The visits of Lady Mallowe and Captain
Palliser had had their features. Neither of
the pair had come to one of the most imposing “places”
in Lancashire to live a life of hermit-like seclusion
and dullness. They had arrived with the intention
of availing themselves of all such opportunities
for entertainment as could be guided in their direction
by the deftness of experience. As a result, there
had been hospitalities at Temple Barholm such as
it had not beheld during the last generation at least.
T. Tembarom had looked on, an interested spectator,
as these festivities had been adroitly arranged and
managed for him. He had not, however, in the
least resented acting as a sort of figurehead in
the position of sponsor and host.
“They think I don’t know
I’m not doing it all myself,” was his easy
mental summing-up. “They’ve got
the idea that I’m pleased because I believe
I’m It. But that’s all to the merry.
It’s what I’ve set my mind on having
going on here, and I couldn’t have started it
as well myself. I shouldn’t have known
how. They’re teaching me. All I hope
is that Ann’s grandmother is keeping tab.”
“Do you and Rose know old Mrs.
Hutchinson?” he had inquired of Pearson the
night before the talk with the duke.
“Well, not to say exactly know
her, sir, but everybody knows of her. She is
a most remarkable old person, sir.” Then,
after watching his face for a moment or so, he added
tentatively, “Would you perhaps wish us to
make her acquaintance for— for any reason?”
Tembarom thought the matter over speculatively.
He had learned that his first liking for Pearson
had been founded upon a rock. He was always
to be trusted to understand, and also to apply a quite
unusual intelligence to such matters as he became
aware of without having been told about them.
“What I’d like would be
for her to hear that there’s plenty doing at
Temple Barholm; that people are coming and going
all the time; and that there’s ladies to burn—and
most of them lookers, at that,” was his answer.
How Pearson had discovered the exotic
subtleties of his master’s situation and mental
attitude toward it, only those of his class and gifted
with his occult powers could explain in detail.
The fact exists that Pearson did know an immense
number of things his employer had not mentioned to
him, and held them locked in his bosom in honored
security, like a little gentleman. He made his
reply with a polite conviction which carried weight.
“It would not be necessary for
either Rose or me to make old Mrs. Hutchinson’s
acquaintance with a view to informing her of anything
which occurs on the estate or in the village, sir,”
he remarked. “Mrs. Hutchinson knows more
of things than any one ever tells her. She sits
in her cottage there, and she just knows things and
sees through people in a way that’d be almost
unearthly, if she wasn’t a good old person,
and so respectable that there’s those that touches
their hats to her as if she belonged to the gentry.
She’s got a blue eye, sir—”
“Has she?” exclaimed Tembarom.
“Yes, sir. As blue as a
baby’s, sir, and as clear, though she’s
past eighty. And they tell me there’s
a quiet, steady look in it that ill-doers downright
quail before. It’s as if she was a kind
of judge that sentenced them without speaking.
They can’t stand it. Oh, sir! you can
depend upon old Mrs. Hutchinson as to who’s been
here, and even what they’ve thought about it.
The village just flocks to her to tell her the news
and get advice about things. She’d know.”
It was as a result of this that on
his return from Stone Hover he dismissed the carriage
at the gates and walked through them to make a visit
in the village. Old Mrs. Hutchinson, sitting knitting
in her chair behind the abnormally flourishing fuchsias,
geraniums, and campanula carpaticas in her cottage-window,
looked between the banked-up flower-pots to see that
Mr. Temple Barholm had opened her wicket-gate and
was walking up the clean bricked path to her front
door. When he knocked she called out in the
broad Lancashire she had always spoken, “Coom
in!” When he entered he took off his hat and
looked at her, friendly but hesitant, and with the
expression of a young man who has not quite made
up his mind as to what he is about to encounter.
“I’m Temple Temple Barholm,
Mrs. Hutchinson,” he announced.
“I know that,” she answered.
“Not that tha looks loike th’ Temple
Barholms, but I’ve been watchin’ thee walk
an’ drive past here ever since tha coom to
th’ place.”
She watched him steadily with an astonishingly
limpid pair of old eyes. They were old and young
at the same time; old because they held deeps of
wisdom, young because they were so alive and full of
question.
“I don’t know whether
I ought to have come to see you or not,” he
said.
“Well, tha’st coom,”
she replied, going on with her knitting. “Sit
thee doun and have a bit of a chat.”
“Say!” he broke out.
“Ain’t you going to shake hands with me?”
He held his hand out impetuously. He knew he
was all right if she’d shake hands.
“Theer’s nowt agen that
surely,” she answered, with a shrewd bit of a
smile. She gave him her hand. “If
I was na stiff in my legs, it’s my place to
get up an’ mak’ thee a curtsey, but th’
rheumatics has no respect even for th’ lord
o’ th’ manor.”
“If you got up and made me a
curtsey,” Tembarom said, “I should throw
a fit. Say, Mrs. Hutchinson, I bet you know
that as well as I do.”
The shrewd bit of a smile lighted
her eyes as well as twinkled about her mouth.
“Sit thee doun,” she said again.
So he sat down and looked at her as straight as she
looked at him.
“Tha ’d give a good bit,”
she said presently, over her flashing needles, “to
know how much Little Ann’s tow’d me about
thee.”
“I’d give a lot to know
how much it’d be square to ask you to tell me
about her,” he gave back to her, hesitating
yet eager.
“What does tha mean by square?” she demanded.
“I mean `fair.’ Can
I talk to you about her at all? I promised I’d
stick it out here and do as she said. She told
me she wasn’t going to write to me or let her
father write. I’ve promised, and I’m
not going to fall down when I’ve said a thing.”
“So tha coom to see her grandmother?”
He reddened, but held his head up.
“I’m not going to ask
her grandmother a thing she doesn’t want me to
be told. But I’ve been up against it pretty
hard lately. I read some things in the New York
papers about her father and his invention, and about
her traveling round with him and helping him with his
business.”
“In Germany they wur,”
she put in, forgetting herself. “They’re
havin’ big doin’s over th’ invention.
What Joe ‘u’d do wi’out th’
lass I canna tell. She’s doin’ every
bit o’ th’ managin’ an’ contrivin’
wi’ them furriners—but he’ll
never know it. She’s got a chap to travel
wi’ him as can talk aw th’ languages
under th’ sun.”
Her face flushed and she stopped herself sharply.
“I’m talkin’ about
her to thee!” she said. “I would na
ha’ believed o’ mysen’.”
He got up from his chair.
“I guess I oughtn’t to
have come,” he said, restlessly. “But
you haven’t told me more than I got here and
there in the papers. That was what started me.
It was like watching her. I could hear her talking
and see the way she was doing things till it drove
me half crazy. All of a sudden, I just got wild
and made up my mind I’d come here. I’ve
wanted to do it many a time, but I’ve kept
away.”
“Tha showed sense i’ doin’
that,” remarked Mrs. Hutchinson. “She’d
not ha’ thowt well o’ thee if tha’d
coom runnin’ to her grandmother every day or
so. What she likes about thee is as she thinks
tha’s got a strong backbone o’ thy own.”
She looked up at him over her knitting,
looked straight into his eyes, and there was that
in her own which made him redden and feel his pulse
quicken. It was actually something which even
remotely suggested that she was not—in
the deeps of her strong old mind—as wholly
unswerving as her words might imply. It was
something more subtle than words. She was not
keeping him wholly in the dark when she said “What
she likes about thee.” If Ann said things
like that to her, he was pretty well off.
“Happen a look at a lass’s
grandmother—when tha conna get at th’
lass hersen—is a bit o’ comfort,”
she added. “But don’t tha go walkin’
by here to look in at th’ window too often.
She would na think well o’ that either.”
“Say! There’s one
thing I’m going to get off my chest before I
go,” he announced, “just one thing.
She can go where she likes and do what she likes,
but I’m going to marry her when she’s done
it—unless something knocks me on the head
and finishes me. I’m going to marry her.”
“Tha art, art tha?” laconically;
but her eyes were still on his, and the something
in their depths by no means diminished.
“I’m keeping up my end
here, and it’s no slouch of a job, but I’m
not forgetting what she promised for one minute!
And I’m not forgetting what her promise means,”
he said obstinately.
“Tha’d like me to tell her that?”
she said.
“If she doesn’t know it,
you telling her wouldn’t cut any ice,”
was his reply. “I’m saying it because
I want you to know it, and because it does me good
to say it out loud. I’m going to marry her.”
“That’s for her and thee
to settle,” she commented, impersonally.
“It is settled,” he answered.
“There ’s no way out of it. Will you
shake hands with me again before I go?”
“Aye,” she consented, “I will.”
When she took his hand she held it
a minute. Her own was warm, and there was no
limpness about it. The secret which had seemed
to conceal itself behind her eyes had some difficulty
in keeping itself wholly in the background.
“She knows aw tha’ does,”
she said coolly, as if she were not suddenly revealing
immensities. “She knows who cooms an’
who goes, an’ what they think o’ thee,
an’ how tha gets on wi’ ’em.
Now get thee gone, lad, an’ dunnot tha coom
back till her or me sends for thee.”
Within an hour of this time the afternoon
post brought to Lady Mallowe a letter which she read
with an expression in which her daughter recognized
relief. It was in fact a letter for which she
had waited with anxiety, and the invitation it contained
was a tribute to her social skill at its highest
watermark. In her less heroic moments, she had
felt doubts of receiving it, which had caused shudders
to run the entire length of her spine.
“I’m going to Broome Haughton,”
she announced to Joan.
“When?” Joan inquired.
“At the end of the week. I am invited for
a fortnight.”
“Am I going?” Joan asked.
“No. You will go to London
to meet some friends who are coming over from Paris.”
Joan knew that comment was unnecessary.
Both she and her mother were on intimate terms with
these hypothetical friends who so frequently turned
up from Paris or elsewhere when it was necessary that
she should suddenly go back to London and live in
squalid seclusion in the unopened house, with a charwoman
to provide her with underdone or burnt chops, and
eggs at eighteen a shilling, while the shutters of
the front rooms were closed, and dusty desolation
reigned. She knew every detail of the melancholy
squalor of it, the dragging hours, the nights of
lying awake listening to the occasional passing of
belated cabs, or the squeaks and nibbling of mice
in the old walls.
“If you had conducted yourself
sensibly you need not have gone,” continued
her mother. “I could have made an excuse
and left you here. You would at least have been
sure of good food and decent comforts.”
“After your visit, are we to
return here?” was Lady Joan’s sole reply.
“Don’t look at me like
that,” said Lady Mallowe. “I thought
the country would freshen your color at least; but
you are going off more every day. You look like
the Witch of Endor sometimes.”
Joan smiled faintly. This was
the brandishing of an old weapon, and she understood
all its significance. It meant that the time for
opportunities was slipping past her like the waters
of a rapid river.
“I do not know what will happen
when I leave Broome Haughton,” her mother added,
a note of rasped uncertainty in her voice. “We
may be obliged to come here for a short time, or
we may go abroad.”
“If I refuse to come, would
you let me starve to death in Piers Street?”
Joan inquired.
Lady Mallowe looked her over, feeling
a sort of frenzy at the sight of her. In truth,
the future was a hideous thing to contemplate if no
rescue at all was in sight. It would be worse
for her than for Joan, because Joan did not care
what happened or did not happen, and she cared desperately.
She had indeed arrived at a maddening moment.
“Yes,” she snapped, fiercely.
And when Joan faintly smiled again
she understood why women of the lower orders beat
one another until policemen interfere. She knew
perfectly well that the girl had somehow found out
that Sir Moses Monaldini was to be at Broome Haughton,
and that when he left there he was going abroad.
She knew also that she had not been able to conceal
that his indifference had of late given her some
ghastly hours, and that her play for this lagging
invitation had been a frantically bold one.
That the most ingenious efforts and devices had ended
in success only after such delay made it all the
more necessary that no straw must remain unseized
on.
“I can wear some of your things,
with a little alteration,” she said. “Rose
will do it for me. Hats and gloves and ornaments
do not require altering. I shall need things
you will not need in London. Where are your
keys?”
Lady Joan rose and got them for her.
She even flushed slightly. They were often obliged
to borrow each other’s possessions, but for a
moment she felt herself moved by a sort of hard pity.
“We are like rats in a trap,”
she remarked. “I hope you will get out.”
“If I do, you will be left inside.
Get out yourself! Get out yourself!” said
Lady Mallowe in a fierce whisper.
Her regrets at the necessity of their
leaving Temple Barholm were expressed with fluent
touchingness at the dinner-table. The visit had
been so delightful. Mr. Temple Barholm and Miss
Alicia had been so kind. The loveliness of the
whole dear place had so embraced them that they felt
as if they were leaving a home instead of ending a
delightful visit. It was extraordinary what
an effect the house had on one. It was as if
one had lived in it always—and always would.
So few places gave one the same feeling. They
should both look forward— greedy as it
seemed—to being allowed some time to come
again. She had decided from the first that it
was not necessary to go to any extreme of caution
or subtlety with her host and Miss Alicia. Her
method of paving the way for future visits was perhaps
more than a shade too elaborate. She felt, however,
that it sufficed. For the most part, Lady Joan
sat with lids dropped over her burning eyes. She
tried to force herself not to listen. This was
the kind of thing which made her sick with humiliation.
Howsoever rudimentary these people were, they could
not fail to comprehend that a foothold in the house
was being bid for. They should at least see
that she did not join in the bidding. Her own
visit had been filled with feelings at war with one
another. There had been hours too many in which
she would have been glad—even with the
dingy horrors of the closed town house before her—to
have flown from the hundred things which called out
to her on every side. In the long-past three
months of happiness, Jem had described them all to
her—the rooms, gardens, pleached walks,
pictures, the very furniture itself. She could
enter no room, walk in no spot she did not seem to
know, and passionately love in spite of herself.
She loved them so much that there were times when she
yearned to stay in the place at any cost, and others
when she could not endure the misery it woke in her—
the pure misery. Now it was over for the time
being, and she was facing something new. There
were endless varieties of wretchedness. She
had been watching her mother for some months, and
had understood her varying moods of temporary elation
or prolonged anxiety. Each one had meant some
phase of the episode of Sir Moses Monaldini.
The people who lived at Broome Haughton were enormously
rich Hebrews, who were related to him. They had
taken the beautiful old country-seat and were filling
it with huge parties of their friends. The party
which Lady Mallowe was to join would no doubt offer
opportunities of the most desirable kind. Among
this special class of people she was a great success.
Her amazingly achieved toilettes, her ripe good looks,
her air of belonging to the great world, impressed
themselves immensely.
T. Tembarom thought he never had seen
Lady Joan look as handsome as she looked to-night.
The color on her cheek burned, her eyes had a driven
loneliness in them. She had a wonderfully beautiful
mouth, and its curve drooped in a new way. He
wished Ann could get her in a corner and sit down
and talk sense to her. He remembered what he had
said to the duke. Perhaps this was the time.
If she was going away, and her mother meant to drag
her back again when she was ready, it would make
it easier for her to leave the place knowing she need
not hate to come back. But the duke wasn’t
making any miss hit when he said it wouldn’t
be easy. She was not like Ann, who would feel
some pity for the biggest fool on earth if she had
to throw him down hard. Lady Joan would feel
neither compunctions nor relentings. He knew the
way she could look at a fellow. If he couldn’t
make her understand what he was aiming at, they would
both be worse off than they would be if he left things
as they were. But—the hard line showed
itself about his mouth—he wasn’t
going to leave things as they were.
As they passed through the hall after
dinner, Lady Mallowe glanced at a side-table on which
lay some letters arrived by the late post. An
imposing envelope was on the top of the rest.
Joan saw her face light as she took it up.
“I think this is from Broome
Haughton,” she said. “If you will
excuse me, I will go into the library and read it.
It may require answering at once.”
She turned hot and cold, poor woman,
and went away, so that she might be free from the
disaster of an audience if anything had gone wrong.
It would be better to be alone even if things had
gone right. The letter was from Sir Moses Monaldini.
Grotesque and ignoble as it naturally strikes the
uninitiated as seeming, the situation had its touch
of hideous pathos. She had fought for her own
hand for years; she could not dig, and to beg she
was not ashamed; but a time had come when even the
most adroit begging began to bore people. They
saw through it, and then there resulted strained
relations, slight stiffness of manner, even in the
most useful and amiable persons, lack of desire to
be hospitable, or even condescendingly generous.
Cold shoulders were turned, there were ominous threatenings
of icy backs presenting themselves. The very
tradesmen had found this out, and could not be persuaded
that the advertisement furnished by the fact that
two beautiful women of fashion ate, drank, and wore
the articles which formed the items in their unpaid
bills, was sufficient return for the outlay of capital
required. Even Mrs. Mellish, when graciously
approached by the “relative of Miss Temple Barholm,
whose perfect wardrobe you supplied,” had listened
to all seductions with a civil eye fixed unmovedly
and had referred to the “rules of the establishment.”
Nearer and nearer the edge of the abyss the years had
pushed them, and now if something did not happen—something—
something—even the increasingly shabby small
house in town would become a thing of the past.
And what then? Could any one wonder she said
to herself that she could have beaten Joan furiously.
It would not matter to any one else if they dropped
out of the world into squalid oblivion—oh,
she knew that—she knew that with bitter
certainty!—but oh, how it would matter
to them!—at least to herself. It
was all very well for Mudie’s to pour forth streams
of sentimental novels preaching the horrors of girls
marrying for money, but what were you to do—what
in heaven’s name were you to do? So, feeling
terrified enough actually to offer up a prayer, she
took the imposingly addressed letter into the library.
The men had come into the drawing-room
when she returned. As she entered, Joan did
not glance up from the book she was reading, but at
the first sound of her voice she knew what had occurred.
“I was obliged to dash off a
note to Broome Haughton so that it would be ready
for the early post,” Lady Mallowe said.
She was at her best. Palliser saw that some
years had slipped from her shoulders. The moment
which relieves or even promises to relieve fears does
astonishing things. Tembarom wondered whether
she had had good news, and Miss Alicia thought that
her evening dress was more becoming than any she
had ever seen her wear before. Her brilliant air
of social ease returned to her, and she began to
talk fluently of what was being done in London, and
to touch lightly upon the possibility of taking part
in great functions. For some time she had rather
evaded talk of the future. Palliser had known
that the future had seemed to be closing in upon
her, and leaving her staring at a high blank wall.
Persons whose fortunate names had ceased to fall
easily from her lips appeared again upon the horizon.
Miss Alicia was impressed anew with the feeling that
she had known every brilliant or important personage
in the big world of social London; that she had taken
part in every dazzling event. Tembarom somehow
realized that she had been afraid of something or
other, and was for some reason not afraid any more.
Such a change, whatsoever the reason for it, ought
to have had some effect on her daughter. Surely
she would share her luck, if luck had come to her.
But Lady Joan sat apart and kept her
eyes upon her book. This was one of the things
she often chose to do, in spite of her mother’s
indignant protest.
“I came here because you brought
me,” she would answer. “I did not
come to be entertaining or polite.”
She was reading this evening.
She heard every word of Lady Mallowe’s agreeable
and slightly excited conversation. She did not
know exactly what had happened; but she knew that
it was something which had buoyed her up with a hopefulness
which exhilarated her almost too much—as
an extra glass of wine might have done. Once
or twice she even lost her head a little and was
a trifle swaggering. T. Tembarom would not recognize
the slip, but Joan saw Palliser’s faint smile
without looking up from her book. He observed
shades in taste and bearing. Before her own
future Joan saw the blank wall of stone building itself
higher and higher. If Sir Moses had capitulated,
she would be counted out. With what degree of
boldness could a mother cast her penniless daughter
on the world? What unendurable provision make
for her? Dare they offer a pound a week and
send her to live in the slums until she chose to
marry some Hebrew friend of her step-father’s?
That she knew would be the final alternative.
A cruel little smile touched her lips, as she reviewed
the number of things she could not do to earn her
living. She could not take in sewing or washing,
and there was nothing she could teach. Starvation
or marriage. The wall built itself higher and
yet higher. What a hideous thing it was for a
penniless girl to be brought up merely to be a beauty,
and in consequence supposably a great lady.
And yet if she was born to a certain rank and had height
and figure, a lovely mouth, a delicate nose, unusual
eyes and lashes, to train her to be a dressmaker
or a housemaid would be a stupid investment of capital.
If nothing tragic interfered and the right man wanted
such a girl, she had been trained to please him.
But tragic things had happened, and before her grew
the wall while she pretended to read her book.
T. Tembarom was coming toward her.
She had heard Palliser suggest a game of billiards.
“Will you come and play billiards
with us?” Tembarom asked. “Palliser
says you play splendidly.”
“She plays brilliantly,”
put in Lady Mallowe. “Come, Joan.”
“No, thank you,” she answered.
“Let me stay here and read.”
Lady Mallowe protested. She tried
an air of playful maternal reproach because she was
in good spirits. Joan saw Palliser smiling quietly,
and there was that in his smile which suggested to
her that he was thinking her an obstinate fool.
“You had better show Temple
Barholm what you can do,” he remarked.
“This will be your last chance, as you leave
so soon. You ought never let a last chance slip
by. I never do.”
Tembarom stood still and looked down
at her from his good height. He did not know
what Palliser’s speech meant, but an instinct
made him feel that it somehow held an ugly, quiet
taunt.
“What I would like to do,”
was the unspoken crudity which passed through his
mind, “would be to swat him on the mouth.
He’s getting at her just when she ought to
be let alone.”
“Would you like it better to
stay here and read?” he inquired.
“Much better, if you please,” was her
reply.
“Then that goes,” he answered, and left
her.
He swept the others out of the room
with a good-natured promptness which put an end to
argument. When he said of anything “Then
that goes,” it usually did so.