When the earl and his countess went
to their house in the country, there fell to Mistress
Anne a great and curious piece of good fortune.
In her wildest dreams she had never dared to hope
that such a thing might be.
My Lady Dunstanwolde, on her first
visit home, bore her sister back with her to the manor,
and there established her. She gave her a suite
of rooms and a waiting woman of her own, and even
provided her with a suitable wardrobe. This
last she had chosen herself with a taste and fitness
which only such wit as her own could have devised.
“They are not great rooms I
give thee, Anne,” she said, “but quiet
and small ones, which you can make home-like in such
ways as I know your taste lies. My lord has
aided me to choose romances for your shelves, he knowing
more of books than I do. And I shall not dress
thee out like a peacock with gay colours and great
farthingales. They would frighten thee, poor
woman, and be a burden with their weight. I have
chosen such things as are not too splendid, but will
suit thy pale face and shot partridge eyes.”
Anne stood in the middle of her room
and looked about at its comforts, wondering.
“Sister,” she said, “why
are you so good to me? What have I done to serve
you? Why is it Anne instead of Barbara you are
so gracious to?”
“Perchance because I am a vain
woman and would be worshipped as you worship me.”
“But you are always worshipped,” Anne
faltered.
“Ay, by men!” said Clorinda,
mocking; “but not by women. And it may
be that my pride is so high that I must be worshipped
by a woman too. You would always love me, sister
Anne. If you saw me break the law—if
you saw me stab the man I hated to the heart, you
would think it must be pardoned to me.”
She laughed, and yet her voice was
such that Anne lost her breath and caught at it again.
“Ay, I should love you, sister!”
she cried. “Even then I could not but
love you. I should know you could not strike
so an innocent creature, and that to be so hated he
must have been worthy of hate. You—are
not like other women, sister Clorinda; but you could
not be base—for you have a great heart.”
Clorinda put her hand to her side
and laughed again, but with less mocking in her laughter.
“What do you know of my heart,
Anne?” she said. “Till late I did
not know it beat, myself. My lord says ’tis
a great one and noble, but I know ’tis his own
that is so. Have I done honestly by him, Anne,
as I told you I would? Have I been fair in my
bargain—as fair as an honest man, and not
a puling, slippery woman.”
“You have been a great lady,”
Anne answered, her great dull, soft eyes filling with
slow tears as she gazed at her. “He says
that you have given to him a year of Heaven, and that
you seem to him like some archangel—for
the lower angels seem not high enough to set beside
you.”
“’Tis as I said—’tis
his heart that is noble,” said Clorinda.
“But I vowed it should be so. He paid—he
paid!”
The country saw her lord’s happiness
as the town had done, and wondered at it no less.
The manor was thrown open, and guests came down from
town; great dinners and balls being given, at which
all the country saw the mistress reign at her consort’s
side with such a grace as no lady ever had worn before.
Sir Jeoffry, appearing at these assemblies, was so
amazed that he forgot to muddle himself with drink,
in gazing at his daughter and following her in all
her movements.
“Look at her!” he said
to his old boon companions and hers, who were as much
awed as he. “Lord! who would think she
was the strapping, handsome shrew that swore, and
sang men’s songs to us, and rode to the hunt
in breeches.”
He was awed at the thought of paying
fatherly visits to her house, and would have kept
away, but that she was kind to him in the way he was
best able to understand.
“I am country-bred, and have
not the manners of your town men, my lady,”
he said to her, as he sat with her alone on one of
the first mornings he spent with her in her private
apartment. “I am used to rap out an oath
or an ill-mannered word when it comes to me.
Dunstanwolde has weaned you of hearing such things—and
I am too old a dog to change.”
“Wouldst have thought I was
too old to change,” answered she, “but
I was not. Did I not tell thee I would be a
great lady. There is naught a man or woman cannot
learn who hath the wit.”
“Thou hadst it, Clo,”
said Sir Jeoffry, gazing at her with a sort of slow
wonder. “Thou hadst it. If thou hadst
not—!” He paused, and shook his head,
and there was a rough emotion in his coarse face.
“I was not the man to have made aught but a
baggage of thee, Clo. I taught thee naught decent,
and thou never heard or saw aught to teach thee.
Damn me!” almost with moisture in his eyes,
“if I know what kept thee from going to ruin
before thou wert fifteen.”
She sat and watched him steadily.
“Nor I,” quoth she, in
answer. “Nor I—but here thou
seest me, Dad—an earl’s lady, sitting
before thee.”
“’Twas thy wit,”
said he, still moved, and fairly maudlin. “’Twas
thy wit and thy devil’s will!”
“Ay,” she answered, “’twas
they—my wit and my devil’s will!”
She rode to the hunt with him as she
had been wont to do, but she wore the latest fashion
in hunting habit and coat; and though ’twould
not have been possible for her to sit her horse better
than of old, or to take hedges and ditches with greater
daring and spirit, yet in some way every man who rode
with her felt that ’twas a great lady who led
the field. The horse she rode was a fierce,
beauteous devil of a beast which Sir Jeoffry himself
would scarce have mounted even in his younger days;
but she carried her loaded whip, and she sat upon
the brute as if she scarcely felt its temper, and
held it with a wrist of steel.
My Lord Dunstanwolde did not hunt
this season. He had never been greatly fond
of the sport, and at this time was a little ailing,
but he would not let his lady give up her pleasure
because he could not join it.
“Nay,” he said, “’tis
not for the queen of the hunting-field to stay at
home to nurse an old man’s aches. My pride
would not let it be so. Your father will attend
you. Go—and lead them all, my dear.”
In the field appeared Sir John Oxon,
who for a brief visit was at Eldershawe. He
rode close to my lady, though she had naught to say
to him after her first greetings of civility.
He looked not as fresh and glowing with youth as
had been his wont only a year ago. His reckless
wildness of life and his town debaucheries had at last
touched his bloom, perhaps. He had a haggard
look at moments when his countenance was not lighted
by excitement. ’Twas whispered that he
was deep enough in debt to be greatly straitened,
and that his marriage having come to naught his creditors
were besetting him without mercy. This and more
than this, no one knew so well as my Lady Dunstanwolde;
but of a certainty she had little pity for his evil
case, if one might judge by her face, when in the
course of the running he took a hedge behind her, and
pressing his horse, came up by her side and spoke.
“Clorinda,” he began breathlessly, through
set teeth.
She could have left him and not answered,
but she chose to restrain the pace of her wild beast
for a moment and look at him.
“‘Your ladyship!’”
she corrected his audacity. “Or—’my
Lady Dunstanwolde.’”
“There was a time”—he said.
“This morning,” she said,
“I found a letter in a casket in my closet.
I do not know the mad villain who wrote it.
I never knew him.”
“You did not,” he cried,
with an oath, and then laughed scornfully.
“The letter lies in ashes on
the hearth,” she said. “’Twas burned
unopened. Do not ride so close, Sir John, and
do not play the madman and the beast with the wife
of my Lord Dunstanwolde.”
“‘The wife!’”
he answered. “‘My lord!’ ’Tis
a new game this, and well played, by God!”
She did not so much as waver in her
look, and her wide eyes smiled.
“Quite new,” she answered
him—“quite new. And could I
not have played it well and fairly, I would not have
touched the cards. Keep your horse off, Sir
John. Mine is restive, and likes not another
beast near him;” and she touched the creature
with her whip, and he was gone like a thunderbolt.
The next day, being in her room, Anne
saw her come from her dressing-table with a sealed
letter in her hand. She went to the bell and
rang it.
“Anne,” she said, “I
am going to rate my woman and turn her from my service.
I shall not beat or swear at her as I was wont to
do with my women in time past. You will be afraid,
perhaps; but you must stay with me.”
She was standing by the fire with
the letter held almost at arm’s length in her
finger-tips, when the woman entered, who, seeing her
face, turned pale, and casting her eyes upon the letter,
paler still, and began to shake.
“You have attended mistresses
of other ways than mine,” her lady said in her
slow, clear voice, which seemed to cut as knives do.
“Some fool and madman has bribed you to serve
him. You cannot serve me also. Come hither
and put this in the fire. If ’twere to
be done I would make you hold it in the live coals
with your hand.”
The woman came shuddering, looking
as if she thought she might be struck dead.
She took the letter and kneeled, ashen pale, to burn
it. When ’twas done, her mistress pointed
to the door.
“Go and gather your goods and
chattels together, and leave within this hour,”
she said. “I will be my own tirewoman till
I can find one who comes to me honest.”
When she was gone, Anne sat gazing
at the ashes on the hearth. She was pale also.
“Sister,” she said, “do you—”
“Yes,” answered my lady.
“’Tis a man who loved me, a cur and a
knave. He thought for an hour he was cured of
his passion. I could have told him ’twould
spring up and burn more fierce than ever when he saw
another man possess me. ’Tis so with knaves
and curs; and ’tis so with him. He hath
gone mad again.”
“Ay, mad!” cried Anne—“mad,
and base, and wicked!”
Clorinda gazed at the ashes, her lips curling.
“He was ever base,” she
said—“as he was at first, so he is
now. ’Tis thy favourite, Anne,”
lightly, and she delicately spurned the blackened
tinder with her foot—“thy favourite,
John Oxon.”
Mistress Anne crouched in her seat and hid her face
in her thin hands.
“Oh, my lady!” she cried,
not feeling that she could say “sister,”
“if he be base, and ever was so, pity him, pity
him! The base need pity more than all.”
For she had loved him madly, all unknowing
her own passion, not presuming even to look up in
his beautiful face, thinking of him only as the slave
of her sister, and in dead secrecy knowing strange
things—strange things! And when she
had seen the letter she had known the handwriting,
and the beating of her simple heart had well-nigh strangled
her—for she had seen words writ by him
before.
* * * *
When Dunstanwolde and his lady went
back to their house in town, Mistress Anne went with
them. Clorinda willed that it should be so.
She made her there as peaceful and retired a nest
of her own as she had given to her at Dunstanwolde.
By strange good fortune Barbara had been wedded to
a plain gentleman, who, being a widower with children,
needed a help-meet in his modest household, and through
a distant relationship to Mistress Wimpole, encountered
her charge, and saw in her meekness of spirit the
thing which might fall into the supplying of his needs.
A beauty or a fine lady would not have suited him;
he wanted but a housewife and a mother for his orphaned
children, and this, a young woman who had lived straitly,
and been forced to many contrivances for mere decency
of apparel and ordinary comfort, might be trained
to become.
So it fell that Mistress Anne could
go to London without pangs of conscience at leaving
her sister in the country and alone. The stateliness
of the town mansion, my Lady Dunstanwolde’s retinue
of lacqueys and serving-women, her little black page,
who waited on her and took her pug dogs to walk, her
wardrobe, and jewels, and equipages, were each and
all marvels to her, but seemed to her mind so far befitting
that she remembered, wondering, the days when she
had darned the tattered tapestry in her chamber, and
changed the ribbands and fashions of her gowns.
Being now attired fittingly, though soberly as became
her, she was not in these days—at least,
as far as outward seeming went—an awkward
blot upon the scene when she appeared among her sister’s
company; but at heart she was as timid and shrinking
as ever, and never mingled with the guests in the
great rooms when she could avoid so doing. Once
or twice she went forth with Clorinda in her coach
and six, and saw the glittering world, while she drew
back into her corner of the equipage and gazed with
all a country-bred woman’s timorous admiration.
“’Twas grand and like
a beautiful show!” she said, when she came home
the first time. “But do not take me often,
sister; I am too plain and shy, and feel that I am
naught in it.”
But though she kept as much apart
from the great World of Fashion as she could, she
contrived to know of all her sister’s triumphs;
to see her when she went forth in her bravery, though
’twere but to drive in the Mall; to be in her
closet with her on great nights when her tirewomen
were decking her in brocades and jewels, that she might
show her highest beauty at some assembly or ball of
State. And at all these times, as also at all
others, she knew that she but shared her own love and
dazzled admiration with my Lord Dunstanwolde, whose
tenderness, being so fed by his lady’s unfailing
graciousness of bearing and kindly looks and words,
grew with every hour that passed.
They held one night a splendid assembly
at which a member of the Royal House was present.
That night Clorinda bade her sister appear.
“Sometimes—I do not
command it always—but sometimes you must
show yourself to our guests. My lord will not
be pleased else. He says it is not fitting that
his wife’s sister should remain unseen as if
we hid her away through ungraciousness. Your
woman will prepare for you all things needful.
I myself will see that your dress becomes you.
I have commanded it already, and given much thought
to its shape and colour. I would have you very
comely, Anne.” And she kissed her lightly
on her cheek—almost as gently as she sometimes
kissed her lord’s grey hair. In truth,
though she was still a proud lady and stately in her
ways, there had come upon her some strange subtle
change Anne could not understand.
On the day on which the assembly was
held, Mistress Anne’s woman brought to her a
beautiful robe. ’Twas flowered satin of
the sheen and softness of a dove’s breast, and
the lace adorning it was like a spider’s web
for gossamer fineness. The robe was sweetly
fashioned, fitting her shape wondrously; and when
she was attired in it at night a little colour came
into her cheeks to see herself so far beyond all comeliness
she had ever known before. When she found herself
in the midst of the dazzling scene in the rooms of
entertainment, she was glad when at last she could
feel herself lost among the crowd of guests.
Her only pleasure in such scenes was to withdraw
to some hidden corner and look on as at a pageant or
a play. To-night she placed herself in the shadow
of a screen, from which retreat she could see Clorinda
and Dunstanwolde as they received their guests.
Thus she found enjoyment enough; for, in truth, her
love and almost abject passion of adoration for her
sister had grown as his lordship’s had, with
every hour. For a season there had rested upon
her a black shadow beneath which she wept and trembled,
bewildered and lost; though even at its darkest the
object of her humble love had been a star whose brightness
was not dimmed, because it could not be so whatsoever
passed before it. This cloud, however, being
it seemed dispelled, the star had shone but more brilliant
in its high place, and she the more passionately worshipped
it. To sit apart and see her idol’s radiance,
to mark her as she reigned and seemed the more royal
when she bent the knee to royalty itself, to see the
shimmer of her jewels crowning her midnight hair and
crashing the warm whiteness of her noble neck, to observe
the admiration in all eyes as they dwelt upon her—this
was, indeed, enough of happiness.
“She is, as ever,” she
murmured, “not so much a woman as a proud lovely
goddess who has deigned to descend to earth.
But my lord does not look like himself. He seems
shrunk in the face and old, and his eyes have rings
about them. I like not that. He is so kind
a gentleman and so happy that his body should not
fail him. I have marked that he has looked colourless
for days, and Clorinda questioned him kindly on it,
but he said he suffered naught.”
’Twas but a little later than
she had thought this, that she remarked a gentleman
step aside and stand quite near without observing her.
Feeling that she had no testimony to her fancifulness,
she found herself thinking in a vague fashion that
he, too, had come there because he chose to be unobserved.
’Twould not have been so easy for him to retire
as it had been for her smallness and insignificance
to do so; and, indeed, she did not fancy that he meant
to conceal himself, but merely to stand for a quiet
moment a little apart from the crowd.
And as she looked up at him, wondering
why this should be, she saw he was the noblest and
most stately gentleman she had ever beheld.
She had never seen him before; he
must either be a stranger or a rare visitor.
As Clorinda was beyond a woman’s height, he
was beyond a man’s.
He carried himself as kingly as she
did nobly; he had a countenance of strong, manly beauty,
and a deep tawny eye, thick-fringed and full of fire;
orders glittered upon his breast, and he wore a fair
periwig, which became him wondrously, and seemed to
make his eye more deep and burning by its contrast.
Beside his strength and majesty of
bearing the stripling beauty of John Oxon would have
seemed slight and paltry, a thing for flippant women
to trifle with.
Mistress Anne looked at him with an
admiration somewhat like reverence, and as she did
so a sudden thought rose to her mind, and even as it
rose, she marked what his gaze rested on, and how
it dwelt upon it, and knew that he had stepped apart
to stand and gaze as she did—only with a
man’s hid fervour—at her sister’s
self.
’Twas as if suddenly a strange
secret had been told her. She read it in his
face, because he thought himself unobserved, and for
a space had cast his mask aside. He stood and
gazed as a man who, starving at soul, fed himself
through his eyes, having no hope of other sustenance,
or as a man weary with long carrying of a burden,
for a space laid it down for rest and to gather power
to go on. She heard him draw a deep sigh almost
stifled in its birth, and there was that in his face
which she felt it was unseemly that a stranger like
herself should behold, himself unknowing of her near
presence.
She gently rose from her corner, wondering
if she could retire from her retreat without attracting
his observation; but as she did so, chance caused
him to withdraw himself a little farther within the
shadow of the screen, and doing so, he beheld her.
Then his face changed; the mask of
noble calmness, for a moment fallen, resumed itself,
and he bowed before her with the reverence of a courtly
gentleman, undisturbed by the unexpectedness of his
recognition of her neighbourhood.
“Madam,” he said, “pardon
my unconsciousness that you were near me. You
would pass?” And he made way for her.
She curtseyed, asking his pardon with her dull, soft
eyes.
“Sir,” she answered, “I
but retired here for a moment’s rest from the
throng and gaiety, to which I am unaccustomed.
But chiefly I sat in retirement that I might watch—my
sister.”
“Your sister, madam?”
he said, as if the questioning echo were almost involuntary,
and he bowed again in some apology.
“My Lady Dunstanwolde,”
she replied. “I take such pleasure in her
loveliness and in all that pertains to her, it is a
happiness to me to but look on.”
Whatsoever the thing was in her loving
mood which touched him and found echo in his own,
he was so far moved that he answered to her with something
less of ceremoniousness; remembering also, in truth,
that she was a lady he had heard of, and recalling
her relationship and name.
“It is then Mistress Anne Wildairs
I am honoured by having speech with,” he said.
“My Lady Dunstanwolde has spoken of you in my
presence. I am my lord’s kinsman the Duke
of Osmonde;” again bowing, and Anne curtseyed
low once more.
Despite his greatness, she felt a
kindness and grace in him which was not condescension,
and which almost dispelled the timidity which, being
part of her nature, so unduly beset her at all times
when she addressed or was addressed by a stranger.
John Oxon, bowing his bright curls, and seeming ever
to mock with his smiles, had caused her to be overcome
with shy awkwardness and blushes; but this man, who
seemed as far above him in person and rank and mind
as a god is above a graceful painted puppet, even
appeared to give of his own noble strength to her poor
weakness. He bore himself towards her with a
courtly respect such as no human being had ever shown
to her before. He besought her again to be seated
in her nook, and stood before her conversing with
such delicate sympathy with her mood as seemed to
raise her to the pedestal on which stood less humble
women. All those who passed before them he knew
and could speak easily of. The high deeds of
those who were statesmen, or men honoured at Court
or in the field, he was familiar with; and of those
who were beauties or notable gentlewomen he had always
something courtly to say.
Her own worship of her sister she
knew full well he understood, though he spoke of her
but little.
“Well may you gaze at her,”
he said. “So does all the world, and honours
and adores.”
He proffered her at last his arm,
and she, having strangely taken courage, let him lead
her through the rooms and persuade her to some refreshment.
Seeing her so wondrously emerge from her chrysalis,
and under the protection of so distinguished a companion,
all looked at her as she passed with curious amazement,
and indeed Mistress Anne was all but overpowered by
the reverence shown them as they made their way.
As they came again into the apartment
wherein the host and hostess received their guests,
Anne felt her escort pause, and looked up at him to
see the meaning of his sudden hesitation. He
was gazing intently, not at Clorinda, but at the Earl
of Dunstanwolde.
“Madam,” he said, “pardon
me that I seem to detain you, but—but I
look at my kinsman. Madam,” with a sudden
fear in his voice, “he is ailing—he
sways as he stands. Let us go to him. Quickly!
He falls!”
And, in sooth, at that very moment
there arose a dismayed cry from the guests about them,
and there was a surging movement; and as they pressed
forward themselves through the throng, Anne saw Dunstanwolde
no more above the people, for he had indeed fallen
and lay outstretched and deathly on the floor.
’Twas but a few seconds before
she and Osmonde were close enough to him to mark his
fallen face and ghastly pallor, and a strange dew starting
out upon his brow.
But ’twas his wife who knelt
beside his prostrate body, waving all else aside with
a great majestic gesture of her arm.
“Back! back!” she cried.
“Air! air! and water! My lord! My
dear lord!”
But he did not answer, or even stir,
though she bent close to him and thrust her hand within
his breast. And then the frightened guests beheld
a strange but beautiful and loving thing, such as might
have moved any heart to tenderness and wonder.
This great beauty, this worshipped creature, put
her arms beneath and about the helpless, awful body—for
so its pallor and stillness indeed made it—and
lifted it in their powerful whiteness as if it had
been the body of a child, and so bore it to a couch
near and laid it down, kneeling beside it.
Anne and Osmonde were beside her.
Osmonde pale himself, but gently calm and strong.
He had despatched for a physician the instant he saw
the fall.
“My lady,” he said, bending
over her, “permit me to approach. I have
some knowledge of these seizures. Your pardon!”
He knelt also and took the moveless
hand, feeling the pulse; he, too, thrust his hand
within the breast and held it there, looking at the
sunken face.
“My dear lord,” her ladyship
was saying, as if to the prostrate man’s ear
alone, knowing that her tender voice must reach him
if aught would—as indeed was truth.
“Edward! My dear—dear lord!”
Osmonde held his hand steadily over
the heart. The guests shrunk back, stricken
with terror.
There was that in this corner of the
splendid room which turned faces pale.
Osmonde slowly withdrew his hand,
and turning to the kneeling woman—with
a pallor like that of marble, but with a noble tenderness
and pity in his eyes—
“My lady,” he said, “you
are a brave woman. Your great courage must sustain
you. The heart beats no more. A noble life
is finished.”
* * * *
The guests heard, and drew still farther
back, a woman or two faintly whimpering; a hurrying
lacquey parted the crowd, and so, way being made for
him, the physician came quickly forward.
Anne put her shaking hands up to cover
her gaze. Osmonde stood still, looking down.
My Lady Dunstanwolde knelt by the couch and hid her
beautiful face upon the dead man’s breast.