ACCIDENTAL.
When dinner was over, Lady Theobald
rose, and proceeded to the drawing-room, Lucia following
in her wake. From her very babyhood Lucia had
disliked the drawing-room, which was an imposing apartment
of great length and height, containing much massive
furniture, upholstered in faded blue satin. All
the girl’s evenings, since her fifth year, had
been spent sitting opposite her grandmother, in one
of the straightest of the blue chairs: all the
most scathing reproofs she had received had been administered
to her at such times. She had a secret theory,
indeed, that all unpleasant things occurred in the
drawing-room after dinner.
Just as they had seated themselves,
and Lady Theobald was on the point of drawing toward
her the little basket containing the gray woollen mittens
she made a duty of employing herself by knitting each
evening, Dobson, the coachman, in his character of
footman, threw open the door, and announced a visitor.
“Capt. Barold.”
Lady Theobald dropped her gray mitten,
the steel needles falling upon the table with a clink.
She rose to her feet at once, and met half-way the
young man who had entered.
“My dear Francis,” she
remarked, “I am exceedingly glad to see you at
last,” with a slight emphasis upon the “at
last.”
“Tha-anks,” said Capt.
Barold, rather languidly. “You’re
very good, I’m sure.”
Then he glanced at Lucia, and Lady
Theobald addressed her:—
“Lucia,” she said, “this
is Francis Barold, who is your cousin.”
Capt. Barold shook hands feebly.
“I have been trying to find out whether it is
third or fourth,” he said.
“It is third,” said my lady.
Lucia had never seen her display such
cordiality to anybody. But Capt. Francis
Barold did not seem much impressed by it. It struck
Lucia that he would not be likely to be impressed
by any thing. He seated himself near her grandmother’s
chair, and proceeded to explain his presence on the
spot, without exhibiting much interest even in his
own relation of facts.
“I promised the Rathburns that
I would spend a week at their place; and Slowbridge
was on the way, so it occurred to me I would drop off
in passing. The Rathburns’ place, Broadoaks,
is about ten miles farther on; not far, you see.”
“Then,” said Lady Theobald,
“I am to understand that your visit is accidental.”
Capt. Barold was not embarrassed.
He did not attempt to avoid her ladyship’s rather
stern eye, as he made his cool reply.
“Well, yes,” he said.
“I beg pardon, but it is accidental, rather.”
Lucia gave him a pretty, frightened
look, as if she felt that, after such an audacious
confession, something very serious must happen; but
nothing serious happened at all. Singularly enough,
it was Lady Theobald herself who looked ill at ease,
and as though she had not been prepared for such a
contingency.
During the whole of the evening, in
fact, it was always Lady Theobald who was placed at
a disadvantage, Lucia discovered. She could hardly
realize the fact at first; but before an hour had passed,
its truth was forced upon her.
Capt. Barold was a very striking-looking
man, upon the whole. He was large, gracefully
built, and fair: his eyes were gray, and noticeable
for the coldness of their expression, his features
regular and aquiline, his movements leisurely.
As he conversed with her grandmother,
Lucia wondered at him privately. It seemed to
her innocent mind that he had been everywhere, and
seen every thing and everybody, without caring for
or enjoying his privileges. The truth was, that
he had seen and experienced a great deal too much.
As an only child, the heir to a large property, and
heir prospective to one of the oldest titles in the
country, he had exhausted life early. He saw in
Lady Theobald, not the imposing head and social front
of Slowbridge social life, the power who rewarded
with approval and punished with a frown, but a tiresome,
pretentious old woman, whom his mother had asked him,
for some feminine reason, to visit. “She
feels she has a claim upon us, Francis,” she
had said appealingly.
“Well,” he had remarked,
“that is rather deuced cool, isn’t it?
We have people enough on our hands without cultivating
Slowbridge, you know.”
His mother sighed faintly.
“It is true we have a great
many people to consider; but I wish you would do it,
my dear.”
She did not say any thing at all about
Lucia: above all, she did not mention that a
year ago she herself had spent two or three days at
Slowbridge, and had been charmed beyond measure by
the girl’s innocent freshness, and that she
had said, rather absently, to Lady Theobald,—
“What a charming wife Lucia
would make for a man to whom gentleness and a yielding
disposition were necessary! We do not find such
girls in society nowadays, my dear Lady Theobald.
It is very difficult of late years to find a girl
who is not spoken of as ‘fast,’ and who
is not disposed to take the reins in her own hands.
Our young men are flattered and courted until they
become a little dictatorial, and our girls are spoiled
at home. And the result is a great deal of domestic
unhappiness afterward—and even a great
deal of scandal, which is dreadful to contemplate.
I cannot help feeling the greatest anxiety in secret
concerning Francis. Young men so seldom consider
these matters until it is too late.”
“Girls are not trained as they
were in my young days, or even in yours,” said
Lady Theobald. “They are allowed too much
liberty. Lucia has been brought up immediately
under my own eye.”
“I feel that it is fortunate,”
remarked Mrs. Barold, quite incidentally, “that
Francis need not make a point of money.”
For a few moments Lady Theobald did
not respond; but afterward, in the course of the conversation
which followed, she made an observation which was,
of course, purely incidental.
“If Lucia makes a marriage which
pleases her great-uncle, old Mr. Dugald Binnie, of
Glasgow, she will be a very fortunate girl. He
has intimated, in his eccentric fashion, that his
immense fortune will either be hers, or will be spent
in building charitable asylums of various kinds.
He is a remarkable and singular man.”
When Capt. Barold had entered
his distinguished relative’s drawing-room, he
had not regarded his third cousin with a very great
deal of interest. He had seen too many beauties
in his thirty years to be greatly moved by the sight
of one; and here was only a girl who had soft eyes,
and looked young for her age, and who wore an ugly
muslin gown, that most girls could not have carried
off at all.
“You have spent the greater
part of your life in Slowbridge?” he condescended
to say in the course of the evening.
“I have lived here always,”
Lucia answered. “I have never been away
more than a week at a time.”
“Ah?” interrogatively.
“I hope you have not found it dull.”
“No,” smiling a little.
“Not very. You see, I have known nothing
gayer.”
“There is society enough of
a harmless kind here,” spoke up Lady Theobald
virtuously. “I do not approve of a round
of gayeties for young people: it unfits them
for the duties of life.”
But Capt. Barold was not as favorably
impressed by these remarks as might have been anticipated.
“What an old fool she is!”
was his polite inward comment. And he resolved
at once to make his visit as brief as possible, and
not to be induced to run down again during his stay
at Broadoaks. He did not even take the trouble
to appear to enjoy his evening. From his earliest
infancy, he had always found it easier to please himself
than to please other people. In fact, the world
had devoted itself to endeavoring to please him, and
win his—toleration, we may say, instead
of admiration, since it could not hope for the latter.
At home he had been adored rapturously by a large
circle of affectionate male and female relatives; at
school his tutors had been singularly indulgent of
his faults and admiring of his talents; even among
his fellow-pupils he had been a sort of autocrat.
Why not, indeed, with such birthrights
and such prospects? When he had entered society,
he had met with even more amiable treatment from affectionate
mothers, from innocent daughters, from cordial paternal
parents, who voted him an exceedingly fine fellow.
Why should he bore himself by taking the trouble to
seem pleased by a stupid evening with an old grenadier
in petticoats and a badly dressed country girl?
Lucia was very glad when, in answer
to a timidly appealing glance, Lady Theobald said,—
“It is half-past ten. You may wish us good-night,
Lucia.”
Lucia obeyed, as if she had been half-past
ten herself, instead of nearly twenty; and Barold
was not long in following her example.
Dobson led him to a stately chamber
at the top of the staircase, and left him there.
The captain chose the largest and most luxurious chair,
sat down in it, and lighted a cigar at his leisure.
“Confoundedly stupid hole!”
he said with a refined vigor one would scarcely have
expected from an individual of his birth and breeding.
“I shall leave to-morrow, of course. What
was my mother thinking of? Stupid business from
first to last.”