Lady Constantine flung down the old-fashioned
lacework, whose beauties she had been pointing out
to Swithin, and exclaimed, ’Who can it be?
Not Louis, surely?’
They listened. An arrival was
such a phenomenon at this unfrequented mansion, and
particularly a late arrival, that no servant was on
the alert to respond to the call; and the visitor
rang again, more loudly than before. Sounds
of the tardy opening and shutting of a passage-door
from the kitchen quarter then reached their ears, and
Viviette went into the corridor to hearken more attentively.
In a few minutes she returned to the wardrobe-room
in which she had left Swithin.
‘Yes; it is my brother!’
she said with difficult composure. ’I just
caught his voice. He has no doubt come back from
Paris to stay. This is a rather vexatious, indolent
way he has, never to write to prepare me!’
‘I can easily go away,’ said Swithin.
By this time, however, her brother
had been shown into the house, and the footsteps of
the page were audible, coming in search of Lady Constantine.
‘If you will wait there a moment,’
she said, directing St. Cleeve into a bedchamber which
adjoined; ’you will be quite safe from interruption,
and I will quickly come back.’ Taking
the light she left him.
Swithin waited in darkness.
Not more than ten minutes had passed when a whisper
in her voice came through the keyhole. He opened
the door.
‘Yes; he is come to stay!’
she said. ‘He is at supper now.’
’Very well; don’t be flurried,
dearest. Shall I stay too, as we planned?’
‘O, Swithin, I fear not!’
she replied anxiously. ’You see how it
is. To-night we have broken the arrangement
that you should never come here; and this is the result.
Will it offend you if I ask you to leave?’
’Not in the least. Upon
the whole, I prefer the comfort of my little cabin
and homestead to the gauntness and alarms of this place.’
‘There, now, I fear you are
offended!’ she said, a tear collecting in her
eye. ’I wish I was going back with you
to the cabin! How happy we were, those three
days of our stay there! But it is better, perhaps,
just now, that you should leave me. Yes, these
rooms are oppressive. They require a large household
to make them cheerful. . . . Yet, Swithin,’
she added, after reflection, ’I will not request
you to go. Do as you think best. I will
light a night-light, and leave you here to consider.
For myself, I must go downstairs to my brother at
once, or he’ll wonder what I am doing.’
She kindled the little light, and
again retreated, closing the door upon him.
Swithin stood and waited some time;
till he considered that upon the whole it would be
preferable to leave. With this intention he emerged
and went softly along the dark passage towards the
extreme end, where there was a little crooked staircase
that would conduct him down to a disused side door.
Descending this stair he duly arrived at the other
side of the house, facing the quarter whence the wind
blew, and here he was surprised to catch the noise
of rain beating against the windows. It was
a state of weather which fully accounted for the visitor’s
impatient ringing.
St. Cleeve was in a minor kind of
dilemma. The rain reminded him that his hat
and great-coat had been left downstairs, in the front
part of the house; and though he might have gone home
without either in ordinary weather it was not a pleasant
feat in the pelting winter rain. Retracing his
steps to Viviette’s room he took the light, and
opened a closet-door that he had seen ajar on his
way down. Within the closet hung various articles
of apparel, upholstery lumber of all kinds filling
the back part. Swithin thought he might find
here a cloak of hers to throw round him, but finally
took down from a peg a more suitable garment, the only
one of the sort that was there. It was an old
moth-eaten great-coat, heavily trimmed with fur; and
in removing it a companion cap of sealskin was disclosed.
‘Whose can they be?’ he
thought, and a gloomy answer suggested itself.
‘Pooh,’ he then said (summoning the scientific
side of his nature), ‘matter is matter, and
mental association only a delusion.’ Putting
on the garments he returned the light to Lady Constantine’s
bedroom, and again prepared to depart as before.
Scarcely, however, had he regained
the corridor a second time, when he heard a light
footstep seemingly Viviette’s again
on the front landing. Wondering what she wanted
with him further he waited, taking the precaution
to step into the closet till sure it was she.
The figure came onward, bent to the
keyhole of the bedroom door, and whispered (supposing
him still inside), ’Swithin, on second thoughts
I think you may stay with safety.’
Having no further doubt of her personality
he came out with thoughtless abruptness from the closet
behind her, and looking round suddenly she beheld
his shadowy fur-clad outline. At once she raised
her hands in horror, as if to protect herself from
him; she uttered a shriek, and turned shudderingly
to the wall, covering her face.
Swithin would have picked her up in
a moment, but by this time he could hear footsteps
rushing upstairs, in response to her cry. In
consternation, and with a view of not compromising
her, he effected his retreat as fast as possible,
reaching the bend of the corridor just as her brother
Louis appeared with a light at the other extremity.
‘What’s the matter, for
heaven’s sake, Viviette?’ said Louis.
‘My husband!’ she involuntarily exclaimed.
‘What nonsense!’
‘O yes, it is nonsense,’ she added, with
an effort. ‘It was nothing.’
‘But what was the cause of your cry?’
She had by this time recovered her
reason and judgment. ’O, it was a trick
of the imagination,’ she said, with a faint laugh.
’I live so much alone that I get superstitious and I
thought for the moment I saw an apparition.’
‘Of your late husband?’
’Yes. But it was nothing;
it was the outline of the tall clock and
the chair behind. Would you mind going down,
and leaving me to go into my room for a moment?’
She entered the bedroom, and her brother
went downstairs. Swithin thought it best to
leave well alone, and going noiselessly out of the
house plodded through the rain homeward. It was
plain that agitations of one sort and another had
so weakened Viviette’s nerves as to lay her open
to every impression. That the clothes he had
borrowed were some cast-off garments of the late Sir
Blount had occurred to St. Cleeve in taking them;
but in the moment of returning to her side he had forgotten
this, and the shape they gave to his figure had obviously
been a reminder of too sudden a sort for her.
Musing thus he walked along as if he were still,
as before, the lonely student, dissociated from all
mankind, and with no shadow of right or interest in
Welland House or its mistress.
The great-coat and cap were unpleasant
companions; but Swithin having been reared, or having
reared himself, in the scientific school of thought,
would not give way to his sense of their weirdness.
To do so would have been treason to his own beliefs
and aims.
When nearly home, at a point where
his track converged on another path, there approached
him from the latter a group of indistinct forms.
The tones of their speech revealed them to be Hezzy
Biles, Nat Chapman, Fry, and other labourers.
Swithin was about to say a word to them, till recollecting
his disguise he deemed it advisable to hold his tongue,
lest his attire should tell a too dangerous tale as
to where he had come from. By degrees they drew
closer, their walk being in the same direction.
‘Good-night, strainger,’ said Nat.
The stranger did not reply.
All of them paced on abreast of him,
and he could perceive in the gloom that their faces
were turned inquiringly upon his form. Then a
whisper passed from one to another of them; then Chapman,
who was the boldest, dropped immediately behind his
heels, and followed there for some distance, taking
close observations of his outline, after which the
men grouped again and whispered. Thinking it
best to let them pass on Swithin slackened his pace,
and they went ahead of him, apparently without much
reluctance.
There was no doubt that they had been
impressed by the clothes he wore; and having no wish
to provoke similar comments from his grandmother and
Hannah, Swithin took the precaution, on arriving at
Welland Bottom, to enter the homestead by the outhouse.
Here he deposited the cap and coat in secure hiding,
afterwards going round to the front and opening the
door in the usual way.
In the entry he met Hannah, who said
’Only to hear what have been
seed to-night, Mr. Swithin! The work-folk have
dropped in to tell us!’
In the kitchen were the men who had
outstripped him on the road. Their countenances,
instead of wearing the usual knotty irregularities,
had a smoothed-out expression of blank concern.
Swithin’s entrance was unobtrusive and quiet,
as if he had merely come down from his study upstairs,
and they only noticed him by enlarging their gaze,
so as to include him in the audience.
‘We was in a deep talk at the
moment,’ continued Blore, ’and Natty had
just brought up that story about old Jeremiah Paddock’s
crossing the park one night at one o’clock in
the morning, and seeing Sir Blount a-shutting my lady
out-o’-doors; and we was saying that it seemed
a true return that he should perish in a foreign land;
when we happened to look up, and there was Sir Blount
a-walking along.’
‘Did it overtake you, or did
you overtake it?’ whispered Hannah sepulchrally.
’I don’t say ‘twas
it,’ returned Sammy. ’God
forbid that I should drag in a resurrection word about
what perhaps was still solid manhood, and has to die!
But he, or it, closed in upon us, as ‘twere.’
‘Yes, closed in upon us!’ said Haymoss.
‘And I said “Good-night, strainger,"’
added Chapman.
’Yes, “Good-night, strainger,” that
wez yer words, Natty. I support ye in it.’
‘And then he closed in upon us still more.’
‘We closed in upon he, rather,’ said Chapman.
’Well, well; ’tis the
same thing in such matters! And the form was
Sir Blount’s. My nostrils told me, for there,
’a smelled. Yes, I could smell’n,
being to leeward.’
’Lord, lord, what unwholesome
scandal’s this about the ghost of a respectable
gentleman?’ said Mrs. Martin, who had entered
from the sitting-room.
’Now, wait, ma’am.
I don’t say ’twere a low smell, mind ye.
’Twere a high smell, a sort of gamey flaviour,
calling to mind venison and hare, just as you’d
expect of a great squire, not like a poor
man’s ’natomy, at all; and that was what
strengthened my faith that ‘twas Sir Blount.’
(’The skins that old coat was
made of,’ ruminated Swithin.)
‘Well, well; I’ve not
held out against the figure o’ starvation these
five-and-twenty year, on nine shillings a week, to
be afeard of a walking vapour, sweet or savoury,’
said Hezzy. ‘So here’s home-along.’
‘Bide a bit longer, and I’m
going too,’ continued Fry. ’Well,
when I found ’twas Sir Blount my spet dried
up within my mouth; for neither hedge nor bush were
there for refuge against any foul spring ’a might
have made at us.’
’’Twas very curious; but
we had likewise a-mentioned his name just afore, in
talking of the confirmation that’s shortly coming
on,’ said Hezzy.
‘Is there soon to be a confirmation?’
’Yes. In this parish the
first time in Welland church for twenty years.
As I say, I had told ’em that he was confirmed
the same year that I went up to have it done, as I
have very good cause to mind. When we went to
be examined, the pa’son said to me, “Rehearse
the articles of thy belief.” Mr. Blount
(as he was then) was nighest me, and he whispered,
“Women and wine.” “Women and
wine,” says I to the pa’son: and for
that I was sent back till next confirmation, Sir Blount
never owning that he was the rascal.’
‘Confirmation was a sight different
at that time,’ mused Biles. ’The
Bishops didn’t lay it on so strong then as they
do now. Now-a-days, yer Bishop gies both hands
to every Jack-rag and Tom-straw that drops the knee
afore him; but ’twas six chaps to one blessing
when we was boys. The Bishop o’ that time
would stretch out his palms and run his fingers over
our row of crowns as off-hand as a bank gentleman telling
money. The great lords of the Church in them
days wasn’t particular to a soul or two more
or less; and, for my part, I think living was easier
for ‘t.’
‘The new Bishop, I hear, is
a bachelor-man; or a widow gentleman is it?’
asked Mrs. Martin.
’Bachelor, I believe, ma’am.
Mr. San Cleeve, making so bold, you’ve never
faced him yet, I think?’
Mrs. Martin shook her head.
‘No; it was a piece of neglect.
I hardly know how it happened,’ she said.
‘I am going to, this time,’
said Swithin, and turned the chat to other matters.