Half an hour before this time Swithin
St. Cleeve had been sitting in his cabin at the base
of the column, working out some figures from observations
taken on preceding nights, with a view to a theory
that he had in his head on the motions of certain
so-called fixed stars.
The evening being a little chilly
a small fire was burning in the stove, and this and
the shaded lamp before him lent a remarkably cosy air
to the chamber. He was awakened from his reveries
by a scratching at the window-pane like that of the
point of an ivy leaf, which he knew to be really caused
by the tip of his sweetheart-wife’s forefinger.
He rose and opened the door to admit her, not without
astonishment as to how she had been able to get away
from her friends.
‘Dearest Viv, why, what’s
the matter?’ he said, perceiving that her face,
as the lamplight fell on it, was sad, and even stormy.
’I thought I would run across
to see you. I have heard something so so to
your discredit, and I know it can’t be true!
I know you are constancy itself; but your constancy
produces strange effects in people’s eyes!’
‘Good heavens! Nobody has found us out ’
’No, no it is not
that. You know, Swithin, that I am always sincere,
and willing to own if I am to blame in anything.
Now will you prove to me that you are the same by
owning some fault to me?’
‘Yes, dear, indeed; directly
I can think of one worth owning.’
‘I wonder one does not rush upon your tongue
in a moment!’
’I confess that I am sufficiently
a Pharisee not to experience that spontaneity.’
’Swithin, don’t speak
so affectedly, when you know so well what I mean!
Is it nothing to you that, after all our vows for life,
you have thought it right to flirt with
a village girl?’
‘O Viviette!’ interrupted
Swithin, taking her hand, which was hot and trembling.
’You who are full of noble and generous feelings,
and regard me with devoted tenderness that has never
been surpassed by woman, how can you be
so greatly at fault? I flirt, Viviette?
By thinking that you injure yourself in my eyes.
Why, I am so far from doing so that I continually
pull myself up for watching you too jealously, as to-day,
when I have been dreading the effect upon you of other
company in my absence, and thinking that you rather
shut the gates against me when you have big-wigs to
entertain.’
‘Do you, Swithin?’ she
cried. It was evident that the honest tone of
his words was having a great effect in clearing away
the clouds. She added with an uncertain smile,
’But how can I believe that, after what was seen
to-day? My brother, not knowing in the least
that I had an iota of interest in you, told me that
he witnessed the signs of an attachment between you
and Tabitha Lark in church, this morning.’
‘Ah!’ cried Swithin, with
a burst of laughter. ’Now I know what you
mean, and what has caused this misunderstanding!
How good of you, Viviette, to come at once and have
it out with me, instead of brooding over it with dark
imaginings, and thinking bitter things of me, as many
women would have done!’ He succinctly told the
whole story of his little adventure with Tabitha that
morning; and the sky was clear on both sides.
‘When shall I be able to claim you,’ he
added, ’and put an end to all such painful accidents
as these?’
She partially sighed. Her perception
of what the outside world was made of, latterly somewhat
obscured by solitude and her lover’s company,
had been revived to-day by her entertainment of the
Bishop, clergymen, and, more particularly, clergymen’s
wives; and it did not diminish her sense of the difficulties
in Swithin’s path to see anew how little was
thought of the greatest gifts, mental and spiritual,
if they were not backed up by substantial temporalities.
However, the pair made the best of their future that
circumstances permitted, and the interview was at length
drawing to a close when there came, without the slightest
forewarning, a smart rat-tat-tat upon the little door.
‘O I am lost!’ said Viviette,
seizing his arm. ’Why was I so incautious?’
‘It is nobody of consequence,’
whispered Swithin assuringly. ’Somebody
from my grandmother, probably, to know when I am coming
home.’
They were unperceived so far, for
the only window which gave light to the hut was screened
by a curtain. At that moment they heard the sound
of their visitors’ voices, and, with a consternation
as great as her own, Swithin discerned the tones of
Mr. Torkingham and the Bishop of Melchester.
‘Where shall I get? What
shall I do?’ said the poor lady, clasping her
hands.
Swithin looked around the cabin, and
a very little look was required to take in all its
resources. At one end, as previously explained,
were a table, stove, chair, cupboard, and so on; while
the other was completely occupied by a diminutive
Arabian bedstead, hung with curtains of pink-and-white
chintz. On the inside of the bed there was a
narrow channel, about a foot wide, between it and
the wall of the hut. Into this cramped retreat
Viviette slid herself, and stood trembling behind the
curtains.
By this time the knock had been repeated
more loudly, the light through the window-blind unhappily
revealing the presence of some inmate. Swithin
threw open the door, and Mr. Torkingham introduced
his visitors.
The Bishop shook hands with the young
man, told him he had known his father, and at Swithin’s
invitation, weak as it was, entered the cabin, the
vicar and Louis Glanville remaining on the threshold,
not to inconveniently crowd the limited space within.
Bishop Helmsdale looked benignantly
around the apartment, and said, ’Quite a settlement
in the backwoods quite: far enough
from the world to afford the votary of science the
seclusion he needs, and not so far as to limit his
resources. A hermit might apparently live here
in as much solitude as in a primeval forest.’
’His lordship has been good
enough to express an interest in your studies,’
said Mr. Torkingham to St. Cleeve. ’And
we have come to ask you to let us see the observatory.’
‘With great pleasure,’ stammered Swithin.
‘Where is the observatory?’ inquired the
Bishop, peering round again.
‘The staircase is just outside
this door,’ Swithin answered. ’I
am at your lordship’s service, and will show
you up at once.’
‘And this is your little bed,
for use when you work late,’ said the Bishop.
‘Yes; I am afraid it is rather
untidy,’ Swithin apologized.
‘And here are your books,’
the Bishop continued, turning to the table and the
shaded lamp. ’You take an observation at
the top, I presume, and come down here to record your
observations.’
The young man explained his precise
processes as well as his state of mind would let him,
and while he was doing so Mr. Torkingham and Louis
waited patiently without, looking sometimes into the
night, and sometimes through the door at the interlocutors,
and listening to their scientific converse.
When all had been exhibited here below, Swithin lit
his lantern, and, inviting his visitors to follow,
led the way up the column, experiencing no small sense
of relief as soon as he heard the footsteps of all
three tramping on the stairs behind him. He knew
very well that, once they were inside the spiral,
Viviette was out of danger, her knowledge of the locality
enabling her to find her way with perfect safety through
the plantation, and into the park home.
At the top he uncovered his equatorial,
and, for the first time at ease, explained to them
its beauties, and revealed by its help the glories
of those stars that were eligible for inspection.
The Bishop spoke as intelligently as could be expected
on a topic not peculiarly his own; but, somehow, he
seemed rather more abstracted in manner now than when
he had arrived. Swithin thought that perhaps
the long clamber up the stairs, coming after a hard
day’s work, had taken his spontaneity out of
him, and Mr. Torkingham was afraid that his lordship
was getting bored. But this did not appear to
be the case; for though he said little he stayed on
some time longer, examining the construction of the
dome after relinquishing the telescope; while occasionally
Swithin caught the eyes of the Bishop fixed hard on
him.
‘Perhaps he sees some likeness
of my father in me,’ the young man thought;
and the party making ready to leave at this time he
conducted them to the bottom of the tower.
Swithin was not prepared for what
followed their descent. All were standing at
the foot of the staircase. The astronomer, lantern
in hand, offered to show them the way out of the plantation,
to which Mr. Torkingham replied that he knew the way
very well, and would not trouble his young friend.
He strode forward with the words, and Louis followed
him, after waiting a moment and finding that the Bishop
would not take the precedence. The latter and
Swithin were thus left together for one moment, whereupon
the Bishop turned.
‘Mr. St. Cleeve,’ he said
in a strange voice, ’I should like to speak to
you privately, before I leave, to-morrow morning.
Can you meet me let me see in
the churchyard, at half-past ten o’clock?’
‘O yes, my lord, certainly,’
said Swithin. And before he had recovered from
his surprise the Bishop had joined the others in the
shades of the plantation.
Swithin immediately opened the door
of the hut, and scanned the nook behind the bed.
As he had expected his bird had flown.