I.
‘I have decided that I cannot
see Sir William again: I shall go away,’
said Paula on the evening of the next day, as she lay
on her bed in a flushed and highly-strung condition,
though a person who had heard her words without seeing
her face would have assumed perfect equanimity to
be the mood which expressed itself with such quietness.
This was the case with her aunt, who was looking out
of the window at some idlers from Markton walking
round the castle with their eyes bent upon its windows,
and she made no haste to reply.
’Those people have come to see
me, as they have a right to do when a person acts
so strangely,’ Paula continued. ’And
hence I am better away.’
‘Where do you think to go to?’
Paula replied in the tone of one who
was actuated entirely by practical considerations:
’Out of England certainly. And as Normandy
lies nearest, I think I shall go there. It is
a very nice country to ramble in.’
‘Yes, it is a very nice country
to ramble in,’ echoed her aunt, in moderate
tones. ‘When do you intend to start?’
’I should like to cross to-night.
You must go with me, aunt; will you not?’
Mrs. Goodman expostulated against
such suddenness. ’It will redouble the
rumours that are afloat, if, after being supposed ill,
you are seen going off by railway perfectly well.’
’That’s a contingency
which I am quite willing to run the risk of. Well,
it would be rather sudden, as you say, to go to-night.
But we’ll go to-morrow night at latest.’
Under the influence of the decision she bounded up
like an elastic ball and went to the glass, which showed
a light in her eye that had not been there before this
resolution to travel in Normandy had been taken.
The evening and the next morning were
passed in writing a final and kindly note of dismissal
to Sir William De Stancy, in making arrangements for
the journey, and in commissioning Havill to take advantage
of their absence by emptying certain rooms of their
furniture, and repairing their dilapidations a
work which, with that in hand, would complete the
section for which he had been engaged. Mr. Wardlaw
had left the castle; so also had Charlotte, by her
own wish, her residence there having been found too
oppressive to herself to be continued for the present.
Accompanied by Mrs. Goodman, Milly, and Clementine,
the elderly French maid, who still remained with them,
Paula drove into Markton in the twilight and took
the train to Budmouth.
When they got there they found that
an unpleasant breeze was blowing out at sea, though
inland it had been calm enough. Mrs. Goodman proposed
to stay at Budmouth till the next day, in hope that
there might be smooth water; but an English seaport
inn being a thing that Paula disliked more than a
rough passage, she would not listen to this counsel.
Other impatient reasons, too, might have weighed with
her. When night came their looming miseries began.
Paula found that in addition to her own troubles she
had those of three other people to support; but she
did not audibly complain.
‘Paula, Paula,’ said Mrs.
Goodman from beneath her load of wretchedness, ‘why
did we think of undergoing this?’
A slight gleam of humour crossed Paula’s
not particularly blooming face, as she answered, ‘Ah,
why indeed?’
‘What is the real reason, my
dear? For God’s sake tell me!’
‘It begins with S.’
’Well, I would do anything for
that young man short of personal martyrdom; but really
when it comes to that ’
‘Don’t criticize me, auntie, and I won’t
criticize you.’
‘Well, I am open to criticism
just now, I am sure,’ said her aunt, with a
green smile; and speech was again discontinued.
The morning was bright and beautiful,
and it could again be seen in Paula’s looks
that she was glad she had come, though, in taking
their rest at Cherbourg, fate consigned them to an
hotel breathing an atmosphere that seemed specially
compounded for depressing the spirits of a young woman;
indeed nothing had particularly encouraged her thus
far in her somewhat peculiar scheme of searching out
and expressing sorrow to a gentleman for having believed
those who traduced him; and this coup d’audace
to which she had committed herself began to look somewhat
formidable. When in England the plan of following
him to Normandy had suggested itself as the quickest,
sweetest, and most honest way of making amends; but
having arrived there she seemed further off from his
sphere of existence than when she had been at Stancy
Castle. Virtually she was, for if he thought
of her at all, he probably thought of her there; if
he sought her he would seek her there. However,
as he would probably never do the latter, it was necessary
to go on. It had been her sudden dream before
starting, to light accidentally upon him in some romantic
old town of this romantic old province, but she had
become aware that the recorded fortune of lovers in
that respect was not to be trusted too implicitly.
Somerset’s search for her in
the south was now inversely imitated. By diligent
inquiry in Cherbourg during the gloom of evening, in
the disguise of a hooded cloak, she learnt out the
place of his stay while there, and that he had gone
thence to Lisieux. What she knew of the architectural
character of Lisieux half guaranteed the truth of the
information. Without telling her aunt of this
discovery she announced to that lady that it was her
great wish to go on and see the beauties of Lisieux.
But though her aunt was simple, there
were bounds to her simplicity. ‘Paula,’
she said, with an undeceivable air, ’I don’t
think you should run after a young man like this.
Suppose he shouldn’t care for you by this time.’
It was no occasion for further affectation.
‘I am sure he will,’ answered her
niece flatly. ’I have not the least fear
about it nor would you, if you knew how
he is. He will forgive me anything.’
’Well, pray don’t show
yourself forward. Some people are apt to fly into
extremes.’
Paula blushed a trifle, and reflected,
and made no answer. However, her purpose seemed
not to be permanently affected, for the next morning
she was up betimes and preparing to depart; and they
proceeded almost without stopping to the architectural
curiosity-town which had so quickly interested her.
Nevertheless her ardent manner of yesterday underwent
a considerable change, as if she had a fear that, as
her aunt suggested, in her endeavour to make amends
for cruel injustice, she was allowing herself to be
carried too far.
On nearing the place she said, ’Aunt,
I think you had better call upon him; and you need
not tell him we have come on purpose. Let him
think, if he will, that we heard he was here, and
would not leave without seeing him. You can also
tell him that I am anxious to clear up a misunderstanding,
and ask him to call at our hotel.’
But as she looked over the dreary
suburban erections which lined the road from the railway
to the old quarter of the town, it occurred to her
that Somerset would at that time of day be engaged
in one or other of the mediaeval buildings thereabout,
and that it would be a much neater thing to meet him
as if by chance in one of these edifices than to call
upon him anywhere. Instead of putting up at any
hotel, they left the maids and baggage at the station;
and hiring a carriage, Paula told the coachman to
drive them to such likely places as she could think
of.
‘He’ll never forgive you,’
said her aunt, as they rumbled into the town.
‘Won’t he?’ said
Paula, with soft faith. ‘I’ll see
about that.’
’What are you going to do when
you find him? Tell him point-blank that you are
in love with him?’
‘Act in such a manner that he
may tell me he is in love with me.’
They first visited a large church
at the upper end of a square that sloped its gravelled
surface to the western shine, and was pricked out
with little avenues of young pollard limes. The
church within was one to make any Gothic architect
take lodgings in its vicinity for a fortnight, though
it was just now crowded with a forest of scaffolding
for repairs in progress. Mrs. Goodman sat down
outside, and Paula, entering, took a walk in the form
of a horse-shoe; that is, up the south aisle, round
the apse, and down the north side; but no figure of
a melancholy young man sketching met her eye anywhere.
The sun that blazed in at the west doorway smote her
face as she emerged from beneath it and revealed real
sadness there.
‘This is not all the old architecture
of the town by far,’ she said to her aunt with
an air of confidence. ‘Coachman, drive to
St. Jacques’.’
He was not at St. Jacques’.
Looking from the west end of that building the girl
observed the end of a steep narrow street of antique
character, which seemed a likely haunt. Beckoning
to her aunt to follow in the fly Paula walked down
the street.
She was transported to the Middle
Ages. It contained the shops of tinkers, braziers,
bellows-menders, hollow-turners, and other quaintest
trades, their fronts open to the street beneath stories
of timber overhanging so far on each side that a slit
of sky was left at the top for the light to descend,
and no more. A blue misty obscurity pervaded
the atmosphere, into which the sun thrust oblique staves
of light. It was a street for a mediaevalist
to revel in, toss up his hat and shout hurrah in,
send for his luggage, come and live in, die and be
buried in. She had never supposed such a street
to exist outside the imaginations of antiquarians.
Smells direct from the sixteenth century hung in the
air in all their original integrity and without a modern
taint. The faces of the people in the doorways
seemed those of individuals who habitually gazed on
the great Francis, and spoke of Henry the Eighth as
the king across the sea.
She inquired of a coppersmith if an
English artist had been seen here lately. With
a suddenness that almost discomfited her he announced
that such a man had been seen, sketching a house just
below the ’Vieux Manoir
de Francois premier.’ Just turning
to see that her aunt was following in the fly, Paula
advanced to the house. The wood framework of
the lower story was black and varnished; the upper
story was brown and not varnished; carved figures
of dragons, griffins, satyrs, and mermaids swarmed
over the front; an ape stealing apples was the subject
of this cantilever, a man undressing of that.
These figures were cloaked with little cobwebs which
waved in the breeze, so that each figure seemed alive.
She examined the woodwork closely;
here and there she discerned pencil-marks which had
no doubt been jotted thereon by Somerset as points
of admeasurement, in the way she had seen him mark
them at the castle. Some fragments of paper lay
below: there were pencilled lines on them, and
they bore a strong resemblance to a spoilt leaf of
Somerset’s sketch-book. Paula glanced up,
and from a window above protruded an old woman’s
head, which, with the exception of the white handkerchief
tied round it, was so nearly of the colour of the
carvings that she might easily have passed as of a
piece with them. The aged woman continued motionless,
the remains of her eyes being bent upon Paula, who
asked her in Englishwoman’s French where the
sketcher had gone. Without replying, the crone
produced a hand and extended finger from her side,
and pointed towards the lower end of the street.
Paula went on, the carriage following
with difficulty, on account of the obstructions in
the thoroughfare. At bottom, the street abutted
on a wide one with customary modern life flowing through
it; and as she looked, Somerset crossed her front
along this street, hurrying as if for a wager.
By the time that Paula had reached
the bottom Somerset was a long way to the left, and
she recognized to her dismay that the busy transverse
street was one which led to the railway. She quickened
her pace to a run; he did not see her; he even walked
faster. She looked behind for the carriage.
The driver in emerging from the sixteenth-century street
to the nineteenth had apparently turned to the right,
instead of to the left as she had done, so that her
aunt had lost sight of her. However, she dare
not mind it, if Somerset would but look back!
He partly turned, but not far enough, and it was only
to hail a passing omnibus upon which she discerned
his luggage. Somerset jumped in, the omnibus drove
on, and diminished up the long road. Paula stood
hopelessly still, and in a few minutes puffs of steam
showed her that the train had gone.
She turned and waited, the two or
three children who had gathered round her looking
up sympathizingly in her face. Her aunt, having
now discovered the direction of her flight, drove
up and beckoned to her.
‘What’s the matter?’ asked Mrs.
Goodman in alarm.
‘Why?’
‘That you should run like that, and look so
woebegone.’
‘Nothing: only I have decided not to stay
in this town.’
‘What! he is gone, I suppose?’
‘Yes!’ exclaimed Paula,
with tears of vexation in her eyes. ’It
isn’t every man who gets a woman of my position
to run after him on foot, and alone, and he ought
to have looked round! Drive to the station; I
want to make an inquiry.’
On reaching the station she asked
the booking-clerk some questions, and returned to
her aunt with a cheerful countenance. ’Mr.
Somerset has only gone to Caen,’ she said.
’He is the only Englishman who went by this
train, so there is no mistake. There is no other
train for two hours. We will go on then shall
we?’
‘I am indifferent,’ said
Mrs. Goodman. ’But, Paula, do you think
this quite right? Perhaps he is not so anxious
for your forgiveness as you think. Perhaps he
saw you, and wouldn’t stay.’
A momentary dismay crossed her face,
but it passed, and she answered, ’Aunt, that’s
nonsense. I know him well enough, and can assure
you that if he had only known I was running after
him, he would have looked round sharply enough, and
would have given his little finger rather than have
missed me! I don’t make myself so silly
as to run after a gentleman without good grounds,
for I know well that it is an undignified thing to
do. Indeed, I could never have thought of doing
it, if I had not been so miserably in the wrong!’
II.
That evening when the sun was dropping
out of sight they started for the city of Somerset’s
pilgrimage. Paula seated herself with her face
toward the western sky, watching from her window the
broad red horizon, across which moved thin poplars
lopped to human shapes, like the walking forms in
Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace. It was dark when
the travellers drove into Caen.
She still persisted in her wish to
casually encounter Somerset in some aisle, lady-chapel,
or crypt to which he might have betaken himself to
copy and learn the secret of the great artists who
had erected those nooks. Mrs. Goodman was for
discovering his inn, and calling upon him in a straightforward
way; but Paula seemed afraid of it, and they went out
in the morning on foot. First they searched the
church of St. Sauveur; he was not there; next the
church of St. Jean; then the church of St. Pierre;
but he did not reveal himself, nor had any verger seen
or heard of such a man. Outside the latter church
was a public flower-garden, and she sat down to consider
beside a round pool in which water-lilies grew and
gold-fish swam, near beds of fiery geraniums, dahlias,
and verbenas just past their bloom. Her enterprise
had not been justified by its results so far; but
meditation still urged her to listen to the little
voice within and push on. She accordingly rejoined
her aunt, and they drove up the hill to the Abbaye
aux Dames, the day by this time having grown hot and
oppressive.
The church seemed absolutely empty,
the void being emphasized by its grateful coolness.
But on going towards the east end they perceived a
bald gentleman close to the screen, looking to the
right and to the left as if much perplexed. Paula
merely glanced over him, his back being toward her,
and turning to her aunt said softly, ’I wonder
how we get into the choir?’
‘That’s just what I am
wondering,’ said the old gentleman, abruptly
facing round, and Paula discovered that the countenance
was not unfamiliar to her eye. Since knowing
Somerset she had added to her gallery of celebrities
a photograph of his father, the Academician, and he
it was now who confronted her.
For the moment embarrassment, due
to complicated feelings, brought a slight blush to
her cheek, but being well aware that he did not know
her, she answered, coolly enough, ‘I suppose
we must ask some one.’
‘And we certainly would if there
were any one to ask,’ he said, still looking
eastward, and not much at her. ’I have been
here a long time, but nobody comes. Not that
I want to get in on my own account; for though it
is thirty years since I last set foot in this place,
I remember it as if it were but yesterday.’
‘Indeed. I have never been here before,’
said Paula.
’Naturally. But I am looking
for a young man who is making sketches in some of
these buildings, and it is as likely as not that he
is in the crypt under this choir, for it is just such
out-of-the-way nooks that he prefers. It is very
provoking that he should not have told me more distinctly
in his letter where to find him.’
Mrs. Goodman, who had gone to make
inquiries, now came back, and informed them that she
had learnt that it was necessary to pass through the
Hotel-Dieu to the choir, to do which they must go outside.
Thereupon they walked on together, and Mr. Somerset,
quite ignoring his troubles, made remarks upon the
beauty of the architecture; and in absence of mind,
by reason either of the subject, or of his listener,
retained his hat in his hand after emerging from the
church, while they walked all the way across the Place
and into the Hospital gardens.
‘A very civil man,’ said Mrs. Goodman
to Paula privately.
‘Yes,’ said Paula, who had not told her
aunt that she recognized him.
One of the Sisters now preceded them
towards the choir and crypt, Mr. Somerset asking her
if a young Englishman was or had been sketching there.
On receiving a reply in the negative, Paula nearly
betrayed herself by turning, as if her business there,
too, ended with the information. However, she
went on again, and made a pretence of looking round,
Mr. Somerset also staying in a spirit of friendly attention
to his countrywomen. They did not part from him
till they had come out from the crypt, and again reached
the west front, on their way to which he additionally
explained that it was his son he was looking for, who
had arranged to meet him here, but had mentioned no
inn at which he might be expected.
When he had left them, Paula informed
her aunt whose company they had been sharing.
Her aunt began expostulating with Paula for not telling
Mr. Somerset what they had seen of his son’s
movements. ’It would have eased his mind
at least,’ she said.
’I was not bound to ease his
mind at the expense of showing what I would rather
conceal. I am continually hampered in such generosity
as that by the circumstance of being a woman!’
‘Well, it is getting too late to search further
tonight.’
It was indeed almost evening twilight
in the streets, though the graceful freestone spires
to a depth of about twenty feet from their summits
were still dyed with the orange tints of a vanishing
sun. The two relatives dined privately as usual,
after which Paula looked out of the window of her
room, and reflected upon the events of the day.
A tower rising into the sky quite near at hand showed
her that some church or other stood within a few steps
of the hotel archway, and saying nothing to Mrs. Goodman,
she quietly cloaked herself, and went out towards
it, apparently with the view of disposing of a portion
of a dull dispiriting evening. The church was
open, and on entering she found that it was only lighted
by seven candles burning before the altar of a chapel
on the south side, the mass of the building being in
deep shade. Motionless outlines, which resolved
themselves into the forms of kneeling women, were
darkly visible among the chairs, and in the triforium
above the arcades there was one hitherto unnoticed
radiance, dim as that of a glow-worm in the grass.
It was seemingly the effect of a solitary tallow-candle
behind the masonry.
A priest came in, unlocked the door
of a confessional with a click which sounded in the
silence, and entered it; a woman followed, disappeared
within the curtain of the same, emerging again in about
five minutes, followed by the priest, who locked up
his door with another loud click, like a tradesman
full of business, and came down the aisle to go out.
In the lobby he spoke to another woman, who replied,
’Ah, oui, Monsieur l’Abbe!’
Two women having spoken to him, there
could be no harm in a third doing likewise. ‘Monsieur
l’Abbe,’ said Paula in French, ’could
you indicate to me the stairs of the triforium?’
and she signified her reason for wishing to know by
pointing to the glimmering light above.
‘Ah, he is a friend of yours,
the Englishman?’ pleasantly said the priest,
recognizing her nationality; and taking her to a little
door he conducted her up a stone staircase, at the
top of which he showed her the long blind story over
the aisle arches which led round to where the light
was. Cautioning her not to stumble over the uneven
floor, he left her and descended. His words had
signified that Somerset was here.
It was a gloomy place enough that
she found herself in, but the seven candles below
on the opposite altar, and a faint sky light from the
clerestory, lent enough rays to guide her. Paula
walked on to the bend of the apse: here were
a few chairs, and the origin of the light.
This was a candle stuck at the end
of a sharpened stick, the latter entering a joint
in the stones. A young man was sketching by the
glimmer. But there was no need for the blush which
had prepared itself beforehand; the young man was
Mr. Cockton, Somerset’s youngest draughtsman.
Paula could have cried aloud with
disappointment. Cockton recognized Miss Power,
and appearing much surprised, rose from his seat with
a bow, and said hastily, ‘Mr. Somerset left
to-day.’
‘I did not ask for him,’ said Paula.
‘No, Miss Power: but I thought ’
’Yes, yes you know,
of course, that he has been my architect. Well,
it happens that I should like to see him, if he can
call on me. Which way did he go?’
‘He’s gone to Etretat.’
‘What for? There are no abbeys to sketch
at Etretat.’
Cockton looked at the point of his
pencil, and with a hesitating motion of his lip answered,
‘Mr. Somerset said he was tired.’
‘Of what?’
’He said he was sick and tired
of holy places, and would go to some wicked spot or
other, to get that consolation which holiness could
not give. But he only said it casually to Knowles,
and perhaps he did not mean it.’
‘Knowles is here too?’
’Yes, Miss Power, and Bowles.
Mr. Somerset has been kind enough to give us a chance
of enlarging our knowledge of French Early-pointed,
and pays half the expenses.’
Paula said a few other things to the
young man, walked slowly round the triforium as if
she had come to examine it, and returned down the
staircase. On getting back to the hotel she told
her aunt, who had just been having a nap, that next
day they would go to Etretat for a change.
‘Why? There are no old churches at Etretat.’
’No. But I am sick and
tired of holy places, and want to go to some wicked
spot or other to find that consolation which holiness
cannot give.’
’For shame, Paula! Now
I know what it is; you have heard that he’s gone
there! You needn’t try to blind me.’
‘I don’t care where he’s
gone!’ cried Paula petulantly. In a moment,
however, she smiled at herself, and added, ’You
must take that for what it is worth. I have made
up my mind to let him know from my own lips how the
misunderstanding arose. That done, I shall leave
him, and probably never see him again. My conscience
will be clear.’
The next day they took the steamboat
down the Orne, intending to reach Etretat by way of
Havre. Just as they were moving off an elderly
gentleman under a large white sunshade, and carrying
his hat in his hand, was seen leisurely walking down
the wharf at some distance, but obviously making for
the boat.
‘A gentleman!’ said the mate.
‘Who is he?’ said the captain.
‘An English,’ said Clementine.
Nobody knew more, but as leisure was
the order of the day the engines were stopped, on
the chance of his being a passenger, and all eyes were
bent upon him in conjecture. He disappeared and
reappeared from behind a pile of merchandise and approached
the boat at an easy pace, whereupon the gangway was
replaced, and he came on board, removing his hat to
Paula, quietly thanking the captain for stopping, and
saying to Mrs. Goodman, ‘I am nicely in time.’
It was Mr. Somerset the elder, who
by degrees informed our travellers, as sitting on
their camp-stools they advanced between the green banks
bordered by elms, that he was going to Etretat; that
the young man he had spoken of yesterday had gone
to that romantic watering-place instead of studying
art at Caen, and that he was going to join him there.
Paula preserved an entire silence
as to her own intentions, partly from natural reticence,
and partly, as it appeared, from the difficulty of
explaining a complication which was not very clear
to herself. At Havre they parted from Mr. Somerset,
and did not see him again till they were driving over
the hills towards Etretat in a carriage and four, when
the white umbrella became visible far ahead among
the outside passengers of the coach to the same place.
In a short time they had passed and cut in before
this vehicle, but soon became aware that their carriage,
like the coach, was one of a straggling procession
of conveyances, some mile and a half in length, all
bound for the village between the cliffs.
In descending the long hill shaded
by lime-trees which sheltered their place of destination,
this procession closed up, and they perceived that
all the visitors and native population had turned out
to welcome them, the daily arrival of new sojourners
at this hour being the chief excitement of Etretat.
The coach which had preceded them all the way, at
more or less remoteness, was now quite close, and in
passing along the village street they saw Mr. Somerset
wave his hand to somebody in the crowd below.
A felt hat was waved in the air in response, the coach
swept into the inn-yard, followed by the idlers, and
all disappeared. Paula’s face was crimson
as their own carriage swept round in the opposite
direction to the rival inn.
Once in her room she breathed like
a person who had finished a long chase. They
did not go down before dinner, but when it was almost
dark Paula begged her aunt to wrap herself up and
come with her to the shore hard by. The beach
was deserted, everybody being at the Casino; the gate
stood invitingly open, and they went in. Here
the brilliantly lit terrace was crowded with promenaders,
and outside the yellow palings, surmounted by its
row of lamps, rose the voice of the invisible sea.
Groups of people were sitting under the verandah, the
women mostly in wraps, for the air was growing chilly.
Through the windows at their back an animated scene
disclosed itself in the shape of a room-full of waltzers,
the strains of the band striving in the ear for mastery
over the sounds of the sea. The dancers came
round a couple at a time, and were individually visible
to those people without who chose to look that way,
which was what Paula did.
‘Come away, come away!’
she suddenly said. ’It is not right for
us to be here.’
Her exclamation had its origin in
what she had at that moment seen within, the spectacle
of Mr. George Somerset whirling round the room with
a young lady of uncertain nationality but pleasing
figure. Paula was not accustomed to show the
white feather too clearly, but she soon had passed
out through those yellow gates and retreated, till
the mixed music of sea and band had resolved into
that of the sea alone.
‘Well!’ said her aunt,
half in soliloquy, ’do you know who I saw dancing
there, Paula? Our Mr. Somerset, if I don’t
make a great mistake!’
‘It was likely enough that you
did,’ sedately replied her niece. ’He
left Caen with the intention of seeking distractions
of a lighter kind than those furnished by art, and
he has merely succeeded in finding them. But
he has made my duty rather a difficult one. Still,
it was my duty, for I very greatly wronged him.
Perhaps, however, I have done enough for honour’s
sake. I would have humiliated myself by an apology
if I had found him in any other situation; but, of
course, one can’t he expected to take much
trouble when he is seen going on like that!’
The coolness with which she began
her remarks had developed into something like warmth
as she concluded.
‘He is only dancing with a lady
he probably knows very well.’
’He doesn’t know her!
The idea of his dancing with a woman of that description!
We will go away tomorrow. This place has been
greatly over-praised.’
‘The place is well enough, as far as I can see.’
’He is carrying out his programme
to the letter. He plunges into excitement in
the most reckless manner, and I tremble for the consequences!
I can do no more: I have humiliated myself into
following him, believing that in giving too ready
credence to appearances I had been narrow and inhuman,
and had caused him much misery. But he does not
mind, and he has no misery; he seems just as well as
ever. How much this finding him has cost me!
After all, I did not deceive him. He must have
acquired a natural aversion for me. I have allowed
myself to be interested in a man of very common qualities,
and am now bitterly alive to the shame of having sought
him out. I heartily detest him! I will go
back aunt, you are right I had
no business to come.... His light conduct has
rendered him uninteresting to me!’
III.
When she rose the next morning the
bell was clanging for the second breakfast, and people
were pouring in from the beach in every variety of
attire. Paula, whom a restless night had left
with a headache, which, however, she said nothing
about, was reluctant to emerge from the seclusion
of her chamber, till her aunt, discovering what was
the matter with her, suggested that a few minutes
in the open air would refresh her; and they went downstairs
into the hotel gardens.
The clatter of the big breakfast within
was audible from this spot, and the noise seemed suddenly
to inspirit Paula, who proposed to enter. Her
aunt assented. In the verandah under which they
passed was a rustic hat-stand in the form of a tree,
upon which hats and other body-gear hung like bunches
of fruit. Paula’s eye fell upon a felt hat
to which a small block-book was attached by a string.
She knew that hat and block-book well, and turning
to Mrs. Goodman said, ’After all, I don’t
want the breakfast they are having: let us order
one of our own as usual. And we’ll have
it here.’
She led on to where some little tables
were placed under the tall shrubs, followed by her
aunt, who was in turn followed by the proprietress
of the hotel, that lady having discovered from the
French maid that there was good reason for paying
these ladies ample personal attention.
‘Is the gentleman to whom that
sketch-book belongs staying here?’ Paula carelessly
inquired, as she indicated the object on the hat-stand.
‘Ah, no!’ deplored the
proprietress. ’The Hotel was full when Mr.
Somerset came. He stays at a cottage beyond the
Rue Anicet Bourgeois: he only has his meals here.’
Paula had taken her seat under the
fuchsia-trees in such a manner that she could observe
all the exits from the salle a manger; but for
the present none of the breakfasters emerged, the
only moving objects on the scene being the waitresses
who ran hither and thither across the court, the cook’s
assistants with baskets of long bread, and the laundresses
with baskets of sun-bleached linen. Further back
towards the inn-yard, stablemen were putting in the
horses for starting the flys and coaches to Les Ifs,
the nearest railway-station.
‘Suppose the Somersets should
be going off by one of these conveyances,’ said
Mrs. Goodman as she sipped her tea.
‘Well, aunt, then they must,’
replied the younger lady with composure.
Nevertheless she looked with some
misgiving at the nearest stableman as he led out four
white horses, harnessed them, and leisurely brought
a brush with which he began blacking their yellow
hoofs. All the vehicles were ready at the door
by the time breakfast was over, and the inmates soon
turned out, some to mount the omnibuses and carriages,
some to ramble on the adjacent beach, some to climb
the verdant slopes, and some to make for the cliffs
that shut in the vale. The fuchsia-trees which
sheltered Paula’s breakfast-table from the blaze
of the sun, also screened it from the eyes of the
outpouring company, and she sat on with her aunt in
perfect comfort, till among the last of the stream
came Somerset and his father. Paula reddened
at being so near the former at last. It was with
sensible relief that she observed them turn towards
the cliffs and not to the carriages, and thus signify
that they were not going off that day.
Neither of the two saw the ladies,
and when the latter had finished their tea and coffee
they followed to the shore, where they sat for nearly
an hour, reading and watching the bathers. At
length footsteps crunched among the pebbles in their
vicinity, and looking out from her sunshade Paula
saw the two Somersets close at hand.
The elder recognized her, and the
younger, observing his father’s action of courtesy,
turned his head. It was a revelation to Paula,
for she was shocked to see that he appeared worn and
ill. The expression of his face changed at sight
of her, increasing its shade of paleness; but he immediately
withdrew his eyes and passed by.
Somerset was as much surprised at
encountering her thus as she had been distressed to
see him. As soon as they were out of hearing,
he asked his father quietly, ’What strange thing
is this, that Lady De Stancy should be here and her
husband not with her? Did she bow to me, or to
you?’
‘Lady De Stancy that
young lady?’ asked the puzzled painter.
He proceeded to explain all he knew; that she was
a young lady he had met on his journey at two or three
different times; moreover, that if she were his son’s
client the woman who was to have become
Lady De Stancy she was Miss Power still;
for he had seen in some newspaper two days before
leaving England that the wedding had been postponed
on account of her illness.
Somerset was so greatly moved that
he could hardly speak connectedly to his father as
they paced on together. ’But she is not
ill, as far as I can see,’ he said. ’The
wedding postponed? You are sure the word
was postponed? Was it broken off?’
’No, it was postponed.
I meant to have told you before, knowing you would
be interested as the castle architect; but it slipped
my memory in the bustle of arriving.’
‘I am not the castle architect.’
‘The devil you are not what are you
then?’
‘Well, I am not that.’
Somerset the elder, though not of
penetrating nature, began to see that here lay an
emotional complication of some sort, and reserved further
inquiry till a more convenient occasion. They
had reached the end of the level beach where the cliff
began to rise, and as this impediment naturally stopped
their walk they retraced their steps. On again
nearing the spot where Paula and her aunt were sitting,
the painter would have deviated to the hotel; but
as his son persisted in going straight on, in due
course they were opposite the ladies again. By
this time Miss Power, who had appeared anxious during
their absence, regained her self-control. Going
towards her old lover she said, with a smile, ’I
have been looking for you!’
‘Why have you been doing that?’
said Somerset, in a voice which he failed to keep
as steady as he could wish.
’Because I want some
architect to continue the restoration. Do you
withdraw your resignation?’
Somerset appeared unable to decide
for a few instants. ‘Yes,’ he then
answered.
For the moment they had ignored the
presence of the painter and Mrs. Goodman, but Somerset
now made them known to one another, and there was
friendly intercourse all round.
‘When will you be able to resume
operations at the castle?’ she asked, as soon
as she could again speak directly to Somerset.
’As soon as I can get back.
Of course I only resume it at your special request.’
‘Of course.’ To one
who had known all the circumstances it would have
seemed a thousand pities that, after again getting
face to face with him, she did not explain, without
delay, the whole mischief that had separated them.
But she did not do it perhaps from the inherent
awkwardness of such a topic at this idle time.
She confined herself simply to the above-mentioned
business-like request, and when the party had walked
a few steps together they separated, with mutual promises
to meet again.
’I hope you have explained your
mistake to him, and how it arose, and everything?’
said her aunt when they were alone.
‘No, I did not.’
‘What, not explain after all?’ said her
amazed relative.
‘I decided to put it off.’
’Then I think you decided very
wrongly. Poor young man, he looked so ill!’
’Did you, too, think he looked
ill? But he danced last night. Why did he
dance?’ She turned and gazed regretfully at the
corner round which the Somersets had disappeared.
’I don’t know why he danced;
but if I had known you were going to be so silent,
I would have explained the mistake myself.’
‘I wish you had. But no;
I have said I would; and I must.’
Paula’s avoidance of tables
d’hote did not extend to the present one.
It was quite with alacrity that she went down; and
with her entry the antecedent hotel beauty who had
reigned for the last five days at that meal, was unceremoniously
deposed by the guests. Mr. Somerset the elder
came in, but nobody with him. His seat was on
Paula’s left hand, Mrs. Goodman being on Paula’s
right, so that all the conversation was between the
Academician and the younger lady. When the latter
had again retired upstairs with her aunt, Mrs. Goodman
expressed regret that young Mr. Somerset was absent
from the table. ‘Why has he kept away?’
she asked.
‘I don’t know I
didn’t ask,’ said Paula sadly. ’Perhaps
he doesn’t care to meet us again.’
‘That’s because you didn’t explain.’
‘Well why didn’t
the old man give me an opportunity?’ exclaimed
the niece with suppressed excitement. ’He
would scarcely say anything but yes and no, and gave
me no chance at all of introducing the subject.
I wanted to explain I came all the way
on purpose I would have begged George’s
pardon on my two knees if there had been any way of
beginning; but there was not, and I could not do it!’
Though she slept badly that night,
Paula promptly appeared in the public room to breakfast,
and that not from motives of vanity; for, while not
unconscious of her accession to the unstable throne
of queen-beauty in the establishment, she seemed too
preoccupied to care for the honour just then, and
would readily have changed places with her unhappy
predecessor, who lingered on in the background like
a candle after sunrise.
Mrs. Goodman was determined to trust
no longer to Paula for putting an end to what made
her so restless and self-reproachful. Seeing old
Mr. Somerset enter to a little side-table behind for
lack of room at the crowded centre tables, again without
his son, she turned her head and asked point-blank
where the young man was.
Mr. Somerset’s face became a
shade graver than before. ’My son is unwell,’
he replied; ’so unwell that he has been advised
to stay indoors and take perfect rest.’
‘I do hope it is nothing serious.’
’I hope so too. The fact
is, he has overdone himself a little. He was
not well when he came here; and to make himself worse
he must needs go dancing at the Casino with this lady
and that among others with a young American
lady who is here with her family, and whom he met in
London last year. I advised him against it, but
he seemed desperately determined to shake off lethargy
by any rash means, and wouldn’t listen to me.
Luckily he is not in the hotel, but in a quiet cottage
a hundred yards up the hill.’
Paula, who had heard all, did not
show or say what she felt at the news: but after
breakfast, on meeting the landlady in a passage alone,
she asked with some anxiety if there were a really
skilful medical man in Etretat; and on being told
that there was, and his name, she went back to look
for Mr. Somerset; but he had gone.
They heard nothing more of young Somerset
all that morning, but towards evening, while Paula
sat at her window, looking over the heads of fuchsias
upon the promenade beyond, she saw the painter walk
by. She immediately went to her aunt and begged
her to go out and ask Mr. Somerset if his son had
improved.
‘I will send Milly or Clementine,’ said
Mrs. Goodman.
‘I wish you would see him yourself.’
‘He has gone on. I shall never find him.’
‘He has only gone round to the
front,’ persisted Paula. ’Do walk
that way, auntie, and ask him.’
Thus pressed, Mrs. Goodman acquiesced,
and brought back intelligence to Miss Power, who had
watched them through the window, that his son did
not positively improve, but that his American friends
were very kind to him.
Having made use of her aunt, Paula
seemed particularly anxious to get rid of her again,
and when that lady sat down to write letters, Paula
went to her own room, hastily dressed herself without
assistance, asked privately the way to the cottage,
and went off thitherward unobserved.
At the upper end of the lane she saw
a little house answering to the description, whose
front garden, window-sills, palings, and doorstep
were literally ablaze with nasturtiums in bloom.
She entered this inhabited nosegay,
quietly asked for the invalid, and if he were well
enough to see Miss Power. The woman of the house
soon returned, and she was conducted up a crooked
staircase to Somerset’s modest apartments.
It appeared that some rooms in this dwelling had been
furnished by the landlady of the inn, who hired them
of the tenant during the summer season to use as an
annexe to the hotel.
Admitted to the outer room she beheld
her architect looking as unarchitectural as possible;
lying on a small couch which was drawn up to the open
casement, whence he had a back view of the window flowers,
and enjoyed a green transparency through the undersides
of the same nasturtium leaves that presented their
faces to the passers without.
When the latch had again clicked into
the catch of the closed door Paula went up to the
invalid, upon whose pale and interesting face a flush
had arisen simultaneously with the announcement of
her name. He would have sprung up to receive
her, but she pressed him down, and throwing all reserve
on one side for the first time in their intercourse,
she crouched beside the sofa, whispering with roguish
solicitude, her face not too far from his own:
’How foolish you are, George, to get ill just
now when I have been wanting so much to see you again! I
am so sorry to see you like this what I
said to you when we met on the shore was not what
I had come to say!’
Somerset took her by the hand.
‘Then what did you come to say, Paula?’
he asked.
’I wanted to tell you that the
mere wanton wandering of a capricious mind was not
the cause of my estrangement from you. There has
been a great deception practised the exact
nature of it I cannot tell you plainly just at present;
it is too painful but it is all over, and
I can assure you of my sorrow at having behaved as
I did, and of my sincere friendship now as ever.’
’There is nothing I shall value
so much as that. It will make my work at the
castle very pleasant to feel that I can consult you
about it without fear of intruding on you against
your wishes.’
‘Yes, perhaps it will. But you
do not comprehend me.’
‘You have been an enigma always.’
’And you have been provoking;
but never so provoking as now. I wouldn’t
for the world tell you the whole of my fancies as I
came hither this evening: but I should think
your natural intuition would suggest what they were.’
’It does, Paula. But there
are motives of delicacy which prevent my acting on
what is suggested to me.’
’Delicacy is a gift, and you
should thank God for it; but in some cases it is not
so precious as we would persuade ourselves.’
‘Not when the woman is rich, and the man is
poor?’
’O, George Somerset be
cold, or angry, or anything, but don’t be like
this! It is never worth a woman’s while
to show regret for her injustice; for all she gets
by it is an accusation of want of delicacy.’
’Indeed I don’t accuse
you of that I warmly, tenderly thank you
for your kindness in coming here to see me.’
’Well, perhaps you do.
But I am now in I cannot tell what mood I
will not tell what mood, for it would be confessing
more than I ought. This finding you out is a
piece of weakness that I shall not repeat; and I have
only one thing more to say. I have served you
badly, George, I know that; but it is never too late
to mend; and I have come back to you. However,
I shall never run after you again, trust me for that,
for it is not the woman’s part. Still,
before I go, that there may be no mistake as to my
meaning, and misery entailed on us for want of a word,
I’ll add this: that if you want to marry
me, as you once did, you must say so; for I am here
to be asked.’
It would be superfluous to transcribe
Somerset’s reply, and the remainder of the scene
between the pair. Let it suffice that half-an-hour
afterwards, when the sun had almost gone down, Paula
walked briskly into the hotel, troubled herself nothing
about dinner, but went upstairs to their sitting-room,
where her aunt presently found her upon the couch
looking up at the ceiling through her fingers.
They talked on different subjects for some time till
the old lady said ’Mr. Somerset’s cottage
is the one covered with flowers up the lane, I hear.’
‘Yes,’ said Paula.
‘How do you know?’
‘I’ve been there.... We are going
to be married, aunt.’
‘Indeed!’ replied Mrs.
Goodman. ’Well, I thought this might be
the end of it: you were determined on the point;
and I am not much surprised at your news. Your
father was very wise after all in entailing everything
so strictly upon your offspring; for if he had not
I should have been driven wild with the responsibility!’
‘And now that the murder is
out,’ continued Paula, passing over that view
of the case, ’I don’t mind telling you
that somehow or other I have got to like George Somerset
as desperately as a woman can care for any man.
I thought I should have died when I saw him dancing,
and feared I had lost him! He seemed ten times
nicer than ever then! So silly we women are,
that I wouldn’t marry a duke in preference to
him. There, that’s my honest feeling, and
you must make what you can of it; my conscience is
clear, thank Heaven!’
‘Have you fixed the day?’
‘No,’ continued the young
lady, still watching the sleeping flies on the ceiling.
’It is left unsettled between us, while I come
and ask you if there would be any harm if
it could conveniently be before we return to England?’
‘Paula, this is too precipitate!’
’On the contrary, aunt.
In matrimony, as in some other things, you should
be slow to decide, but quick to execute. Nothing
on earth would make me marry another man; I know every
fibre of his character; and he knows a good many fibres
of mine; so as there is nothing more to be learnt,
why shouldn’t we marry at once? On one point
I am firm: I will never return to that castle
as Miss Power. A nameless dread comes over me
when I think of it a fear that some uncanny
influence of the dead De Stancys would drive me again
from him. O, if it were to do that,’ she
murmured, burying her face in her hands, ’I really
think it would be more than I could bear!’
‘Very well,’ said Mrs.
Goodman; ’we will see what can be done.
I will write to Mr. Wardlaw.’
IV.
On a windy afternoon in November,
when more than two months had closed over the incidents
previously recorded, a number of farmers were sitting
in a room of the Lord-Quantock-Arms Inn, Markton, that
was used for the weekly ordinary. It was a long,
low apartment, formed by the union of two or three
smaller rooms, with a bow-window looking upon the street,
and at the present moment was pervaded by a blue fog
from tobacco-pipes, and a temperature like that of
a kiln. The body of farmers who still sat on
there was greater than usual, owing to the cold air
without, the tables having been cleared of dinner
for some time and their surface stamped with liquid
circles by the feet of the numerous glasses.
Besides the farmers there were present
several professional men of the town, who found it
desirable to dine here on market-days for the opportunity
it afforded them of increasing their practice among
the agriculturists, many of whom were men of large
balances, even luxurious livers, who drove to market
in elegant phaetons drawn by horses of supreme blood,
bone, and action, in a style never anticipated by their
fathers when jogging thither in light carts, or afoot
with a butter basket on each arm.
The buzz of groggy conversation was
suddenly impinged on by the notes of a peal of bells
from the tower hard by. Almost at the same instant
the door of the room opened, and there entered the
landlord of the little inn at Sleeping-Green.
Drawing his supply of cordials from this superior
house, to which he was subject, he came here at stated
times like a prebendary to the cathedral of his diocesan,
afterwards retailing to his own humbler audience the
sentiments which he had learnt of this. But curiosity
being awakened by the church bells the usual position
was for the moment reversed, and one of the farmers,
saluting him by name, asked him the reason of their
striking up at that time of day.
‘My mis’ess out yonder,’
replied the rural landlord, nodding sideways, ’is
coming home with her fancy-man. They have been
a-gaying together this turk of a while in foreign
parts Here, maid! what with the
wind, and standing about, my blood’s as low
as water bring us a thimbleful of that
that isn’t gin and not far from it.’
‘It is true, then, that she’s
become Mrs. Somerset?’ indifferently asked a
farmer in broadcloth, tenant of an estate in quite
another direction than hers, as he contemplated the
grain of the table immediately surrounding the foot
of his glass.
‘True of course it
is,’ said Havill, who was also present, in the
tone of one who, though sitting in this rubicund company,
was not of it. ’I could have told you the
truth of it any day these last five weeks.’
Among those who had lent an ear was
Dairyman Jinks, an old gnarled character who wore
a white fustian coat and yellow leggings; the only
man in the room who never dressed up in dark clothes
for marketing. He now asked, ’Married abroad,
was they? And how long will a wedding abroad
stand good for in this country?’
‘As long as a wedding at home.’
’Will it? Faith; I didn’t
know: how should I? I thought it might be
some new plan o’ folks for leasing women now
they be so plentiful, so as to get rid o’ ’em
when the men be tired o’ ’em, and hev spent
all their money.’
‘He won’t be able to spend
her money,’ said the landlord of Sleeping-Green.
’’Tis her very own person’s settled
upon the hairs of her head for ever.’
’O nation! Then if I were
the man I shouldn’t care for such a one-eyed
benefit as that,’ said Dairyman Jinks, turning
away to listen to the talk on his other hand.
‘Is that true?’ asked the gentleman-farmer
in broadcloth.
‘It is sufficiently near the
truth,’ said Havill. ’There is nothing
at all unusual in the arrangement; it was only settled
so to prevent any schemer making a beggar of her.
If Somerset and she have any children, which probably
they will, it will be theirs; and what can a man want
more? Besides, there is a large portion of property
left to her personal use quite as much
as they can want. Oddly enough, the curiosities
and pictures of the castle which belonged to the De
Stancys are not restricted from sale; they are hers
to do what she likes with. Old Power didn’t
care for articles that reminded him so much of his
predecessors.’
‘Hey?’ said Dairyman Jinks,
turning back again, having decided that the conversation
on his right hand was, after all, the more interesting.
’Well why can’t ’em hire
a travelling chap to touch up the picters into her
own gaffers and gammers? Then they’d be
worth sommat to her.’
‘Ah, here they are? I thought
so,’ said Havill, who had been standing up at
the window for the last few moments. ’The
ringers were told to begin as soon as the train signalled.’
As he spoke a carriage drew up to
the hotel-door, followed by another with the maid
and luggage. The inmates crowded to the bow-window,
except Dairyman Jinks, who had become absorbed in
his own reflections.
‘What be they stopping here
for?’ asked one of the previous speakers.
‘They are going to stay here
to-night,’ said Havill. ’They have
come quite unexpectedly, and the castle is in such
a state of turmoil that there is not a single carpet
down, or room for them to use. We shall get two
or three in order by next week.’
’Two little people like them
will be lost in the chammers of that wandering place!’
satirized Dairyman Jinks. ’They will be
bound to have a randy every fortnight to keep the
moth out of the furniture!’
By this time Somerset was handing
out the wife of his bosom, and Dairyman Jinks went
on: ’That’s no more Miss Power that
was, than my niece’s daughter Kezia is Miss
Power in short it is a different woman
altogether!’
‘There is no mistake about the
woman,’ said the landlord; ’it is her fur
clothes that make her look so like a caterpillar on
end. Well, she is not a bad bargain! As
for Captain De Stancy, he’ll fret his gizzard
green.’
‘He’s the man she ought
to ha’ married,’ declared the farmer in
broadcloth. ’As the world goes she ought
to have been Lady De Stancy. She gave up her
chapel-going, and you might have thought she would
have given up her first young man: but she stuck
to him, though by all accounts he would soon have
been interested in another party.’
’’Tis woman’s nature
to be false except to a man, and man’s nature
to be true except to a woman,’ said the landlord
of Sleeping-Green. ’However, all’s
well that ends well, and I have something else to think
of than new-married couples;’ saying which the
speaker moved off, and the others returned to their
seats, the young pair who had been their theme vanishing
through the hotel into some private paradise to rest
and dine.
By this time their arrival had become
known, and a crowd soon gathered outside, acquiring
audacity with continuance there. Raising a hurrah,
the group would not leave till Somerset had showed
himself on the balcony above; and then declined to
go away till Paula also had appeared; when, remarking
that her husband seemed a quiet young man enough,
and would make a very good borough member when their
present one misbehaved himself, the assemblage good-humouredly
dispersed.
Among those whose ears had been reached
by the hurrahs of these idlers was a man in silence
and solitude, far out of the town. He was leaning
over a gate that divided two meads in a watery level
between Stancy Castle and Markton. He turned
his head for a few seconds, then continued his contemplative
gaze towards the towers of the castle, visible over
the trees as far as was possible in the leaden gloom
of the November eve. The military form of the
solitary lounger was recognizable as that of Sir William
De Stancy, notwithstanding the failing light and his
attitude of so resting his elbows on the gate that
his hands enclosed the greater part of his face.
The scene was inexpressibly cheerless.
No other human creature was apparent, and the only
sounds audible above the wind were those of the trickling
streams which distributed the water over the meadow.
A heron had been standing in one of these rivulets
about twenty yards from the officer, and they vied
with each other in stillness till the bird suddenly
rose and flew off to the plantation in which it was
his custom to pass the night with others of his tribe.
De Stancy saw the heron rise, and seemed to imagine
the creature’s departure without a supper to
be owing to the increasing darkness; but in another
minute he became conscious that the heron had been
disturbed by sounds too distant to reach his own ears
at the time. They were nearer now, and there came
along under the hedge a young man known to De Stancy
exceedingly well.
‘Ah,’ he said listlessly, ‘you have
ventured back.’
‘Yes, captain. Why do you walk out here?’
’The bells began ringing because
she and he were expected, and my thoughts naturally
dragged me this way. Thank Heaven the battery
leaves Markton in a few days, and then the precious
place will know me no more!’
‘I have heard of it.’
Turning to where the dim lines of the castle rose
he continued: ‘Well, there it stands.’
‘And I am not in it.’
‘They are not in it yet either.’
‘They soon will be.’
‘Well what tune is that you were
humming, captain?’
‘All is lost now,’
replied the captain grimly.
’O no; you have got me, and
I am a treasure to any man. I have another match
in my eye for you, and shall get you well settled yet,
if you keep yourself respectable. So thank God,
and take courage!’
’Ah, Will you are
a flippant young fool wise in your own conceit;
I say it to my sorrow! ’Twas your dishonesty
spoilt all. That lady would have been my wife
by fair dealing time was all I required.
But base attacks on a man’s character never
deserve to win, and if I had once been certain that
you had made them, my course would have been very
different, both towards you and others. But why
should I talk to you about this? If I cared an
atom what becomes of you I would take you in hand
severely enough; not caring, I leave you alone, to
go to the devil your own way.’
’Thank you kindly, captain.
Well, since you have spoken plainly, I will do the
same. We De Stancys are a worn-out old party that’s
the long and the short of it. We represent conditions
of life that have had their day especially
me. Our one remaining chance was an alliance with
new aristocrats; and we have failed. We are past
and done for. Our line has had five hundred years
of glory, and we ought to be content. Enfin
les renards se trouvent chez le
pelletier.’
’Speak for yourself, young Consequence,
and leave the destinies of old families to respectable
philosophers. This fiasco is the direct result
of evil conduct, and of nothing else at all. I
have managed badly; I countenanced you too far.
When I saw your impish tendencies I should have forsworn
the alliance.’
’Don’t sting me, captain.
What I have told you is true. As for my conduct,
cat will after kind, you know. You should have
held your tongue on the wedding morning, and have
let me take my chance.’
’Is that all I get for saving
you from jail? Gad I alone am the
sufferer, and feel I am alone the fool!... Come,
off with you I never want to see you any
more.’
’Part we will, then till
we meet again. It will be a light night hereabouts,
I think, this evening.’
‘A very dark one for me.’
‘Nevertheless, I think it will be a light night.
Au revoir!’
Dare went his way, and after a while
De Stancy went his. Both were soon lost in the
shades.
V.
The castle to-night was as gloomy
as the meads. As Havill had explained, the habitable
rooms were just now undergoing a scour, and the main
block of buildings was empty even of the few servants
who had been retained, they having for comfort’s
sake taken up their quarters in the detached rooms
adjoining the entrance archway. Hence not a single
light shone from the lonely windows, at which ivy
leaves tapped like woodpeckers, moved by gusts that
were numerous and contrary rather than violent.
Within the walls all was silence, chaos, and obscurity,
till towards eleven o’clock, when the thick
immovable cloud that had dulled the daytime broke
into a scudding fleece, through which the moon forded
her way as a nebulous spot of watery white, sending
light enough, though of a rayless kind, into the castle
chambers to show the confusion that reigned there.
At this time an eye might have noticed
a figure flitting in and about those draughty apartments,
and making no more noise in so doing than a puff of
wind. Its motion hither and thither was rapid,
but methodical, its bearing absorbed, yet cautious.
Though it ran more or less through all the principal
rooms, the chief scene of its operations was the Long
Gallery overlooking the Pleasance, which was covered
by an ornamental wood-and-plaster roof, and contained
a whole throng of family portraits, besides heavy
old cabinets and the like. The portraits which
were of value as works of art were smaller than these,
and hung in adjoining rooms.
The manifest occupation of the figure
was that of removing these small and valuable pictures
from other chambers to the gallery in which the rest
were hung, and piling them in a heap in the midst.
Included in the group were nine by Sir Peter Lely,
five by Vandyck, four by Cornelius Jansen, one by
Salvator Rosa (remarkable as being among the few English
portraits ever painted by that master), many by Kneller,
and two by Romney. Apparently by accident, the
light being insufficient to distinguish them from
portraits, the figure also brought a Raffaelle Virgin-and-Child,
a magnificent Tintoretto, a Titian, and a Giorgione.
On these was laid a large collection
of enamelled miniature portraits of the same illustrious
line; afterwards tapestries and cushions embroidered
with the initials ‘De S.’; and next the
cradle presented by Charles the First to the contemporary
De Stancy mother, till at length there arose in the
middle of the floor a huge heap containing most of
what had been personal and peculiar to members of the
De Stancy family as distinct from general furniture.
Then the figure went from door to
door, and threw open each that was unfastened.
It next proceeded to a room on the ground floor, at
present fitted up as a carpenter’s shop, and
knee-deep in shavings. An armful of these was
added to the pile of objects in the gallery; a window
at each end of the gallery was opened, causing a brisk
draught along the walls; and then the activity of
the figure ceased, and it was seen no more.
Five minutes afterwards a light shone
upon the lawn from the windows of the Long Gallery,
which glowed with more brilliancy than it had known
in the meridian of its Caroline splendours. Thereupon
the framed gentleman in the lace collar seemed to
open his eyes more widely; he with the flowing locks
and turn-up mustachios to part his lips; he in the
armour, who was so much like Captain De Stancy, to
shake the plates of his mail with suppressed laughter;
the lady with the three-stringed pearl necklace, and
vast expanse of neck, to nod with satisfaction and
triumphantly signify to her adjoining husband that
this was a meet and glorious end.
The flame increased, and blown upon
by the wind roared round the pictures, the tapestries,
and the cradle, up to the plaster ceiling and through
it into the forest of oak timbers above.
The best sitting-room at the Lord-Quantock-Arms
in Markton was as cosy this evening as a room can
be that lacks the minuter furniture on which cosiness
so largely depends. By the fire sat Paula and
Somerset, the former with a shawl round her shoulders
to keep off the draught which, despite the curtains,
forced its way in on this gusty night through the
windows opening upon the balcony. Paula held a
letter in her hand, the contents of which formed the
subject of their conversation. Happy as she was
in her general situation, there was for the nonce a
tear in her eye.
’My ever dear
Paula (ran the letter), Your last letter
has just reached me, and I have followed your account
of your travels and intentions with more interest
than I can tell. You, who know me, need no assurance
of this. At the present moment, however, I am
in the whirl of a change that has resulted from a
resolution taken some time ago, but concealed from
almost everybody till now. Why? Well, I will
own from cowardice fear lest
I should be reasoned out of my plan. I am going
to steal from the world, Paula, from the social world,
for whose gaieties and ambitions I never had much
liking, and whose circles I have not the ability to
grace. My home, and resting-place till the great
rest comes, is with the Protestant Sisterhood at -----.
Whatever shortcomings may be found in such a community,
I believe that I shall be happier there than in any
other place.
’Whatever you may think of my
judgment in taking this step, I can assure you that
I have not done it without consideration. My reasons
are good, and my determination is unalterable.
But, my own very best friend, and more than sister,
don’t think that I mean to leave my love and
friendship for you behind me. No, Paula, you will
always be with me, and I believe that if an increase
in what I already feel for you be possible, it will
be furthered by the retirement and meditation I shall
enjoy in my secluded home. My heart is very full,
dear too full to write more. God bless
you, and your husband. You must come and see me
there; I have not so many friends that I can afford
to lose you who have been so kind. I write this
with the fellow-pen to yours, that you gave me when
we went to Budmouth together. Good-bye! Ever
your own sister, Charlotte.’
Paula had first read this through
silently, and now in reading it a second time aloud
to Somerset her voice faltered, and she wept outright.
‘I had been expecting her to live with us always,’
she said through her tears, ‘and to think she
should have decided to do this!’
‘It is a pity certainly,’
said Somerset gently. ’She was genuine,
if anybody ever was; and simple as she was true.’
‘I am the more sorry,’
Paula presently resumed, ’because of a little
plan I had been thinking of with regard to her.
You know that the pictures and curiosities of the
castle are not included in the things I cannot touch,
or impeach, or whatever it is. They are our own
to do what we like with. My father felt in devising
the estate that, however interesting to the De Stancys
those objects might be, they did not concern us were
indeed rather in the way, having been come by so strangely,
through Mr. Wilkins, though too valuable to be treated
lightly. Now I was going to suggest that we would
not sell them indeed I could not bear to
do such a thing with what had belonged to Charlotte’s
forefathers but to hand them over to her
as a gift, either to keep for herself, or to pass
on to her brother, as she should choose. Now
I fear there is no hope of it: and yet I shall
never like to see them in the house.’
’It can be done still, I should
think. She can accept them for her brother when
he settles, without absolutely taking them into her
own possession.’
’It would be a kind of generosity
which hardly amounts to more than justice (although
they were purchased) from a recusant usurper to a dear
friend not that I am a usurper exactly;
well, from a representative of the new aristocracy
of internationality to a representative of the old
aristocracy of exclusiveness.’
’What do you call yourself,
Paula, since you are not of your father’s creed?’
’I suppose I am what poor Mr.
Woodwell said by the way, we must call
and see him something or other that’s
in Revelation, neither cold nor hot. But of course
that’s a sub-species I may be a lukewarm
anything. What I really am, as far as I know,
is one of that body to whom lukewarmth is not an accident
but a provisional necessity, till they see a little
more clearly.’ She had crossed over to his
side, and pulling his head towards her whispered a
name in his ear.
’Why, Mr. Woodwell said you
were that too! You carry your beliefs very comfortably.
I shall be glad when enthusiasm is come again.’
’I am going to revise and correct
my beliefs one of these days when I have thought a
little further.’ She suddenly breathed a
sigh and added, ’How transitory our best emotions
are! In talking of myself I am heartlessly forgetting
Charlotte, and becoming happy again. I won’t
be happy to-night for her sake!’
A few minutes after this their attention
was attracted by a noise of footsteps running along
the street; then a heavy tramp of horses, and lumbering
of wheels. Other feet were heard scampering at
intervals, and soon somebody ascended the staircase
and approached their door. The head waiter appeared.
‘Ma’am, Stancy Castle
is all afire!’ said the waiter breathlessly.
Somerset jumped up, drew aside the
curtains, and stepped into the bow-window. Right
before him rose a blaze. The window looked upon
the street and along the turnpike road to the very
hill on which the castle stood, the keep being visible
in the daytime above the trees. Here rose the
light, which appeared little further off than a stone’s
throw instead of nearly three miles. Every curl
of the smoke and every wave of the flame was distinct,
and Somerset fancied he could hear the crackling.
Paula had risen from her seat and
joined him in the window, where she heard some people
in the street saying that the servants were all safe;
after which she gave her mind more fully to the material
aspects of the catastrophe.
The whole town was now rushing off
to the scene of the conflagration, which, shining
straight along the street, showed the burgesses’
running figures distinctly upon the illumined road.
Paula was quite ready to act upon Somerset’s
suggestion that they too should hasten to the spot,
and a fly was got ready in a few minutes. With
lapse of time Paula evinced more anxiety as to the
fate of her castle, and when they had driven as near
as it was prudent to do, they dismounted, and went
on foot into the throng of people which was rapidly
gathering from the town and surrounding villages.
Among the faces they recognized Mr. Woodwell, Havill
the architect, the rector of the parish, the curate,
and many others known to them by sight. These,
as soon as they saw the young couple, came forward
with words of condolence, imagining them to have been
burnt out of bed, and vied with each other in offering
them a lodging. Somerset explained where they
were staying and that they required no accommodation,
Paula interrupting with ’O my poor horses, what
has become of them?’
‘The fire is not near the stables,’
said Mr. Woodwell. ’It broke out in the
body of the building. The horses, however, are
driven into the field.’
‘I can assure you, you need
not be alarmed, madam,’ said Havill. ’The
chief constable is here, and the two town engines,
and I am doing all I can. The castle engine unfortunately
is out of repair.’
Somerset and Paula then went on to
another point of view near the gymnasium, where they
could not be seen by the crowd. Three-quarters
of a mile off, on their left hand, the powerful irradiation
fell upon the brick chapel in which Somerset had first
seen the woman who now stood beside him as his wife.
It was the only object visible in that direction,
the dull hills and trees behind failing to catch the
light. She significantly pointed it out to Somerset,
who knew her meaning, and they turned again to the
more serious matter.
It had long been apparent that in
the face of such a wind all the pigmy appliances that
the populace could bring to act upon such a mass of
combustion would be unavailing. As much as could
burn that night was burnt, while some of that which
would not burn crumbled and fell as a formless heap,
whence new flames towered up, and inclined to the
north-east so far as to singe the trees of the park.
The thicker walls of Norman date remained unmoved,
partly because of their thickness, and partly because
in them stone vaults took the place of wood floors.
The tower clock kept manfully going
till it had struck one, its face smiling out from
the smoke as if nothing were the matter, after which
hour something fell down inside, and it went no more.
Cunningham Haze, with his body of
men, was devoted in his attention, and came up to
say a word to our two spectators from time to time.
Towards four o’clock the flames diminished,
and feeling thoroughly weary, Somerset and Paula remained
no longer, returning to Markton as they had come.
On their journey they pondered and
discussed what course it would be best to pursue in
the circumstances, gradually deciding not to attempt
rebuilding the castle unless they were absolutely compelled.
True, the main walls were still standing as firmly
as ever; but there was a feeling common to both of
them that it would be well to make an opportunity
of a misfortune, and leaving the edifice in ruins start
their married life in a mansion of independent construction
hard by the old one, unencumbered with the ghosts
of an unfortunate line.
’We will build a new house from
the ground, eclectic in style. We will remove
the ashes, charred wood, and so on from the ruin, and
plant more ivy. The winter rains will soon wash
the unsightly smoke from the walls, and Stancy Castle
will be beautiful in its decay. You, Paula, will
be yourself again, and recover, if you have not already,
from the warp given to your mind (according to Woodwell)
by the mediaevalism of that place.’
‘And be a perfect representative
of “the modern spirit"?’ she inquired;
’representing neither the senses and understanding,
nor the heart and imagination; but what a finished
writer calls “the imaginative reason"?’
’Yes; for since it is rather
in your line you may as well keep straight on.’
’Very well, I’ll keep
straight on; and we’ll build a new house beside
the ruin, and show the modern spirit for evermore....
But, George, I wish ’ And Paula repressed
a sigh.
‘Well?’
‘I wish my castle wasn’t burnt; and I
wish you were a De Stancy!’