somerset had finished
his business in the outer office of the bank he went
to the manager’s room. The hour being somewhat
early the only persons present in that sanctuary of
balances, besides the manager who welcomed him, were
two gentlemen, apparently lawyers, who sat talking
earnestly over a box of papers. The manager,
on learning what Somerset wanted, unlocked a door from
which a flight of stone steps led to the vaults, and
sent down a clerk and a porter for the safe.
Before, however, they had descended
far a gentle tap came to the door, and in response
to an invitation to enter a lady appeared, wrapped
up in furs to her very nose.
The manager seemed to recognize her,
for he went across the room in a moment, and set her
a chair at the middle table, replying to some observation
of hers with the words, ‘O yes, certainly,’
in a deferential tone.
‘I should like it brought up at once,’
said the lady.
Somerset, who had seated himself at
a table in a somewhat obscure corner, screened by
the lawyers, started at the words. The voice
was Miss Power’s, and so plainly enough was the
figure as soon as he examined it. Her back was
towards him, and either because the room was only
lighted in two places, or because she was absorbed
in her own concerns, she seemed to be unconscious
of any one’s presence on the scene except the
banker and herself. The former called back the
clerk, and two other porters having been summoned
they disappeared to get whatever she required.
Somerset, somewhat excited, sat wondering
what could have brought Paula to London at this juncture,
and was in some doubt if the occasion were a suitable
one for revealing himself, her errand to her banker
being possibly of a very private nature. Nothing
helped him to a decision. Paula never once turned
her head, and the progress of time was marked only
by the murmurs of the two lawyers, and the ceaseless
clash of gold and rattle of scales from the outer
room, where the busy heads of cashiers could be seen
through the partition moving about under the globes
of the gas-lamps.
Footsteps were heard upon the cellar-steps,
and the three men previously sent below staggered
from the doorway, bearing a huge safe which nearly
broke them down. Somerset knew that his father’s
box, or boxes, could boast of no such dimensions,
and he was not surprised to see the chest deposited
in front of Miss Power. When the immense accumulation
of dust had been cleared off the lid, and the chest
conveniently placed for her, Somerset was attended
to, his modest box being brought up by one man unassisted,
and without much expenditure of breath.
His interest in Paula was of so emotional
a cast that his attention to his own errand was of
the most perfunctory kind. She was close to a
gas-standard, and the lawyers, whose seats had intervened,
having finished their business and gone away, all
her actions were visible to him. While he was
opening his father’s box the manager assisted
Paula to unseal and unlock hers, and he now saw her
lift from it a morocco case, which she placed on the
table before her, and unfastened. Out of it she
took a dazzling object that fell like a cascade over
her fingers. It was a necklace of diamonds and
pearls, apparently of large size and many strands,
though he was not near enough to see distinctly.
When satisfied by her examination that she had got
the right article she shut it into its case.
The manager closed the chest for her;
and when it was again secured Paula arose, tossed
the necklace into her hand-bag, bowed to the manager,
and was about to bid him good morning. Thereupon
he said with some hesitation: ’Pardon one
question, Miss Power. Do you intend to take those
jewels far?’
‘Yes,’ she said simply, ‘to Stancy
Castle.’
‘You are going straight there?’
‘I have one or two places to call at first.’
’I would suggest that you carry
them in some other way by fastening them
into the pocket of your dress, for instance.’
‘But I am going to hold the bag in my hand and
never once let it go.’
The banker slightly shook his head.
’Suppose your carriage gets overturned:
you would let it go then.’
‘Perhaps so.’
’Or if you saw a child under
the wheels just as you were stepping in; or if you
accidentally stumbled in getting out; or if there was
a collision on the railway you might let
it go.’
‘Yes; I see I was too careless. I thank
you.’
Paula removed the necklace from the
bag, turned her back to the manager, and spent several
minutes in placing her treasure in her bosom, pinning
it and otherwise making it absolutely secure.
‘That’s it,’ said
the grey-haired man of caution, with evident satisfaction.
’There is not much danger now: you are not
travelling alone?’
Paula replied that she was not alone,
and went to the door. There was one moment during
which Somerset might have conveniently made his presence
known; but the juxtaposition of the bank-manager, and
his own disarranged box of securities, embarrassed
him: the moment slipped by, and she was gone.
In the meantime he had mechanically
unearthed the pedigree, and, locking up his father’s
chest, Somerset also took his departure at the heels
of Paula. He walked along the misty street, so
deeply musing as to be quite unconscious of the direction
of his walk. What, he inquired of himself, could
she want that necklace for so suddenly? He recollected
a remark of Dare’s to the effect that her appearance
on a particular occasion at Stancy Castle had been
magnificent by reason of the jewels she wore; which
proved that she had retained a sufficient quantity
of those valuables at the castle for ordinary requirements.
What exceptional occasion, then, was impending on
which she wished to glorify herself beyond all previous
experience? He could not guess. He was interrupted
in these conjectures by a carriage nearly passing over
his toes at a crossing in Bond Street: looking
up he saw between the two windows of the vehicle the
profile of a thickly mantled bosom, on which a camellia
rose and fell. All the remainder part of the lady’s
person was hidden; but he remembered that flower of
convenient season as one which had figured in the
bank parlour half-an-hour earlier to-day.
Somerset hastened after the carriage,
and in a minute saw it stop opposite a jeweller’s
shop. Out came Paula, and then another woman,
in whom he recognized Mrs. Birch, one of the lady’s
maids at Stancy Castle. The young man was at
Paula’s side before she had crossed the pavement.
VI.
A quick arrested expression in her
two sapphirine eyes, accompanied by a little, a very
little, blush which loitered long, was all the outward
disturbance that the sight of her lover caused.
The habit of self-repression at any new emotional
impact was instinctive with her always. Somerset
could not say more than a word; he looked his intense
solicitude, and Paula spoke.
She declared that this was an unexpected
pleasure. Had he arranged to come on the tenth
as she wished? How strange that they should meet
thus! and yet not strange the
world was so small.
Somerset said that he was coming on
the very day she mentioned that the appointment
gave him infinite gratification, which was quite within
the truth.
‘Come into this shop with me,’
said Paula, with good-humoured authoritativeness.
They entered the shop and talked on
while she made a small purchase. But not a word
did Paula say of her sudden errand to town.
‘I am having an exciting morning,’
she said. ’I am going from here to catch
the one-o’clock train to Markton.’
‘It is important that you get
there this afternoon, I suppose?’
‘Yes. You know why?’
‘Not at all.’
’The Hunt Ball. It was
fixed for the sixth, and this is the sixth. I
thought they might have asked you.’
‘No,’ said Somerset, a
trifle gloomily. ’No, I am not asked.
But it is a great task for you a long journey
and a ball all in one day.’
‘Yes: Charlotte said that. But I don’t
mind it.’
‘You are glad you are going. Are you glad?’
he said softly.
Her air confessed more than her words.
’I am not so very glad that I am going to the
Hunt Ball,’ she replied confidentially.
‘Thanks for that,’ said he.
She lifted her eyes to his for a moment.
Her manner had suddenly become so nearly the counterpart
of that in the tea-house that to suspect any deterioration
of affection in her was no longer generous. It
was only as if a thin layer of recent events had overlaid
her memories of him, until his presence swept them
away.
Somerset looked up, and finding the
shopman to be still some way off, he added, ’When
will you assure me of something in return for what
I assured you that evening in the rain?’
’Not before you have built the
castle. My aunt does not know about it yet, nor
anybody.’
‘I ought to tell her.’
‘No, not yet. I don’t wish it.’
‘Then everything stands as usual?’
She lightly nodded.
‘That is, I may love you: but you still
will not say you love me.’
She nodded again, and directing his
attention to the advancing shopman, said, ‘Please
not a word more.’
Soon after this, they left the jeweller’s,
and parted, Paula driving straight off to the station
and Somerset going on his way uncertainly happy.
His re-impression after a few minutes was that a special
journey to town to fetch that magnificent necklace
which she had not once mentioned to him, but which
was plainly to be the medium of some proud purpose
with her this evening, was hardly in harmony with her
assertions of indifference to the attractions of the
Hunt Ball.
He got into a cab and drove to his
club, where he lunched, and mopingly spent a great
part of the afternoon in making calculations for the
foundations of the castle works. Later in the
afternoon he returned to his chambers, wishing that
he could annihilate the three days remaining before
the tenth, particularly this coming evening. On
his table was a letter in a strange writing, and indifferently
turning it over he found from the superscription that
it had been addressed to him days before at the Lord-Quantock-Arms
Hotel, Markton, where it had lain ever since, the
landlord probably expecting him to return. Opening
the missive, he found to his surprise that it was,
after all, an invitation to the Hunt Ball.
‘Too late!’ said Somerset.
’To think I should be served this trick a second
time!’
After a moment’s pause, however,
he looked to see the time of day. It was five
minutes past five just about the hour when
Paula would be driving from Markton Station to Stancy
Castle to rest and prepare herself for her evening
triumph. There was a train at six o’clock,
timed to reach Markton between eleven and twelve,
which by great exertion he might save even now, if
it were worth while to undertake such a scramble for
the pleasure of dropping in to the ball at a late hour.
A moment’s vision of Paula moving to swift tunes
on the arm of a person or persons unknown was enough
to impart the impetus required. He jumped up,
flung his dress clothes into a portmanteau, sent down
to call a cab, and in a few minutes was rattling off
to the railway which had borne Paula away from London
just five hours earlier.
Once in the train, he began to consider
where and how he could most conveniently dress for
the dance. The train would certainly be half-an-hour
late; half-an-hour would be spent in getting to the
town-hall, and that was the utmost delay tolerable
if he would secure the hand of Paula for one spin,
or be more than a mere dummy behind the earlier arrivals.
He looked for an empty compartment at the next stoppage,
and finding the one next his own unoccupied, he entered
it and changed his raiment for that in his portmanteau
during the ensuing run of twenty miles.
Thus prepared he awaited the Markton
platform, which was reached as the clock struck twelve.
Somerset called a fly and drove at once to the town-hall.
The borough natives had ascended to
their upper floors, and were putting out their candles
one by one as he passed along the streets; but the
lively strains that proceeded from the central edifice
revealed distinctly enough what was going on among
the temporary visitors from the neighbouring manors.
The doors were opened for him, and entering the vestibule
lined with flags, flowers, evergreens, and escutcheons,
he stood looking into the furnace of gaiety beyond.
It was some time before he could gather
his impressions of the scene, so perplexing were the
lights, the motions, the toilets, the full-dress uniforms
of officers and the harmonies of sound. Yet light,
sound, and movement were not so much the essence of
that giddy scene as an intense aim at obliviousness
in the beings composing it. For two or three hours
at least those whirling young people meant not to know
that they were mortal. The room was beating like
a heart, and the pulse was regulated by the trembling
strings of the most popular quadrille band in Wessex.
But at last his eyes grew settled enough to look critically
around.
The room was crowded too
crowded. Every variety of fair one, beauties
primary, secondary, and tertiary, appeared among the
personages composing the throng. There were suns
and moons; also pale planets of little account.
Broadly speaking, these daughters of the county fell
into two classes: one the pink-faced unsophisticated
girls from neighbouring rectories and small country-houses,
who knew not town except for an occasional fortnight,
and who spent their time from Easter to Lammas Day
much as they spent it during the remaining nine months
of the year: the other class were the children
of the wealthy landowners who migrated each season
to the town-house; these were pale and collected,
showed less enjoyment in their countenances, and wore
in general an approximation to the languid manners
of the capital.
A quadrille was in progress, and Somerset
scanned each set. His mind had run so long upon
the necklace, that his glance involuntarily sought
out that gleaming object rather than the personality
of its wearer. At the top of the room there he
beheld it; but it was on the neck of Charlotte De
Stancy.
The whole lucid explanation broke
across his understanding in a second. His dear
Paula had fetched the necklace that Charlotte should
not appear to disadvantage among the county people
by reason of her poverty. It was generously done a
disinterested act of sisterly kindness; theirs was
the friendship of Hermia and Helena. Before he
had got further than to realize this, there wheeled
round amongst the dancers a lady whose tournure
he recognized well. She was Paula; and to the
young man’s vision a superlative something distinguished
her from all the rest. This was not dress or
ornament, for she had hardly a gem upon her, her attire
being a model of effective simplicity. Her partner
was Captain De Stancy.
The discovery of this latter fact
slightly obscured his appreciation of what he had
discovered just before. It was with rather a lowering
brow that he asked himself whether Paula’s predilection
d’artiste, as she called it, for the De Stancy
line might not lead to a predilection of a different
sort for its last representative which would be not
at all satisfactory.
The architect remained in the background
till the dance drew to a conclusion, and then he went
forward. The circumstance of having met him by
accident once already that day seemed to quench any
surprise in Miss Power’s bosom at seeing him
now. There was nothing in her parting from Captain
De Stancy, when he led her to a seat, calculated to
make Somerset uneasy after his long absence.
Though, for that matter, this proved nothing; for,
like all wise maidens, Paula never ventured on the
game of the eyes with a lover in public; well knowing
that every moment of such indulgence overnight might
mean an hour’s sneer at her expense by the indulged
gentleman next day, when weighing womankind by the
aid of a cold morning light and a bad headache.
While Somerset was explaining to Paula
and her aunt the reason of his sudden appearance,
their attention was drawn to a seat a short way off
by a fluttering of ladies round the spot. In a
moment it was whispered that somebody had fallen ill,
and in another that the sufferer was Miss De Stancy.
Paula, Mrs. Goodman, and Somerset at once joined the
group of friends who were assisting her. Neither
of them imagined for an instant that the unexpected
advent of Somerset on the scene had anything to do
with the poor girl’s indisposition.
She was assisted out of the room,
and her brother, who now came up, prepared to take
her home, Somerset exchanging a few civil words with
him, which the hurry of the moment prevented them from
continuing; though on taking his leave with Charlotte,
who was now better, De Stancy informed Somerset in
answer to a cursory inquiry, that he hoped to be back
again at the ball in half-an-hour.
When they were gone Somerset, feeling
that now another dog might have his day, sounded Paula
on the delightful question of a dance.
Paula replied in the negative.
‘How is that?’ asked Somerset with reproachful
disappointment.
‘I cannot dance again,’
she said in a somewhat depressed tone; ’I must
be released from every engagement to do so, on account
of Charlotte’s illness. I should have gone
home with her if I had not been particularly requested
to stay a little longer, since it is as yet so early,
and Charlotte’s illness is not very serious.’
If Charlotte’s illness was not
very serious, Somerset thought, Paula might have stretched
a point; but not wishing to hinder her in showing
respect to a friend so well liked by himself, he did
not ask it. De Stancy had promised to be back
again in half-an-hour, and Paula had heard the promise.
But at the end of twenty minutes, still seeming indifferent
to what was going on around her, she said she would
stay no longer, and reminding Somerset that they were
soon to meet and talk over the rebuilding, drove off
with her aunt to Stancy Castle.
Somerset stood looking after the retreating
carriage till it was enveloped in shades that the
lamps could not disperse. The ball-room was now
virtually empty for him, and feeling no great anxiety
to return thither he stood on the steps for some minutes
longer, looking into the calm mild night, and at the
dark houses behind whose blinds lay the burghers with
their eyes sealed up in sleep. He could not but
think that it was rather too bad of Paula to spoil
his evening for a sentimental devotion to Charlotte
which could do the latter no appreciable good; and
he would have felt seriously hurt at her move if it
had not been equally severe upon Captain De Stancy,
who was doubtless hastening back, full of a belief
that she would still be found there.
The star of gas-jets over the entrance
threw its light upon the walls on the opposite side
of the street, where there were notice-boards of forthcoming
events. In glancing over these for the fifth time,
his eye was attracted by the first words of a placard
in blue letters, of a size larger than the rest, and
moving onward a few steps he read:
Stancy castle.
By the kind permission of Miss Power,
A play
Will shortly be performed at the above castle,
In aid of the funds of the
County hospital,
By the Officers of the
Royal horse artillery,
Markton barracks,
Assisted by several
Ladies of the neighbourhood.
The cast and other particulars will be duly announced in
small bills. Places will be reserved on application to Mr.
Clangham, High Street, Markton, where a plan of the room may be seen.
N.B The Castle is about twenty minutes’ drive from Markton
Station, to which there are numerous convenient trains from all parts
of the county.
In a profound study Somerset turned
and re-entered the ball-room, where he remained gloomily
standing here and there for about five minutes, at
the end of which he observed Captain De Stancy, who
had returned punctually to his word, crossing the
hall in his direction.
The gallant officer darted glances
of lively search over every group of dancers and sitters;
and then with rather a blank look in his face, he
came on to Somerset. Replying to the latter’s
inquiry for his sister that she had nearly recovered,
he said, ’I don’t see my father’s
neighbours anywhere.’
‘They have gone home,’
replied Somerset, a trifle drily. ’They
asked me to make their apologies to you for leading
you to expect they would remain. Miss Power was
too anxious about Miss De Stancy to care to stay longer.’
The eyes of De Stancy and the speaker
met for an instant. That curious guarded understanding,
or inimical confederacy, which arises at moments between
two men in love with the same woman, was present here;
and in their mutual glances each said as plainly as
by words that her departure had ruined his evening’s
hope.
They were now about as much in one
mood as it was possible for two such differing natures
to be. Neither cared further for elaborating giddy
curves on that town-hall floor. They stood talking
languidly about this and that local topic, till De
Stancy turned aside for a short time to speak to a
dapper little lady who had beckoned to him. In
a few minutes he came back to Somerset.
’Mrs. Camperton, the wife of
Major Camperton of my battery, would very much like
me to introduce you to her. She is an old friend
of your father’s, and has wanted to know you
for a long time.’
De Stancy and Somerset crossed over
to the lady, and in a few minutes, thanks to her flow
of spirits, she and Somerset were chatting with remarkable
freedom.
‘It is a happy coincidence,’
continued Mrs. Camperton, ’that I should have
met you here, immediately after receiving a letter
from your father: indeed it reached me only this
morning. He has been so kind! We are getting
up some theatricals, as you know, I suppose, to help
the funds of the County Hospital, which is in debt.’
‘I have just seen the announcement nothing
more.’
’Yes, such an estimable purpose;
and as we wished to do it thoroughly well, I asked
Mr. Somerset to design us the costumes, and he has
now sent me the sketches. It is quite a secret
at present, but we are going to play Shakespeare’s
romantic drama, ‘Love’s Labour’s
Lost,’ and we hope to get Miss Power to take
the leading part. You see, being such a handsome
girl, and so wealthy, and rather an undiscovered novelty
in the county as yet, she would draw a crowded room,
and greatly benefit the funds.’
‘Miss Power going to play herself? I
am rather surprised,’ said Somerset. ‘Whose
idea is all this?’
’O, Captain De Stancy’s he’s
the originator entirely. You see he is so interested
in the neighbourhood, his family having been connected
with it for so many centuries, that naturally a charitable
object of this local nature appeals to his feelings.’
‘Naturally!’ her listener
laconically repeated. ’And have you settled
who is to play the junior gentleman’s part, leading
lover, hero, or whatever he is called?’
’Not absolutely; though I think
Captain De Stancy will not refuse it; and he is a
very good figure. At present it lies between him
and Mr. Mild, one of our young lieutenants. My
husband, of course, takes the heavy line; and I am
to be the second lady, though I am rather too old
for the part really. If we can only secure Miss
Power for heroine the cast will be excellent.’
‘Excellent!’ said Somerset, with a spectral
smile.
VII.
When he awoke the next morning at
the Lord-Quantock-Arms Hotel Somerset felt quite morbid
on recalling the intelligence he had received from
Mrs. Camperton. But as the day for serious practical
consultation about the castle works, to which Paula
had playfully alluded, was now close at hand, he determined
to banish sentimental reflections on the frailties
that were besieging her nature, by active preparation
for his professional undertaking. To be her high-priest
in art, to elaborate a structure whose cunning workmanship
would be meeting her eye every day till the end of
her natural life, and saying to her, ‘He invented
it,’ with all the eloquence of an inanimate
thing long regarded this was no mean satisfaction,
come what else would.
He returned to town the next day to
set matters there in such trim that no inconvenience
should result from his prolonged absence at the castle;
for having no other commission he determined (with
an eye rather to heart-interests than to increasing
his professional practice) to make, as before, the
castle itself his office, studio, and chief abiding-place
till the works were fairly in progress.
On the tenth he reappeared at Markton.
Passing through the town, on the road to Stancy Castle,
his eyes were again arrested by the notice-board which
had conveyed such startling information to him on the
night of the ball. The small bills now appeared
thereon; but when he anxiously looked them over to
learn how the parts were to be allotted, he found
that intelligence still withheld. Yet they told
enough; the list of lady-players was given, and Miss
Power’s name was one.
That a young lady who, six months
ago, would scarcely join for conscientious reasons
in a simple dance on her own lawn, should now be willing
to exhibit herself on a public stage, simulating love-passages
with a stranger, argued a rate of development which
under any circumstances would have surprised him,
but which, with the particular addition, as leading
colleague, of Captain De Stancy, inflamed him almost
to anger. What clandestine arrangements had been
going on in his absence to produce such a full-blown
intention it were futile to guess. Paula’s
course was a race rather than a march, and each successive
heat was startling in its eclipse of that which went
before.
Somerset was, however, introspective
enough to know that his morals would have taken no
such virtuous alarm had he been the chief male player
instead of Captain De Stancy.
He passed under the castle-arch and
entered. There seemed a little turn in the tide
of affairs when it was announced to him that Miss Power
expected him, and was alone.
The well-known ante-chambers through
which he walked, filled with twilight, draughts, and
thin echoes that seemed to reverberate from two hundred
years ago, did not delay his eye as they had done when
he had been ignorant that his destiny lay beyond;
and he followed on through all this ancientness to
where the modern Paula sat to receive him.
He forgot everything in the pleasure
of being alone in a room with her. She met his
eye with that in her own which cheered him. It
was a light expressing that something was understood
between them. She said quietly in two or three
words that she had expected him in the forenoon.
Somerset explained that he had come
only that morning from London.
After a little more talk, in which
she said that her aunt would join them in a few minutes,
and Miss De Stancy was still indisposed at her father’s
house, she rang for tea and sat down beside a little
table.
‘Shall we proceed to business at once?’
she asked him.
‘I suppose so.’
’First then, when will the working
drawings be ready, which I think you said must be
made out before the work could begin?’
While Somerset informed her on this
and other matters, Mrs. Goodman entered and joined
in the discussion, after which they found it would
be necessary to adjourn to the room where the plans
were hanging. On their walk thither Paula asked
if he stayed late at the ball.
‘I left soon after you.’
‘That was very early, seeing how late you arrived.’
‘Yes.... I did not dance.’
‘What did you do then?’
‘I moped, and walked to the door; and saw an
announcement.’
‘I know the play that is to be performed.’
‘In which you are to be the Princess.’
’That’s not settled, I
have not agreed yet. I shall not play the Princess
of France unless Mr. Mild plays the King of Navarre.’
This sounded rather well. The
Princess was the lady beloved by the King; and Mr.
Mild, the young lieutenant of artillery, was a diffident,
inexperienced, rather plain-looking fellow, whose sole
interest in theatricals lay in the consideration of
his costume and the sound of his own voice in the
ears of the audience. With such an unobjectionable
person to enact the part of lover, the prominent character
of leading young lady or heroine, which Paula was
to personate, was really the most satisfactory in
the whole list for her. For although she was to
be wooed hard, there was just as much love-making
among the remaining personages; while, as Somerset
had understood the play, there could occur no flingings
of her person upon her lover’s neck, or agonized
downfalls upon the stage, in her whole performance,
as there were in the parts chosen by Mrs. Camperton,
the major’s wife, and some of the other ladies.
‘Why do you play at all!’ he murmured.
’What a question! How could
I refuse for such an excellent purpose? They
say that my taking a part will be worth a hundred pounds
to the charity. My father always supported the
hospital, which is quite undenominational; and he
said I was to do the same.’
’Do you think the peculiar means
you have adopted for supporting it entered into his
view?’ inquired Somerset, regarding her with
critical dryness. ‘For my part I don’t.’
‘It is an interesting way,’
she returned persuasively, though apparently in a
state of mental equipoise on the point raised by his
question. ’And I shall not play the Princess,
as I said, to any other than that quiet young man.
Now I assure you of this, so don’t be angry and
absurd! Besides, the King doesn’t marry
me at the end of the play, as in Shakespeare’s
other comedies. And if Miss De Stancy continues
seriously unwell I shall not play at all.’
The young man pressed her hand, but
she gently slipped it away.
‘Are we not engaged, Paula!’
he asked. She evasively shook her head.
‘Come yes we are!
Shall we tell your aunt?’ he continued.
Unluckily at that moment Mrs. Goodman, who had followed
them to the studio at a slower pace, appeared round
the doorway.
‘No, to the last,’
replied Paula hastily. Then her aunt entered,
and the conversation was no longer personal.
Somerset took his departure in a serener
mood though not completely assured.
VIII.
His serenity continued during two
or three following days, when, continuing at the castle,
he got pleasant glimpses of Paula now and then.
Her strong desire that his love for her should be kept
secret, perplexed him; but his affection was generous,
and he acquiesced in that desire.
Meanwhile news of the forthcoming
dramatic performance radiated in every direction.
And in the next number of the county paper it was announced,
to Somerset’s comparative satisfaction, that
the cast was definitely settled, Mr. Mild having agreed
to be the King and Miss Power the French Princess.
Captain De Stancy, with becoming modesty for one who
was the leading spirit, figured quite low down, in
the secondary character of Sir Nathaniel.
Somerset remembered that, by a happy
chance, the costume he had designed for Sir Nathaniel
was not at all picturesque; moreover Sir Nathaniel
scarcely came near the Princess through the whole play.
Every day after this there was coming
and going to and from the castle of railway vans laden
with canvas columns, pasteboard trees, limp house-fronts,
woollen lawns, and lath balustrades. There were
also frequent arrivals of young ladies from neighbouring
country houses, and warriors from the X and Y batteries
of artillery, distinguishable by their regulation
shaving.
But it was upon Captain De Stancy
and Mrs. Camperton that the weight of preparation
fell. Somerset, through being much occupied in
the drawing-office, was seldom present during the
consultations and rehearsals: until one day,
tea being served in the drawing-room at the usual
hour, he dropped in with the rest to receive a cup
from Paula’s table. The chatter was tremendous,
and Somerset was at once consulted about some necessary
carpentry which was to be specially made at Markton.
After that he was looked on as one of the band, which
resulted in a large addition to the number of his
acquaintance in this part of England.
But his own feeling was that of being
an outsider still. This vagary had been originated,
the play chosen, the parts allotted, all in his absence,
and calling him in at the last moment might, if flirtation
were possible in Paula, be but a sop to pacify him.
What would he have given to impersonate her lover
in the piece! But neither Paula nor any one else
had asked him.
The eventful evening came. Somerset
had been engaged during the day with the different
people by whom the works were to be carried out and
in the evening went to his rooms at the Lord-Quantock-Arms,
Markton, where he dined. He did not return to
the castle till the hour fixed for the performance,
and having been received by Mrs. Goodman, entered the
large apartment, now transfigured into a theatre,
like any other spectator.
Rumours of the projected representation
had spread far and wide. Six times the number
of tickets issued might have been readily sold.
Friends and acquaintances of the actors came from
curiosity to see how they would acquit themselves;
while other classes of people came because they were
eager to see well-known notabilities in unwonted situations.
When ladies, hitherto only beheld in frigid, impenetrable
positions behind their coachmen in Markton High Street,
were about to reveal their hidden traits, home attitudes,
intimate smiles, nods, and perhaps kisses, to the
public eye, it was a throwing open of fascinating social
secrets not to be missed for money.
The performance opened with no further
delay than was occasioned by the customary refusal
of the curtain at these times to rise more than two
feet six inches; but this hitch was remedied, and the
play began. It was with no enviable emotion that
Somerset, who was watching intently, saw, not Mr.
Mild, but Captain De Stancy, enter as the King of Navarre.
Somerset as a friend of the family
had had a seat reserved for him next to that of Mrs.
Goodman, and turning to her he said with some excitement,
‘I understood that Mr. Mild had agreed to take
that part?’
‘Yes,’ she said in a whisper,
’so he had; but he broke down. Luckily
Captain De Stancy was familiar with the part, through
having coached the others so persistently, and he
undertook it off-hand. Being about the same figure
as Lieutenant Mild the same dress fits him, with a
little alteration by the tailor.’
It did fit him indeed; and of the
male costumes it was that on which Somerset had bestowed
most pains when designing them. It shrewdly burst
upon his mind that there might have been collusion
between Mild and De Stancy, the former agreeing to
take the captain’s place and act as blind till
the last moment. A greater question was, could
Paula have been aware of this, and would she perform
as the Princess of France now De Stancy was to be
her lover?
‘Does Miss Power know of this change?’
he inquired.
‘She did not till quite a short time ago.’
He controlled his impatience till
the beginning of the second act. The Princess
entered; it was Paula. But whether the slight
embarrassment with which she pronounced her opening
words,
’Good Lord Boyet,
my beauty, though but mean,
Needs not the
painted flourish of your praise,’
was due to the newness of her situation,
or to her knowledge that De Stancy had usurped Mild’s
part of her lover, he could not guess. De Stancy
appeared, and Somerset felt grim as he listened to
the gallant captain’s salutation of the Princess,
and her response.
De S. Fair Princess, welcome to the
court of Navarre.
Paula. Fair, I give you back again:
and welcome, I have
not yet.
Somerset listened to this and to all
that which followed of the same sort, with the reflection
that, after all, the Princess never throughout the
piece compromised her dignity by showing her love for
the King; and that the latter never addressed her
in words in which passion got the better of courtesy.
Moreover, as Paula had herself observed, they did
not marry at the end of the piece, as in Shakespeare’s
other comedies. Somewhat calm in this assurance,
he waited on while the other couples respectively
indulged in their love-making, and banter, including
Mrs. Camperton as the sprightly Rosaline. But
he was doomed to be surprised out of his humour when
the end of the act came on. In abridging the play
for the convenience of representation, the favours
or gifts from the gentlemen to the ladies were personally
presented: and now Somerset saw De Stancy advance
with the necklace fetched by Paula from London, and
clasp it on her neck.
This seemed to throw a less pleasant
light on her hasty journey. To fetch a valuable
ornament to lend it to a poorer friend was estimable;
but to fetch it that the friend’s brother should
have something magnificent to use as a lover’s
offering to herself in public, that wore a different
complexion. And if the article were recognized
by the spectators as the same that Charlotte had worn
at the ball, the presentation by De Stancy of what
must seem to be an heirloom of his house would be
read as symbolizing a union of the families.
De Stancy’s mode of presenting
the necklace, though unauthorized by Shakespeare,
had the full approval of the company, and set them
in good humour to receive Major Camperton as Armado
the braggart. Nothing calculated to stimulate
jealousy occurred again till the fifth act; and then
there arose full cause for it.
The scene was the outside of the Princess’s
pavilion. De Stancy, as the King of Navarre,
stood with his group of attendants awaiting the Princess,
who presently entered from her door. The two began
to converse as the play appointed, De Stancy turning
to her with this reply
’Rebuke me not for that
which you provoke;
The virtue of your eye must break my oath.’
So far all was well; and Paula opened
her lips for the set rejoinder. But before she
had spoken De Stancy continued
’If I profane with my unworthy
hand
(Taking her hand)
This holy shrine, the gentle fine is this
My lips, two blushing pilgrims, ready stand
To smooth that rough touch with a tender kiss.’
Somerset stared. Surely in this
comedy the King never addressed the Princess in such
warm words; and yet they were Shakespeare’s,
for they were quite familiar to him. A dim suspicion
crossed his mind. Mrs. Goodman had brought a
copy of Shakespeare with her, which she kept in her
lap and never looked at: borrowing it, Somerset
turned to ’Romeo and Juliet,’ and there
he saw the words which De Stancy had introduced as
gag, to intensify the mild love-making of the other
play. Meanwhile De Stancy continued
’O then, dear
Saint, let lips do what hands do;
They pray, grant
thou, lest faith turn to despair.
Then move not,
while my prayer’s effect I take.
Thus from my lips,
by yours, my sin is purg’d!’
Could it be that De Stancy was going
to do what came next in the stage direction kiss
her? Before there was time for conjecture on that
point the sound of a very sweet and long-drawn osculation
spread through the room, followed by loud applause
from the people in the cheap seats. De Stancy
withdrew from bending over Paula, and she was very
red in the face. Nothing seemed clearer than
that he had actually done the deed. The applause
continuing, Somerset turned his head. Five hundred
faces had regarded the act, without a consciousness
that it was an interpolation; and four hundred and
fifty mouths in those faces were smiling. About
one half of them were tender smiles; these came from
the women. The other half were at best humorous,
and mainly satirical; these came from the men.
It was a profanation without parallel, and his face
blazed like a coal.
The play was now nearly at an end,
and Somerset sat on, feeling what he could not express.
More than ever was he assured that there had been
collusion between the two artillery officers to bring
about this end. That he should have been the
unhappy man to design those picturesque dresses in
which his rival so audaciously played the lover to
his, Somerset’s, mistress, was an added point
to the satire. He could hardly go so far as to
assume that Paula was a consenting party to this startling
interlude; but her otherwise unaccountable wish that
his own love should be clandestinely shown lent immense
force to a doubt of her sincerity. The ghastly
thought that she had merely been keeping him on, like
a pet spaniel, to amuse her leisure moments till she
should have found appropriate opportunity for an open
engagement with some one else, trusting to his sense
of chivalry to keep secret their little episode, filled
him with a grim heat.
IX.
At the back of the room the applause
had been loud at the moment of the kiss, real or counterfeit.
The cause was partly owing to an exceptional circumstance
which had occurred in that quarter early in the play.
The people had all seated themselves,
and the first act had begun, when the tapestry that
screened the door was lifted gently and a figure appeared
in the opening. The general attention was at this
moment absorbed by the newly disclosed stage, and
scarcely a soul noticed the stranger. Had any
one of the audience turned his head, there would have
been sufficient in the countenance to detain his gaze,
notwithstanding the counter-attraction forward.
He was obviously a man who had come
from afar. There was not a square inch about
him that had anything to do with modern English life.
His visage, which was of the colour of light porphyry,
had little of its original surface left; it was a
face which had been the plaything of strange fires
or pestilences, that had moulded to whatever shape
they chose his originally supple skin, and left it
pitted, puckered, and seamed like a dried water-course.
But though dire catastrophes or the treacherous airs
of remote climates had done their worst upon his exterior,
they seemed to have affected him but little within,
to judge from a certain robustness which showed itself
in his manner of standing.
The face-marks had a meaning, for
any one who could read them, beyond the mere suggestion
of their origin: they signified that this man
had either been the victim of some terrible necessity
as regarded the occupation to which he had devoted
himself, or that he was a man of dogged obstinacy,
from sheer sang froid holding his ground amid malign
forces when others would have fled affrighted away.
As nobody noticed him, he dropped
the door hangings after a while, walked silently along
the matted alley, and sat down in one of the back
chairs. His manner of entry was enough to show
that the strength of character which he seemed to
possess had phlegm for its base and not ardour.
One might have said that perhaps the shocks he had
passed through had taken all his original warmth out
of him. His beaver hat, which he had retained
on his head till this moment, he now placed under
the seat, where he sat absolutely motionless till the
end of the first act, as if he were indulging in a
monologue which did not quite reach his lips.
When Paula entered at the beginning
of the second act he showed as much excitement as
was expressed by a slight movement of the eyes.
When she spoke he turned to his next neighbour, and
asked him in cold level words which had once been
English, but which seemed to have lost the accent
of nationality: ’Is that the young woman
who is the possessor of this castle Power
by name?’
His neighbour happened to be the landlord
at Sleeping-Green, and he informed the stranger that
she was what he supposed.
’And who is that gentleman whose
line of business seems to be to make love to Power?’
’He’s Captain De Stancy,
Sir William De Stancy’s son, who used to own
this property.’
‘Baronet or knight?’
‘Baronet a very old-established family
about here.’
The stranger nodded, and the play
went on, no further word being spoken till the fourth
act was reached, when the stranger again said, without
taking his narrow black eyes from the stage: ’There’s
something in that love-making between Stancy and Power
that’s not all sham!’
‘Well,’ said the landlord,
’I have heard different stories about that,
and wouldn’t be the man to zay what I couldn’t
swear to. The story is that Captain De Stancy,
who is as poor as a gallicrow, is in full cry a’ter
her, and that his on’y chance lies in his being
heir to a title and the wold name. But she has
not shown a genuine hanker for anybody yet.’
’If she finds the money, and
this Stancy finds the name and blood, ’twould
be a very neat match between ’em, hey?’
‘That’s the argument.’
Nothing more was said again for a
long time, but the stranger’s eyes showed more
interest in the passes between Paula and De Stancy
than they had shown before. At length the crisis
came, as described in the last chapter, De Stancy
saluting her with that semblance of a kiss which gave
such umbrage to Somerset. The stranger’s
thin lips lengthened a couple of inches with satisfaction;
he put his hand into his pocket, drew out two half-crowns
which he handed to the landlord, saying, ’Just
applaud that, will you, and get your comrades to do
the same.’
The landlord, though a little surprised,
took the money, and began to clap his hands as desired.
The example was contagious, and spread all over the
room; for the audience, gentle and simple, though they
might not have followed the blank verse in all its
bearings, could at least appreciate a kiss. It
was the unusual acclamation raised by this means which
had led Somerset to turn his head.
When the play had ended the stranger
was the first to rise, and going downstairs at the
head of the crowd he passed out of doors, and was lost
to view. Some questions were asked by the landlord
as to the stranger’s individuality; but few
had seen him; fewer had noticed him, singular as he
was; and none knew his name.
While these things had been going
on in the quarter allotted to the commonalty, Somerset
in front had waited the fall of the curtain with those
sick and sorry feelings which should be combated by
the aid of philosophy and a good conscience, but which
really are only subdued by time and the abrading rush
of affairs. He was, however, stoical enough,
when it was all over, to accept Mrs. Goodman’s
invitation to accompany her to the drawing-room, fully
expecting to find there a large company, including
Captain De Stancy.
But none of the acting ladies and
gentlemen had emerged from their dressing-rooms as
yet. Feeling that he did not care to meet any
of them that night, he bade farewell to Mrs. Goodman
after a few minutes of conversation, and left her.
While he was passing along the corridor, at the side
of the gallery which had been used as the theatre,
Paula crossed it from the latter apartment towards
an opposite door. She was still in the dress
of the Princess, and the diamond and pearl necklace
still hung over her bosom as placed there by Captain
De Stancy.
Her eye caught Somerset’s, and
she stopped. Probably there was something in
his face which told his mind, for she invited him by
a smile into the room she was entering.
‘I congratulate you on your
performance,’ he said mechanically, when she
pushed to the door.
‘Do you really think it was
well done?’ She drew near him with a sociable
air.
’It was startlingly done the
part from “Romeo and Juliet” pre-eminently
so.’
’Do you think I knew he was
going to introduce it, or do you think I didn’t
know?’ she said, with that gentle sauciness which
shows itself in the loved one’s manner when
she has had a triumphant evening without the lover’s
assistance.
‘I think you may have known.’
‘No,’ she averred, decisively
shaking her head. ’It took me as much by
surprise as it probably did you. But why should
I have told!’
Without answering that question Somerset
went on. ’Then what he did at the end of
his gag was of course a surprise also.’
‘He didn’t really do what
he seemed to do,’ she serenely answered.
’Well, I have no right to make
observations your actions are not subject
to my surveillance; you float above my plane,’
said the young man with some bitterness. ‘But
to speak plainly, surely he kissed you?’
‘No,’ she said. ’He
only kissed the air in front of me ever
so far off.’
‘Was it six inches off?’
‘No, not six inches.’
‘Nor three.’
‘It was quite one,’ she said with an ingenuous
air.
‘I don’t call that very far.’
’A miss is as good as a mile,
says the time-honoured proverb; and it is not for
us modern mortals to question its truth.’
‘How can you be so off-hand?’
broke out Somerset. ’I love you wildly and
desperately, Paula, and you know it well!’
‘I have never denied knowing it,’ she
said softly.
’Then why do you, with such
knowledge, adopt an air of levity at such a moment
as this! You keep me at arm’s-length, and
won’t say whether you care for me one bit, or
no. I have owned all to you; yet never once have
you owned anything to me!’
’I have owned much. And
you do me wrong if you consider that I show levity.
But even if I had not owned everything, and you all,
it is not altogether such a grievous thing.’
’You mean to say that it is
not grievous, even if a man does love a woman, and
suffers all the pain of feeling he loves in vain?
Well, I say it is quite the reverse, and I have grounds
for knowing.’
’Now, don’t fume so, George
Somerset, but hear me. My not owning all may
not have the dreadful meaning you think, and therefore
it may not be really such a grievous thing. There
are genuine reasons for women’s conduct in these
matters as well as for men’s, though it is sometimes
supposed to be regulated entirely by caprice.
And if I do not give way to every feeling I
mean demonstration it is because I don’t
want to. There now, you know what that implies;
and be content.’
‘Very well,’ said Somerset,
with repressed sadness, ’I will not expect you
to say more. But you do like me a little, Paula?’
‘Now!’ she said, shaking
her head with symptoms of tenderness and looking into
his eyes. ’What have you just promised?
Perhaps I like you a little more than a little, which
is much too much! Yes, Shakespeare
says so, and he is always right. Do you still
doubt me? Ah, I see you do!’
‘Because somebody has stood
nearer to you to-night than I.’
’A fogy like him! half
as old again as either of us! How can you mind
him? What shall I do to show you that I do not
for a moment let him come between me and you?’
’It is not for me to suggest
what you should do. Though what you should permit
me to do is obvious enough.’
She dropped her voice: ’You
mean, permit you to do really and in earnest what
he only seemed to do in the play.’
Somerset signified by a look that
such had been his thought.
Paula was silent. ‘No,’
she murmured at last. ’That cannot be.
He did not, nor must you.’
It was said none the less decidedly for being spoken
low.
’You quite resent such a suggestion:
you have a right to. I beg your pardon, not for
speaking of it, but for thinking it.’
’I don’t resent it at
all, and I am not offended one bit. But I am not
the less of opinion that it is possible to be premature
in some things; and to do this just now would be premature.
I know what you would say that you would
not have asked it, but for that unfortunate improvisation
of it in the play. But that I was not responsible
for, and therefore owe no reparation to you now....
Listen!’
‘Paula Paula!
Where in the world are you?’ was heard resounding
along the corridor in the voice of her aunt.
’Our friends are all ready to leave, and you
will surely bid them good-night!’
‘I must be gone I
won’t ring for you to be shown out come
this way.’
’But how will you get on in
repeating the play tomorrow evening if that interpolation
is against your wish?’ he asked, looking her
hard in the face.
’I’ll think it over during
the night. Come to-morrow morning to help me
settle. But,’ she added, with coy yet genial
independence, ’listen to me. Not a word
more about a what you asked for, mind!
I don’t want to go so far, and I will not not
just yet anyhow I mean perhaps never.
You must promise that, or I cannot see you again alone.’
‘It shall be as you request.’
’Very well. And not a word
of this to a soul. My aunt suspects: but
she is a good aunt and will say nothing. Now
that is clearly understood, I should be glad to consult
with you tomorrow early. I will come to you in
the studio or Pleasance as soon as I am disengaged.’
She took him to a little chamfered
doorway in the corner, which opened into a descending
turret; and Somerset went down. When he had unfastened
the door at the bottom, and stepped into the lower
corridor, she asked, ‘Are you down?’ And
on receiving an affirmative reply she closed the top
door.
X.
Somerset was in the studio the next
morning about ten o’clock superintending the
labours of Knowles, Bowles, and Cockton, whom he had
again engaged to assist him with the drawings on his
appointment to carry out the works. When he had
set them going he ascended the staircase of the great
tower for some purpose that bore upon the forthcoming
repairs of this part. Passing the door of the
telegraph-room he heard little sounds from the instrument,
which somebody was working. Only two people in
the castle, to the best of his knowledge, knew the
trick of this; Miss Power, and a page in her service
called John. Miss De Stancy could also despatch
messages, but she was at Myrtle Villa.
The door was closed, and much as he
would have liked to enter, the possibility that Paula
was not the performer led him to withhold his steps.
He went on to where the uppermost masonry had resisted
the mighty hostility of the elements for five hundred
years without receiving worse dilapidation than half-a-century
produces upon the face of man. But he still wondered
who was telegraphing, and whether the message bore
on housekeeping, architecture, theatricals, or love.
Could Somerset have seen through the
panels of the door in passing, he would have beheld
the room occupied by Paula alone.
It was she who sat at the instrument,
and the message she was despatching ran as under:
’Can you send down a competent
actress, who will undertake the part of Princess of
France in “Love’s Labour’s Lost”
this evening in a temporary theatre here? Dresses
already provided suitable to a lady about the middle
height. State price.’
The telegram was addressed to a well-known
theatrical agent in London.
Off went the message, and Paula retired
into the next room, leaving the door open between
that and the one she had just quitted. Here she
busied herself with writing some letters, till in less
than an hour the telegraph instrument showed signs
of life, and she hastened back to its side. The
reply received from the agent was as follows:
’Miss Barbara Bell of the Regent’s
Theatre could come. Quite competent. Her
terms would be about twenty-five guineas.’
Without a moment’s pause Paula returned for
answer:
‘The terms are quite satisfactory.’
Presently she heard the instrument
again, and emerging from the next room in which she
had passed the intervening time as before, she read:
’Miss Barbara Bell’s terms
were accidentally understated. They would be
forty guineas, in consequence of the distance.
Am waiting at the office for a reply.’
Paula set to work as before and replied:
‘Quite satisfactory; only let her come at once.’
She did not leave the room this time,
but went to an arrow-slit hard by and gazed out at
the trees till the instrument began to speak again.
Returning to it with a leisurely manner, implying a
full persuasion that the matter was settled, she was
somewhat surprised to learn that,
’Miss Bell, in stating her terms,
understands that she will not be required to leave
London till the middle of the afternoon. If it
is necessary for her to leave at once, ten guineas
extra would be indispensable, on account of the great
inconvenience of such a short notice.’
Paula seemed a little vexed, but not
much concerned she sent back with a readiness scarcely
politic in the circumstances:
‘She must start at once. Price agreed to.’
Her impatience for the answer was
mixed with curiosity as to whether it was due to the
agent or to Miss Barbara Bell that the prices had grown
like Jack’s Bean-stalk in the negotiation.
Another telegram duly came:
‘Travelling expenses are expected to be paid.’
With decided impatience she dashed off:
‘Of course; but nothing more will be agreed
to.’
Then, and only then, came the desired reply:
‘Miss Bell starts by the twelve o’clock
train.’
This business being finished, Paula
left the chamber and descended into the inclosure
called the Pleasance, a spot grassed down like a lawn.
Here stood Somerset, who, having come down from the
tower, was looking on while a man searched for old
foundations under the sod with a crowbar. He
was glad to see her at last, and noticed that she looked
serene and relieved; but could not for the moment divine
the cause. Paula came nearer, returned his salutation,
and regarded the man’s operations in silence
awhile till his work led him to a distance from them.
‘Do you still wish to consult me?’ asked
Somerset.
‘About the building perhaps,’ said she.
‘Not about the play.’
‘But you said so?’
‘Yes; but it will be unnecessary.’
Somerset thought this meant skittishness, and merely
bowed.
‘You mistake me as usual,’
she said, in a low tone. ’I am not going
to consult you on that matter, because I have done
all you could have asked for without consulting you.
I take no part in the play to-night.’
‘Forgive my momentary doubt!’
’Somebody else will play for
me an actress from London. But on no
account must the substitution be known beforehand or
the performance to-night will never come off:
and that I should much regret.’
’Captain De Stancy will not
play his part if he knows you will not play yours that’s
what you mean?’
‘You may suppose it is,’
she said, smiling. ’And to guard against
this you must help me to keep the secret by being
my confederate.’
To be Paula’s confederate; to-day,
indeed, time had brought him something worth waiting
for. ‘In anything!’ cried Somerset.
‘Only in this!’ said she,
with soft severity. ’And you know what you
have promised, George! And you remember there
is to be no what we talked about!
Now will you go in the one-horse brougham to Markton
Station this afternoon, and meet the four o’clock
train? Inquire for a lady for Stancy Castle a
Miss Bell; see her safely into the carriage, and send
her straight on here. I am particularly anxious
that she should not enter the town, for I think she
once came to Markton in a starring company, and she
might be recognized, and my plan be defeated.’
Thus she instructed her lover and
devoted friend; and when he could stay no longer he
left her in the garden to return to his studio.
As Somerset went in by the garden door he met a strange-looking
personage coming out by the same passage a
stranger, with the manner of a Dutchman, the face
of a smelter, and the clothes of an inhabitant of Guiana.
The stranger, whom we have already seen sitting at
the back of the theatre the night before, looked hard
from Somerset to Paula, and from Paula again to Somerset,
as he stepped out. Somerset had an unpleasant
conviction that this queer gentleman had been standing
for some time in the doorway unnoticed, quizzing him
and his mistress as they talked together. If so
he might have learnt a secret.
When he arrived upstairs, Somerset
went to a window commanding a view of the garden.
Paula still stood in her place, and the stranger was
earnestly conversing with her. Soon they passed
round the corner and disappeared.
It was now time for him to see about
starting for Markton, an intelligible zest for circumventing
the ardent and coercive captain of artillery saving
him from any unnecessary delay in the journey.
He was at the station ten minutes before the train
was due; and when it drew up to the platform the first
person to jump out was Captain De Stancy in sportsman’s
attire and with a gun in his hand. Somerset nodded,
and De Stancy spoke, informing the architect that
he had been ten miles up the line shooting waterfowl.
‘That’s Miss Power’s carriage, I
think,’ he added.
‘Yes,’ said Somerset carelessly.
’She expects a friend, I believe. We shall
see you at the castle again to-night?’
De Stancy assured him that they would,
and the two men parted, Captain De Stancy, when he
had glanced to see that the carriage was empty, going
on to where a porter stood with a couple of spaniels.
Somerset now looked again to the train.
While his back had been turned to converse with the
captain, a lady of five-and-thirty had alighted from
the identical compartment occupied by De Stancy.
She made an inquiry about getting to Stancy Castle,
upon which Somerset, who had not till now observed
her, went forward, and introducing himself assisted
her to the carriage and saw her safely off.
De Stancy had by this time disappeared,
and Somerset walked on to his rooms at the Lord-Quantock-Arms,
where he remained till he had dined, picturing the
discomfiture of his alert rival when there should enter
to him as Princess, not Paula Power, but Miss Bell
of the Regent’s Theatre, London. Thus the
hour passed, till he found that if he meant to see
the issue of the plot it was time to be off.
On arriving at the castle, Somerset
entered by the public door from the hall as before,
a natural delicacy leading him to feel that though
he might be welcomed as an ally at the stage-door in
other words, the door from the corridor it
was advisable not to take too ready an advantage of
a privilege which, in the existing secrecy of his understanding
with Paula, might lead to an overthrow of her plans
on that point.
Not intending to sit out the whole
performance, Somerset contented himself with standing
in a window recess near the proscenium, whence he
could observe both the stage and the front rows of
spectators. He was quite uncertain whether Paula
would appear among the audience to-night, and resolved
to wait events. Just before the rise of the curtain
the young lady in question entered and sat down.
When the scenery was disclosed and the King of Navarre
appeared, what was Somerset’s surprise to find
that, though the part was the part taken by De Stancy
on the previous night, the voice was that of Mr. Mild;
to him, at the appointed season, entered the Princess,
namely, Miss Barbara Bell.
Before Somerset had recovered from
his crestfallen sensation at De Stancy’s elusiveness,
that officer himself emerged in evening dress from
behind a curtain forming a wing to the proscenium,
and Somerset remarked that the minor part originally
allotted to him was filled by the subaltern who had
enacted it the night before. De Stancy glanced
across, whether by accident or otherwise Somerset
could not determine, and his glance seemed to say
he quite recognized there had been a trial of wits
between them, and that, thanks to his chance meeting
with Miss Bell in the train, his had proved the stronger.
The house being less crowded to-night
there were one or two vacant chairs in the best part.
De Stancy, advancing from where he had stood for a
few moments, seated himself comfortably beside Miss
Power.
On the other side of her he now perceived
the same queer elderly foreigner (as he appeared)
who had come to her in the garden that morning.
Somerset was surprised to perceive also that Paula
with very little hesitation introduced him and De
Stancy to each other. A conversation ensued between
the three, none the less animated for being carried
on in a whisper, in which Paula seemed on strangely
intimate terms with the stranger, and the stranger
to show feelings of great friendship for De Stancy,
considering that they must be new acquaintances.
The play proceeded, and Somerset still
lingered in his corner. He could not help fancying
that De Stancy’s ingenious relinquishment of
his part, and its obvious reason, was winning Paula’s
admiration. His conduct was homage carried to
unscrupulous and inconvenient lengths, a sort of thing
which a woman may chide, but which she can never resent.
Who could do otherwise than talk kindly to a man,
incline a little to him, and condone his fault, when
the sole motive of so audacious an exercise of his
wits was to escape acting with any other heroine than
herself.
His conjectures were brought to a
pause by the ending of the comedy, and the opportunity
afforded him of joining the group in front. The
mass of people were soon gone, and the knot of friends
assembled around Paula were discussing the merits
and faults of the two days’ performance.
‘My uncle, Mr. Abner Power,’
said Paula suddenly to Somerset, as he came near,
presenting the stranger to the astonished young man.
’I could not see you before the performance,
as I should have liked to do. The return of my
uncle is so extraordinary that it ought to be told
in a less hurried way than this. He has been
supposed dead by all of us for nearly ten years ever
since the time we last heard from him.’
‘For which I am to blame,’
said Mr. Power, nodding to Paula’s architect.
’Yet not I, but accident and a sluggish temperament.
There are times, Mr Somerset, when the human creature
feels no interest in his kind, and assumes that his
kind feels no interest in him. The feeling is
not active enough to make him fly from their presence;
but sufficient to keep him silent if he happens to
be away. I may not have described it precisely;
but this I know, that after my long illness, and the
fancied neglect of my letters ’
‘For which my father was not
to blame, since he did not receive them,’ said
Paula.
‘For which nobody was to blame after
that, I say, I wrote no more.’
‘You have much pleasure in returning
at last, no doubt,’ said Somerset.
’Sir, as I remained away without
particular pain, so I return without particular joy.
I speak the truth, and no compliments. I may add
that there is one exception to this absence of feeling
from my heart, namely, that I do derive great satisfaction
from seeing how mightily this young woman has grown
and prevailed.’
This address, though delivered nominally
to Somerset, was listened to by Paula, Mrs. Goodman,
and De Stancy also. After uttering it, the speaker
turned away, and continued his previous conversation
with Captain De Stancy. From this time till the
group parted he never again spoke directly to Somerset,
paying him barely so much attention as he might have
expected as Paula’s architect, and certainly
less than he might have supposed his due as her accepted
lover.
The result of the appearance, as from
the tomb, of this wintry man was that the evening
ended in a frigid and formal way which gave little
satisfaction to the sensitive Somerset, who was abstracted
and constrained by reason of thoughts on how this
resuscitation of the uncle would affect his relation
with Paula. It was possibly also the thought
of two at least of the others. There had, in truth,
scarcely yet been time enough to adumbrate the possibilities
opened up by this gentleman’s return.
The only private word exchanged by
Somerset with any one that night was with Mrs. Goodman,
in whom he always recognized a friend to his cause,
though the fluidity of her character rendered her but
a feeble one at the best of times. She informed
him that Mr. Power had no sort of legal control over
Paula, or direction in her estates; but Somerset could
not doubt that a near and only blood relation, even
had he possessed but half the static force of character
that made itself apparent in Mr. Power, might exercise
considerable moral influence over the girl if he chose.
And in view of Mr. Power’s marked preference
for De Stancy, Somerset had many misgivings as to
its operating in a direction favourable to himself.
XI.
Somerset was deeply engaged with his
draughtsmen and builders during the three following
days, and scarcely entered the occupied wing of the
castle.
At his suggestion Paula had agreed
to have the works executed as such operations were
carried out in old times, before the advent of contractors.
Each trade required in the building was to be represented
by a master-tradesman of that denomination, who should
stand responsible for his own section of labour, and
for no other, Somerset himself as chief technicist
working out his designs on the spot. By this means
the thoroughness of the workmanship would be greatly
increased in comparison with the modern arrangement,
whereby a nominal builder, seldom present, who can
certainly know no more than one trade intimately and
well, and who often does not know that, undertakes
the whole.
But notwithstanding its manifest advantages
to the proprietor, the plan added largely to the responsibilities
of the architect, who, with his master-mason, master-carpenter,
master-plumber, and what not, had scarcely a moment
to call his own. Still, the method being upon
the face of it the true one, Somerset supervised with
a will.
But there seemed to float across the
court to him from the inhabited wing an intimation
that things were not as they had been before; that
an influence adverse to himself was at work behind
the ashlared face of inner wall which confronted him.
Perhaps this was because he never saw Paula at the
windows, or heard her footfall in that half of the
building given over to himself and his myrmidons.
There was really no reason other than a sentimental
one why he should see her. The uninhabited part
of the castle was almost an independent structure,
and it was quite natural to exist for weeks in this
wing without coming in contact with residents in the
other.
A more pronounced cause than vague
surmise was destined to perturb him, and this in an
unexpected manner. It happened one morning that
he glanced through a local paper while waiting at
the Lord-Quantock-Arms for the pony-carriage to be
brought round in which he often drove to the castle.
The paper was two days old, but to his unutterable
amazement he read therein a paragraph which ran as
follows:
’We are informed that a marriage
is likely to be arranged between Captain De Stancy,
of the Royal Horse Artillery, only surviving son of
Sir William De Stancy, Baronet, and Paula, only daughter
of the late John Power, Esq., M.P., of Stancy Castle.’
Somerset dropped the paper, and stared
out of the window. Fortunately for his emotions,
the horse and carriage were at this moment brought
to the door, so that nothing hindered Somerset in
driving off to the spot at which he would be soonest
likely to learn what truth or otherwise there was
in the newspaper report. From the first he doubted
it: and yet how should it have got there?
Such strange rumours, like paradoxical maxims, generally
include a portion of truth. Five days had elapsed
since he last spoke to Paula.
Reaching the castle he entered his
own quarters as usual, and after setting the draughtsmen
to work walked up and down pondering how he might
best see her without making the paragraph the ground
of his request for an interview; for if it were a
fabrication, such a reason would wound her pride in
her own honour towards him, and if it were partly
true, he would certainly do better in leaving her alone
than in reproaching her. It would simply amount
to a proof that Paula was an arrant coquette.
In his meditation he stood still,
closely scanning one of the jamb-stones of a doorless
entrance, as if to discover where the old hinge-hook
had entered the stonework. He heard a footstep
behind him, and looking round saw Paula standing by.
She held a newspaper in her hand. The spot was
one quite hemmed in from observation, a fact of which
she seemed to be quite aware.
‘I have something to tell you,’
she said; ’something important. But you
are so occupied with that old stone that I am obliged
to wait.’
‘It is not true surely!’ he said, looking
at the paper.
‘No, look here,’ she said,
holding up the sheet. It was not what he had
supposed, but a new one the local rival
to that which had contained the announcement, and
was still damp from the press. She pointed, and
he read
’We are authorized to state
that there is no foundation whatever for the assertion
of our contemporary that a marriage is likely to be
arranged between Captain De Stancy and Miss Power
of Stancy Castle.’
Somerset pressed her hand. ‘It
disturbed me,’ he said, ’though I did not
believe it.’
’It astonished me, as much as
it disturbed you; and I sent this contradiction at
once.’
‘How could it have got there?’
She shook her head.
‘You have not the least knowledge?’
‘Not the least. I wish I had.’
‘It was not from any friends of De Stancy’s?
or himself?’
’It was not. His sister
has ascertained beyond doubt that he knew nothing
of it. Well, now, don’t say any more to
me about the matter.’
‘I’ll find out how it got into the paper.’
‘Not now any future time will do.
I have something else to tell you.’
‘I hope the news is as good
as the last,’ he said, looking into her face
with anxiety; for though that face was blooming, it
seemed full of a doubt as to how her next information
would be taken.
’O yes; it is good, because
everybody says so. We are going to take a delightful
journey. My new-created uncle, as he seems, and
I, and my aunt, and perhaps Charlotte, if she is well
enough, are going to Nice, and other places about
there.’
‘To Nice!’ said Somerset, rather blankly.
‘And I must stay here?’
‘Why, of course you must, considering
what you have undertaken!’ she said, looking
with saucy composure into his eyes. ’My
uncle’s reason for proposing the journey just
now is, that he thinks the alterations will make residence
here dusty and disagreeable during the spring.
The opportunity of going with him is too good a one
for us to lose, as I have never been there.’
’I wish I was going to be one
of the party!... What do you wish about
it?’
She shook her head impenetrably.
’A woman may wish some things she does not care
to tell!’
’Are you really glad you are
going, dearest? as I must call you
just once,’ said the young man, gazing earnestly
into her face, which struck him as looking far too
rosy and radiant to be consistent with ever so little
regret at leaving him behind.
’I take great interest in foreign
trips, especially to the shores of the Mediterranean:
and everybody makes a point of getting away when the
house is turned out of the window.’
’But you do feel a little sadness,
such as I should feel if our positions were reversed?’
‘I think you ought not to have
asked that so incredulously,’ she murmured.
’We can be near each other in spirit, when our
bodies are far apart, can we not?’ Her tone
grew softer and she drew a little closer to his side
with a slightly nestling motion, as she went on, ’May
I be sure that you will not think unkindly of me when
I am absent from your sight, and not begrudge me any
little pleasure because you are not there to share
it with me?’
’May you! Can you ask it?...
As for me, I shall have no pleasure to be begrudged
or otherwise. The only pleasure I have is, as
you well know, in you. When you are with me,
I am happy: when you are away, I take no pleasure
in anything.’
‘I don’t deserve it.
I have no right to disturb you so,’ she said,
very gently. ’But I have given you some
pleasure, have I not? A little more pleasure
than pain, perhaps?’
’You have, and yet....
But I don’t accuse you, dearest. Yes, you
have given me pleasure. One truly pleasant time
was when we stood together in the summer-house on
the evening of the garden-party, and you said you
liked me to love you.’
‘Yes, it was a pleasant time,’
she returned thoughtfully. ’How the rain
came down, and formed a gauze between us and the dancers,
did it not; and how afraid we were at least
I was lest anybody should discover us there,
and how quickly I ran in after the rain was over!’
‘Yes’, said Somerset,
’I remember it. But no harm came of it to
you.... And perhaps no good will come of it to
me.’
‘Do not be premature in your
conclusions, sir,’ she said archly. ’If
you really do feel for me only half what you say,
we shall you will make good come of it in
some way or other.’
‘Dear Paula now I believe you, and
can bear anything.’
’Then we will say no more; because,
as you recollect, we agreed not to go too far.
No expostulations, for we are going to be practical
young people; besides, I won’t listen if you
utter them. I simply echo your words, and say
I, too, believe you. Now I must go. Have
faith in me, and don’t magnify trifles light
as air.’
’I think I understand you.
And if I do, it will make a great difference in my
conduct. You will have no cause to complain.’
’Then you must not understand
me so much as to make much difference; for your conduct
as my architect is perfect. But I must not linger
longer, though I wished you to know this news from
my very own lips.’
‘Bless you for it! When do you leave?’
‘The day after to-morrow.’
’So early? Does your uncle
guess anything? Do you wish him to be told just
yet?’
‘Yes, to the first; no, to the second.’
‘I may write to you?’
‘On business, yes. It will be necessary.’
‘How can you speak so at a time of parting?’
’Now, George you
see I say George, and not Mr. Somerset, and you may
draw your own inference don’t be so
morbid in your reproaches! I have informed you
that you may write, or still better, telegraph, since
the wire is so handy on business.
Well, of course, it is for you to judge whether you
will add postscripts of another sort. There, you
make me say more than a woman ought, because you are
so obtuse and literal. Good afternoon good-bye!
This will be my address.’
She handed him a slip of paper, and flitted away.
Though he saw her again after this,
it was during the bustle of preparation, when there
was always a third person present, usually in the
shape of that breathing refrigerator, her uncle.
Hence the few words that passed between them were
of the most formal description, and chiefly concerned
the restoration of the castle, and a church at Nice
designed by him, which he wanted her to inspect.
They were to leave by an early afternoon
train, and Somerset was invited to lunch on that day.
The morning was occupied by a long business consultation
in the studio with Mr. Power and Mrs. Goodman on what
rooms were to be left locked up, what left in charge
of the servants, and what thrown open to the builders
and workmen under the surveillance of Somerset.
At present the work consisted mostly of repairs to
existing rooms, so as to render those habitable which
had long been used only as stores for lumber.
Paula did not appear during this discussion; but when
they were all seated in the dining-hall she came in
dressed for the journey, and, to outward appearance,
with blithe anticipation at its prospect blooming
from every feature. Next to her came Charlotte
De Stancy, still with some of the pallor of an invalid,
but wonderfully brightened up, as Somerset thought,
by the prospect of a visit to a delightful shore.
It might have been this; and it might have been that
Somerset’s presence had a share in the change.
It was in the hall, when they were
in the bustle of leave-taking, that there occurred
the only opportunity for the two or three private words
with Paula to which his star treated him on that last
day. His took the hasty form of, ‘You will
write soon?’
‘Telegraphing will be quicker,’
she answered in the same low tone; and whispering
‘Be true to me!’ turned away.
How unreasonable he was! In addition
to those words, warm as they were, he would have preferred
a little paleness of cheek, or trembling of lip, instead
of the bloom and the beauty which sat upon her undisturbed
maidenhood, to tell him that in some slight way she
suffered at his loss.
Immediately after this they went to
the carriages waiting at the door. Somerset,
who had in a measure taken charge of the castle, accompanied
them and saw them off, much as if they were his visitors.
She stepped in, a general adieu was spoken, and she
was gone.
While the carriages rolled away, he
ascended to the top of the tower, where he saw them
lessen to spots on the road, and turn the corner out
of sight. The chances of a rival seemed to grow
in proportion as Paula receded from his side; but
he could not have answered why. He had bidden
her and her relatives adieu on her own doorstep, like
a privileged friend of the family, while De Stancy
had scarcely seen her since the play-night. That
the silence into which the captain appeared to have
sunk was the placidity of conscious power, was scarcely
probable; yet that adventitious aids existed for De
Stancy he could not deny. The link formed by
Charlotte between De Stancy and Paula, much as he liked
the ingenuous girl, was one that he could have wished
away. It constituted a bridge of access to Paula’s
inner life and feelings which nothing could rival;
except that one fact which, as he firmly believed,
did actually rival it, giving him faith and hope;
his own primary occupation of Paula’s heart.
Moreover, Mrs. Goodman would be an influence favourable
to himself and his cause during the journey; though,
to be sure, to set against her there was the phlegmatic
and obstinate Abner Power, in whom, apprised by those
subtle media of intelligence which lovers possess,
he fancied he saw no friend.
Somerset remained but a short time
at the castle that day. The light of its chambers
had fled, the gross grandeur of the dictatorial towers
oppressed him, and the studio was hateful. He
remembered a promise made long ago to Mr. Woodwell
of calling upon him some afternoon; and a visit which
had not much attractiveness in it at other times recommended
itself now, through being the one possible way open
to him of hearing Paula named and her doings talked
of. Hence in walking back to Markton, instead
of going up the High Street, he turned aside into the
unfrequented footway that led to the minister’s
cottage.
Mr. Woodwell was not indoors at the
moment of his call, and Somerset lingered at the doorway,
and cast his eyes around. It was a house which
typified the drearier tenets of its occupier with great
exactness. It stood upon its spot of earth without
any natural union with it: no mosses disguised
the stiff straight line where wall met earth; not
a creeper softened the aspect of the bare front.
The garden walk was strewn with loose clinkers from
the neighbouring foundry, which rolled under the pedestrian’s
foot and jolted his soul out of him before he reached
the porchless door. But all was clean, and clear,
and dry.
Whether Mr. Woodwell was personally
responsible for this condition of things there was
not time to closely consider, for Somerset perceived
the minister coming up the walk towards him. Mr.
Woodwell welcomed him heartily; and yet with the mien
of a man whose mind has scarcely dismissed some scene
which has preceded the one that confronts him.
What that scene was soon transpired.
‘I have had a busy afternoon,’
said the minister, as they walked indoors; ’or
rather an exciting afternoon. Your client at Stancy
Castle, whose uncle, as I imagine you know, has so
unexpectedly returned, has left with him to-day for
the south of France; and I wished to ask her before
her departure some questions as to how a charity organized
by her father was to be administered in her absence.
But I have been very unfortunate. She could not
find time to see me at her own house, and I awaited
her at the station, all to no purpose, owing to the
presence of her friends. Well, well, I must see
if a letter will find her.’
Somerset asked if anybody of the neighbourhood
was there to see them off.
’Yes, that was the trouble of
it. Captain De Stancy was there, and quite monopolized
her. I don’t know what ’tis coming
to, and perhaps I have no business to inquire, since
she is scarcely a member of our church now. Who
could have anticipated the daughter of my old friend
John Power developing into the ordinary gay woman
of the world as she has done? Who could have
expected her to associate with people who show contempt
for their Maker’s intentions by flippantly assuming
other characters than those in which He created them?’
‘You mistake her,’ murmured
Somerset, in a voice which he vainly endeavoured to
attune to philosophy. ’Miss Power has some
very rare and beautiful qualities in her nature, though
I confess I tremble fear lest the De Stancy
influence should be too strong.’
’Sir, it is already! Do
you remember my telling you that I thought the force
of her surroundings would obscure the pure daylight
of her spirit, as a monkish window of coloured images
attenuates the rays of God’s sun? I do
not wish to indulge in rash surmises, but her oscillation
from her family creed of Calvinistic truth towards
the traditions of the De Stancys has been so decided,
though so gradual, that well, I may be
wrong.’
‘That what?’ said the young man sharply.
’I sometimes think she will
take to her as husband the present representative
of that impoverished line Captain De Stancy which
she may easily do, if she chooses, as his behaviour
to-day showed.’
‘He was probably there on account
of his sister,’ said Somerset, trying to escape
the mental picture of farewell gallantries bestowed
on Paula.
‘It was hinted at in the papers the other day.’
‘And it was flatly contradicted.’
’Yes. Well, we shall see
in the Lord’s good time; I can do no more for
her. And now, Mr. Somerset, pray take a cup of
tea.’
The revelations of the minister depressed
Somerset a little, and he did not stay long.
As he went to the door Woodwell said, ’There
is a worthy man the deacon of our chapel,
Mr. Havill who would like to be friendly
with you. Poor man, since the death of his wife
he seems to have something on his mind some
trouble which my words will not reach. If ever
you are passing his door, please give him a look in.
He fears that calling on you might be an intrusion.’
Somerset did not clearly promise,
and went his way. The minister’s allusion
to the announcement of the marriage reminded Somerset
that she had expressed a wish to know how the paragraph
came to be inserted. The wish had been carelessly
spoken; but he went to the newspaper office to make
inquiries on the point.
The reply was unexpected. The
reporter informed his questioner that in returning
from the theatricals, at which he was present, he shared
a fly with a gentleman who assured him that such an
alliance was certain, so obviously did it recommend
itself to all concerned, as a means of strengthening
both families. The gentleman’s knowledge
of the Powers was so precise that the reporter did
not hesitate to accept his assertion. He was
a man who had seen a great deal of the world, and his
face was noticeable for the seams and scars on it.
Somerset recognized Paula’s uncle in the portrait.
Hostilities, then, were beginning.
The paragraph had been meant as the first slap.
Taking her abroad was the second.