Trade and commerce have their heroes
as well as arms, and the struggle in which Tyrrel
Rawdon at last plucked victory from apparent failure
was as arduous a campaign as any military operations
could have afforded. It had entailed on him a
ceaseless, undaunted watch over antagonists rich and
powerful; and a fight for rights which contained not
only his own fortune, but the honor of his father,
so that to give up a fraction of them was to turn
traitor to the memory of a parent whom he believed
to be beyond all doubt or reproach. Money, political
power, civic influence, treachery, bribery, the law’s
delay and many other hindrances met him on every side,
but his heart was encouraged daily to perseverance
by love’s tenderest sympathy. For he told
Ethel everything, and received both from her fine
intuitions and her father’s legal skill priceless
comfort and advice. But at last the long trial
was over, the marriage day was set, and Tyrrel, with
all his rights conceded, was honorably free to seek
the happiness he had safeguarded on every side.
It was a lovely day in the beginning
of May, nearly two years after their first meeting,
when Tyrrel reached New York. Ethel knew at what
hour his train would arrive, she was watching and
listening for his step. They met in each other’s
arms, and the blessed hours of that happy evening
were an over-payment of delight for the long months
of their separation.
In the morning Ethel was to introduce
her lover to Madam Rawdon, and side by side, almost
hand in hand, they walked down the avenue together.
Walked? They were so happy they hardly knew whether
their feet touched earth or not. They had a constant
inclination to clasp hands, to run as little children
run; They wished to smile at everyone, to bid all
the world good morning. Madam had resolved to
be cool and careful in her advances, but she quickly
found herself unable to resist the sight of so much
love and hope and happiness. The young people
together took her heart by storm, and she felt herself
compelled to express an interest in their future,
and to question Tyrrel about it.
“What are you going to do with
yourself or make of yourself?” she asked Tyrrel
one evening when they were sitting together.
“I do hope you’ll find some kind of work.
Anything is better than loafing about clubs and such
like places.”
“I am going to study law with
Judge Rawdon. My late experience has taught me
its value. I do not think I shall loaf in his
office.”
“Not if he is anywhere around.
He works and makes others work. Lawyering is
a queer business, but men can be honest in it if
they want to.”
“And, grandmother,” said
Ethel, “my father says Tyrrel has a wonderful
gift for public speaking. He made a fine speech
at father’s club last night. Tyrrel will
go into politics.”
“Will he, indeed? Tyrrel
is a wonder. If he manages to walk his shoes
straight in the zigzaggery ways of the law, he will
be one of that grand breed called `exceptions.’
As for politics, I don’t like them, far from
it. Your grandfather used to say they either
found a man a rascal or made him one. However,
I’m ready to compromise on law and politics.
I was afraid with his grand voice he would set up
for a tenor.”
Tyrrel laughed. “I did
once think of that role,” he said.
“I fancied that. Whoever
taught you to use your voice knew a thing or two about
singing. I’ll say that much.”
“My mother taught me.”
“Never! I wonder now!”
“She was a famous singer.
She was a great and a good woman. I owe her for
every excellent quality there is in me.”
“No, you don’t. You
have got your black eyes and hair her way, I’ll
warrant that, but your solid make-up, your pluck and
grit and perseverance is the Rawdon in you. Without
Rawdon you would very likely now be strutting about
some opera stage, playing at kings and lovemaking.”
“As it is——”
“As it is, you will be lord
consort of Rawdon Manor, with a silver mine to back
you.”
“I am sorry about the Manor,”
said Tyrrel. “I wish the dear old Squire
were alive to meet Ethel and myself.”
“To be sure you do. But
I dare say that he is glad now to have passed out
of it. Death is a mystery to those left, but
I have no doubt it is satisfying to those who have
gone away. He died as he lived, very prop-erly;
walked in the garden that morning as far as the strawberry
beds, and the gardener gave him the first ripe half-dozen
in a young cabbage leaf, and he ate them like a boy,
and said they tasted as if grown in Paradise, then
strolled home and asked Joel to shake the pillows
on the sofa in the hall, laid himself down, shuffled
his head easy among them, and fell on sleep.
So Death the Deliverer found him. A good going
home! Nothing to fear in it.”
“Ethel tells me that Mr. Mostyn
is now living at Mostyn Hall.”
“Yes, he married that girl he
would have sold his soul for and took her there, four
months only after her husband’s death.
When I was young he durst not have done it, the Yorkshire
gentry would have cut them both.”
“I think,” said Tyrrel,
“American gentlemen of to-day felt much the
same. Will Madison told me that the club cut
him as soon as Mrs. Stanhope left her husband.
He went there one day after it was known, and no
one saw him; finally he walked up to McLean, and would
have sat down, but McLean said, `Your company is not
desired, Mr. Mostyn.’ Mostyn said something
in re-ply, and McLean answered sternly, `True, we
are none of us saints, but there are lines the worst
of us will not pass; and if there is any member of
this club willing to interfere between a bridegroom
and his bride, I would like to kick him out of it.’
Mostyn struck the table with some exclamation, and
McLean continued, `Especially when the wronged husband
is a gentleman of such stainless character and unsuspecting
nature as Basil Stanhope—a clergyman also!
Oh, the thing is beyond palliation entirely!’
And he walked away and left Mostyn.”
“Well,” said Madam, “if
it came to kicking, two could play that game.
Fred is no coward. I don’t want to hear
another word about them. They will punish each
other without our help. Let them alone.
I hope you are not going to have a crowd at your
wedding. The quietest weddings are the luckiest
ones.”
“About twenty of our most intimate
friends are invited to the church,” said Ethel.
“There will be no reception until we return
to New York in the fall.”
“No need of fuss here, there
will be enough when you reach Monk-Rawdon. The
village will be garlanded and flagged, the bells ring-ing,
and all your tenants and retainers out to meet you.”
“We intend to get into our own
home without anyone being aware of it. Come,
Tyrrel, my dressmaker is waiting, I know. It
is my wedding gown, dear Granny, and oh, so lovely!”
“You will not be any smarter
than I intend to be, miss. You are shut off from
color. I can outdo you.”
“I am sure you can—and
will. Here comes father. What can he want?”
They met him at the door, and with a few laughing
words left him with Madam. She looked curiously
into his face and asked, “What is it, Edward?”
“I suppose they have told you
all the arrangements. They are very simple.
Did they say anything about Ruth?”
“They never named her.
They said they were going to Washington for a week,
and then to Rawdon Court. Ruth seems out of it
all. Are you going to turn her adrift, or present
her with a few thousand dollars? She has been
a mother to Ethel. Something ought to be done
for Ruth Bayard.”
“I intend to marry her.”
“I thought so.”
“She will go to her sister’s
in Philadelphia for a month ’s preparation.
I shall marry her there, and bring her home as my
wife. She is a sweet, gentle, docile woman.
She will make me happy.”
“Sweet, gentle, docile!
Yes, that is the style of wife Rawdon men prefer.
What does Ethel say?”
“She is delighted. It was
her idea. I was much pleased with her thoughtfulness.
Any serious break in my life would now be a great
discomfort. You need not look so satirical, mother;
I thought of Ruth’s life also.”
“Also an afterthought; but Ruth
is gentle and docile, and she is satisfied, and I
am satisfied, so then everything is proper and everyone
content. Come for me at ten on Wednesday morning.
I shall be ready. No refreshments, I suppose.
I must look after my own breakfast. Won’t
you feel a bit shabby, Edward? “And then
the look and handclasp between them turned every word
into sweetness and good-will.
And as Ethel regarded her marriage
rather as a religious rite than a social function,
she objected to its details becoming in any sense
public, and her desires were to be regarded.
Yet everyone may imagine the white loveli-ness of
the bride, the joy of the bridegroom, the calm happiness
of the family breakfast, and the leisurely, quiet
leave-taking. The whole ceremony was the right
note struck at the beginning of a new life, and they
might justly expect it would move onward in melodious
sequence.
Within three weeks after their marriage
they arrived at Rawdon Court. It was on a day
and at an hour when no one was looking for them, and
they stepped into the lovely home waiting for them
without outside observation. Hiring a carriage
at the railway station, they dismissed it at the little
bridge near the Manor House, and sauntered happily
through the intervening space. The door of the
great hall stood open, and the fire, which had been
burning on its big hearth unquenched for more than
three hundred years, was blazing merrily, as if some
hand had just replenished it. On the long table
the broad, white beaver hat of the dead Squire was
lying, and his oak walking stick was beside it.
No one had liked to remove them. They remained
just as he had put them down, that last, peaceful
morning of his life.
In a few minutes the whole household
was aware of their home-coming, and before the day
was over the whole neighborhood. Then there was
no way of avoiding the calls, the congratulations,
and the entertainments that followed, and the old
Court was once more the center of a splendid hospitality.
Of course the Tyrrel-Rawdons were first on the scene,
and Ethel was genuinely glad to meet again the good-natured
Mrs. Nicholas. No one could give her better local
advice, and Ethel quickly discovered that the best
general social laws require a local interpretation.
Her hands were full, her heart full, she had so many
interests to share, so many people to receive and
to visit, and yet when two weeks passed and Dora neither
came nor wrote she was worried and dissatisfied.
“Are the Mostyns at the Hall?”
she asked Mrs. Nicholas at last. “I have
been expecting Mrs. Mostyn every day, but she neither
comes nor writes to me.”
“I dare say not. Poor little
woman! I’ll warrant she has been forbid
to do either. If Mostyn thought she wanted to
see you, he would watch day and night to prevent her
coming. He’s turning out as cruel a man
as his father was, and you need not say a word worse
than that.”
“Cruel! Oh, dear, how dreadful!
Men will drink and cheat and swear, but a cruel man
seems so unnatural, so wicked.”
“To be sure, cruelty is the
joy of devils. As I said to John Thomas when
we heard about Mostyn’s goings-on, we have got
rid of the Wicked One, but the wicked still remain
with us.”
This conversation having been opened,
was naturally prolonged by the relation of incidents
which had come through various sources to Mrs. Rawdon’s
ears, all of them indicating an almost incredible
system of petty tyranny and cruel contradiction.
Ethel was amazed, and finally angry at what she heard.
Dora was her countrywoman and her friend; she instantly
began to express her sympathy and her intention of
interfering.
“You had better neither meddle
nor make in the matter,” answered Mrs. Rawdon.
“Our Lucy went to see her, and gave her some
advice about managing Yorkshiremen. And as she
was talking Mostyn came in, and was as rude as he
dared to be. Then Lucy asked him `if he was sick.’
She said, `All the men in the neighborhood, gentle
and sim-ple, were talking about him, and that it
wasn’t a pleasant thing to be talked about in
the way they were doing it. You must begin to
look more like yourself, Mr. Mostyn; it is good advice
I am giving you,’ she added; and Mostyn told
her he would look as he felt, whether it was liked
or not liked. And Lucy laughed, and said, `In
that case he would have to go to his looking-glass
for company.’ Well, Ethel, there was a
time to joy a devil after Lucy left, and some one
of the servants went on their own responsibility for
a doctor; and Mostyn ordered him out of the house,
and he would not go until he saw Mrs. Mostyn; and
the little woman was forced to come and say `she was
quite well,’ though she was sobbing all the
time she spoke. Then the doctor told Mostyn what
he thought, and there is a quarrel between them every
time they meet.”
But Ethel was not deterred by these
statements; on the contrary, they stimulated her
interest in her friend. Dora needed her, and
the old feeling of protection stirred her to interference.
At any rate, she could call and see the unhappy woman;
and though Tyrrel was opposed to the visit, and thought
it every way unwise, Ethel was resolved to make it.
“You can drive me there,” she said, “then
go and see Justice Manningham and call for me in half
an hour.” And this resolution was strengthened
by a pitiful little note received from Dora just after
her decision. “Mostyn has gone to Thirsk,”
it said; “for pity’s sake come and see
me about two o’clock this afternoon.”
The request was promptly answered.
As the clock struck two Ethel crossed the threshold
of the home that might have been hers. She shuddered
at the thought. The atmosphere of the house was
full of fear and gloom, the furniture dark and shabby,
and she fancied the wraiths of old forgotten crimes
and sorrows were gliding about the sad, dim rooms
and stairways. Dora rose in a passion of tears
to welcome her, and because time was short instantly
began her pitiful story.
“You know how he adored me once,”
she said; “would you believe it, Ethel, we were
not two weeks married when he began to hate me.
He dragged me through Europe in blazing heat and blinding
snows when I was sick and unfit to move. He brought
me here in the depth of winter, and when no one called
on us he blamed me; and from morning till night, and
sometimes all night long, he taunts and torments me.
After he heard that you had bought the Manor he lost
all control of himself. He will not let me sleep.
He walks the floor hour after hour, declaring he could
have had you and the finest manor in England but for
a cat-faced woman like me. And he blames me for
poor Basil’s death— says we murdered
him together, and that he sees blood on my hands.”
And she looked with terror at her small, thin hands,
and held them up as if to protest against the charge.
When she next spoke it was to sob out, “Poor
Basil! He would pity me! He would help me!
He would forgive me! He knows now that Mostyn
was, and is, my evil genius.”
“Do not cry so bitterly, Dora,
it hurts me. Let us think. Is there nothing
you can do?”
“I want to go to mother.”
Then she drew Ethel’s head close to her and
whispered a few words, and Ethel answered, “You
poor little one, you shall go to your mother.
Where is she?”
“She will be in London next
week, and I must see her. He will not let me
go, but go I must if I die for it. Mrs. John
Thomas Rawdon told me what to do, and I have been
following her advice.”
Ethel did not ask what it was, but
added,
“If Tyrrel and I can help you,
send for us. We will come. And, Dora, do
stop weeping, and be brave. Remember you are
an American woman. Your father has often told
me how you could ride with Indians or cowboys and
shoot with any miner in Colorado. A bully like
Mostyn is always a coward. Lift up your heart
and stand for every one of your rights. You will
find plenty of friends to stand with you.”
And with the words she took her by the hands and raised
her to her feet, and looked at her with such a beaming,
courageous smile that Dora caught its spirit, and
promised to insist on her claims for rest and sleep.
“When shall I come again, Dora?”
“Not till I send for you.
Mother will be in London next Wednesday at the Savoy.
I intend to leave here Wednesday some time, and may
need you; will you come?”
“Surely, both Tyrrel and I.”
Then the time being on a dangerous
line they parted. But Ethel could think of nothing
and talk of nothing but the frightful change in her
friend, and the unceasing misery which had produced
it. Tyrrel shared all her indignation. The
slow torture of any creature was an intolerable crime
in his eyes, but when the brutality was exercised
on a woman, and on a countrywoman, he was roused
to the highest pitch of indignation. When Wednesday
arrived he did not leave the house, but waited with
Ethel for the message they confidently expected.
It came about five o’clock—urgent,
imperative, entreating, “Come, for God’s
sake! He will kill me.”
The carriage was ready, and in half
an hour they were at Mostyn Hall. No one answered
their summons, but as they stood listening and waiting,
a shrill cry of pain and anger pierced the silence.
It was followed by loud voices and a confused noise—
noise of many talking and exclaiming. Then Tyrrel
no longer hesitated. He opened the door easily,
and taking Ethel on his arm, suddenly entered the
parlor from which the clamor came. Dora stood
in the center of the room like an enraged pythoness,
her eyes blazing with passion.
“See!” she cried as Tyrrel
entered the room—“see!” And
she held out her arm, and pointed to her shoulder
from which the lace hung in shreds, showing the white
flesh, red and bruised, where Mostyn had gripped
her. Then Tyrrel turned to Mostyn, who was held
tightly in the grasp of his gardener and coachman,
and foaming with a rage that rendered his explanation
almost inarticulate, especially as the three women
servants gathered around their mistress added their
railing and invectives to the general confusion.
“The witch! The cat-faced
woman!” he screamed. “She wants to
go to her mother! Wants to play the trick she
killed Basil Stanhope with! She shall not!
She shall not! I will kill her first! She
is mad! I will send her to an asylum! She
is a little devil! I will send her to hell!
Nothing is bad enough —nothing——”
“Mr. Mostyn,” said Tyrrel.
“Out of my house! What
are you doing here? Away! This is my house!
Out of it immediately!”
“This man is insane,”
said Tyrrel to Dora. “Put on your hat and
cloak, and come home with us.”
“I am waiting for Justice Manningham,”
she answered with a calm subsidence of passion that
angered Mostyn more than her reproaches. “I
have sent for him. He will be here in five minutes
now. That brute”— pointing to
Mostyn—“must be kept under guard
till I reach my mother. The magistrate will bring
a couple of constables with him.”
“This is a plot, then!
You hear it! You! You, Tyrrel Rawdon, and
you, Saint Ethel, are in it, all here on time.
A plot, I say! Let me loose that I may strangle
the cat-faced creature. Look at her hands, they
are already bloody!”
At these words Dora began to sob passionately,
the servants, one and all, to comfort her, or to abuse
Mostyn, and in the height of the hubbub Justice Manningham
entered with two constables behind him.
“Take charge of Mr. Mostyn,”
he said to them, and as they laid their big hands
on his shoulders the Justice added, “You will
consider yourself under arrest, Mr. Mostyn.”
And when nothing else could cow Mostyn,
he was cowed by the law. He sank almost fainting
into his chair, and the Justice listened to Dora’s
story, and looked indignantly at the brutal man, when
she showed him her torn dress and bruised shoulder.
“I entreat your Honor,” she said, “to
permit me to go to my mother who is now in London.”
And he answered kindly, “You shall go.
You are in a condition only a mother can help and
comfort. As soon as I have taken your deposition
you shall go.”
No one paid any attention to Mostyn’s
disclaimers and denials. The Justice saw the
state of affairs. Squire Rawdon and Mrs. Rawdon
testified to Dora’s ill-usage; the butler, the
coachman, the stablemen, the cook, the housemaids
were all eager to bear witness to the same; and Mrs.
Mostyn’s appearance was too eloquent a plea
for any humane man to deny her the mother-help she
asked for.
Though neighbors and members of the
same hunt and clubs, the Justice took no more friendly
notice of Mostyn than he would have taken of any wife-beating
cotton-weaver; and when all lawful preliminaries
had been arranged, he told Mrs. Mostyn that he should
not take up Mr. Mostyn’s case till Friday; and
in the interval she would have time to put herself
under her mother’s care. She thanked him,
weeping, and in her old, pretty way kissed his hands,
and “vowed he had saved her life, and she would
forever remember his goodness.” Mostyn
mocked at her “play-acting,” and was sternly
reproved by the Justice; and then Tyrrel and Ethel
took charge of Mrs. Mostyn until she was ready to
leave for London.
She was more nearly ready than they
ex-pected. All her trunks were packed, and the
butler promised to take them immediately to the railway
station. In a quarter of an hour she appeared
in traveling costume, with her jewels in a bag, which
she carried in her hand. There was a train for
London passing Monk-Rawdon at eight o’clock;
and after Justice Manningham had left, the cook brought
in some dinner, which Dora asked the Rawdons to share
with her. It was, perhaps, a necessary but a
painful meal. No one noticed Mostyn. He
was enforced to sit still and watch its progress,
which he accompanied with curses it would be a kind
of sacrilege to write down. But no one answered
him, and no one noticed the orders he gave for his
own dinner, until Dora rose to leave forever the
house of bondage. Then she said to the cook:
“See that those gentlemanly
constables have something good to eat and to drink,
and when they have been served you may give that
man”—pointing to Mostyn—“the
dinner of bread and water he has so often prescribed
for me. After my train leaves you are all free
to go to your own homes. Farewell, friends!”
Then Mostyn raved again, and finally
tried his old loving terms. “Come back
to me, Dora,” he called frantically. “Come
back, dearest, sweetest Dora, I will be your lover
forever. I will never say another cross word
to you.”
But Dora heard not and saw not.
She left the room without a glance at the man sitting
cowering between the officers, and blubbering with
shame and passion and the sense of total loss.
In a few minutes he heard the Rawdon carriage drive
to the door. Tyrrel and Ethel assisted Dora into
it, and the party drove at once to the railway station.
They were just able to catch the London train.
The butler came up to report all the trunks safely
forwarded, and Dora dropped gold into his hand, and
bade him clear the house of servants as soon as the
morning broke. Fortunately there was no time
for last words and promises; the train began to move,
and Tyrrel and Ethel, after watching Dora’s
white face glide into the darkness, turned silently
away. That depression which so often follows
the lifting of burdens not intended for our shoulders
weighed on their hearts and made speech difficult.
Tyrrel was especially affected by it. A quick
feeling of something like sympathy for Mostyn would
not be reasoned away, and he drew Ethel close within
his arm, and gave the coachman an order to drive home
as quickly as possible, for twilight was already becoming
night, and under the trees the darkness felt oppressive.
The little fire on the hearth and
their belated dinner somewhat relieved the tension;
but it was not until they had retired to a small parlor,
and Tyrrel had smoked a cigar, that the tragedy of
the evening became a possible topic of conversation.
Tyrrel opened the subject by a question as to whether
“he ought to have gone with Dora to London.”
“Dora opposed the idea strongly
when I named it to her,” answered Ethel.
“She said it would give opportunities for Mostyn
to slander both herself and you, and I think she
was correct. Every way she was best alone.”
“Perhaps, but I feel as if I
ought to have gone, as if I had been something less
than a gentleman; in fact, as if I had been very un-gentle.”
“There is no need,” answered
Ethel a little coldly.
“It is a terrible position for Mostyn.”
“He deserves it.”
“He is so sensitive about public opinion.”
“In that case he should behave
decently in private.”
Then Tyrrel lit another cigar, and
there was another silence, which Ethel occupied in
irritating thoughts of Dora’s unfortunate fatality
in trouble-making. She sat at a little table
standing between herself and Tyrrel. It held
his smoking utensils, and after awhile she pushed
them aside, and let the splendid rings which adorned
her hand fall into the cleared space. Tyrrel
watched her a few moments, and then asked, “What
are you doing, Ethel, my dear?”
She looked up with a smile, and then
down at the hand she had laid open upon the table.
“I am looking at the Ring of all Rings.
See, Tyrrel, it is but a little band of gold, and
yet it gave me more than all the gems of earth could
buy. Rubies and opals and sapphires are only
its guard. The simple wedding ring is the ring
of great price. It is the loveliest ornament
a happy woman can wear.”
Tyrrel took her hand and kissed it,
and kissed the golden band, and then answered, “Truly
an ornament if a happy wife wears it; but oh, Ethel,
what is it when it binds a woman to such misery as
Dora has just fled from?”
“Then it is a fetter, and a
woman who has a particle of self-respect will break
it. The Ring of all Rings!” she ejaculated
again, as she lifted the rubies and opals, and slowly
but smilingly encircled the little gold band.
“Let us try now to forget that
sorrowful woman,” said Tyrrel. “She
will be with her mother in a few hours. Mother-love
can cure all griefs. It never fails. It
never blames. It never grows weary. It is
always young and warm and true. Dora will be
comforted. Let us forget; we can do no more.”
For a couple of days this was possible,
but then came Mrs. Nicholas Rawdon, and the subject
was perforce opened. “It was a bad case,”
she said, “but it is being settled as quickly
and as quietly as possible. I believe the man
has entered into some sort of recognizance to keep
the peace, and has disappeared. No one will look
for him. The gentry are against pulling one another
down in any way, and this affair they don’t
want talked about. Being all of them married
men, it isn’t to be expected, is it? Justice
Manningham was very sorry for the little lady, but
he said also `it was a bad precedent, and ought not
to be discussed.’ And Squire Bentley said,
`If English gentlemen would marry American women,
they must put up with American women’s ways,’
and so on. None of them think it prudent to approve
Mrs. Mostyn’s course. But they won’t
get off as easy as they think. The women are
standing up for her. Did you ever hear anything
like that? And I’ll warrant some husbands
are none so easy in their minds, as my Nicholas said,
`Mrs. Mostyn had sown seed that would be seen and
heard tell of for many a long day.’ Our
Lucy, I suspect, had more to do with the move than
she will confess. She got a lot of new, queer
notions at college, and I do believe in my heart she
set the poor woman up to the business. John
Thomas, of course, says not a word, but he looks at
Lucy in a very proud kind of way; and I’ll be
bound he has got an object lesson he’ll remember
as long as he lives. So has Nicholas, though
he bluffs more than a little as to what he’d
do with a wife that got a running-away notion into
her head. Bless you, dear, they are all formulating
their laws on the subject, and their wives are smiling
queerly at them, and holding their heads a bit higher
than usual. I’ve been doing it myself,
so I know how they feel.”
Thus, though very little was said
in the newspapers about the affair, the notoriety
Mostyn dreaded was complete and thorough. It
was the private topic of conversation in every household.
Men talked it over in all the places where men met,
and women hired the old Mostyn servants in order to
get the very surest and latest story of the poor wife’s
wrongs, and then compared reports and even discussed
the circumstances in their own particular clubs.
At the Court, Tyrrel and Ethel tried
to forget, and their own interests were so many and
so important that they usually succeeded; especially
after a few lines from Mrs. Denning assured them of
Dora’s safety and comfort. And for many
weeks the busy life of the Manor sufficed; there was
the hay to cut in the meadow lands, and after it the
wheat fields to harvest. The stables, the kennels,
the farms and timber, the park and the garden kept
Tyrrel constantly busy. And to these duties were
added the social ones, the dining and dancing and
entertaining, the horse racing, the regattas, and
the enthusiasm which automobiling in its first fever
engenders.
And yet there were times when Tyrrel
looked bored, and when nothing but Squire Percival’s
organ or Ethel’s piano seemed to exorcise the
unrest and ennui that could not be hid. Ethel
watched these moods with a wise and kind curiosity,
and in the beginning of September, when they perceptibly
increased, she asked one day, “Are you happy,
Tyrrel? Quite happy?”
“I am having a splendid holiday,”
he answered, “but——”
“But what, dear?”
“One could not turn life into
a long holiday— that would be harder than
the hardest work.”
She answered “Yes,” and
as soon as she was alone fell to thinking, and in
the midst of her meditation Mrs. Nicholas Rawdon entered
in a whirl of tempestuous delight.
“What do you think?” she
asked between laughing and crying. “Whatever
do you think? Our Lucy had twins yesterday, two
fine boys as ever was. And I wish you could see
their grandfather and their father. They are
out of themselves with joy. They stand hour after
hour beside the two cradles, looking at the little
fellows, and they nearly came to words this morning
about their names.”
“I am so delighted!” cried
Ethel. “And what are you going to call
them?”
“One is an hour older than the
other, and John Thomas wanted them called Percival
and Nicholas. But my Nicholas wanted the eldest
called after himself, and he said so plain enough.
And John Thomas said `he could surely name his own
sons; and then Nicholas told him to remember he wouldn’t
have been here to have any sons at all but for his
father.’ And just then I came into the
room to have a look at the little lads, and when I
heard what they were fratching about, I told them
it was none of their business, that Lucy had the right
to name the children, and they would just have to
put up with the names she gave them.”
“And has Lucy named them?”
“To be sure. I went right
away to her and explained the dilemma, and I said,
`Now, Lucy, it is your place to settle this question.’
And she answered in her positive little way, `You
tell father the eldest is to be called Nicholas, and
tell John Thomas the youngest is to be called John
Thomas. I can manage two of that name very well.
And say that I won’t have any more disputing
about names, the boys are as good as christened already.’
And of course when Lucy said that we all knew it was
settled. And I’m glad the eldest is Nicholas.
He is a fine, sturdy little York-shireman, bawling
out already for what he wants, and flying into a temper
if he doesn’t get it as soon as he wants it.
Dearie me, Ethel, I am a proud woman this morning.
And Nicholas is going to give all the hands a holiday,
and a trip up to Ambleside on Saturday, though John
Thomas is very much against it.”
“Why is he against it?”
“He says they will be holding
a meeting on Monday night to try and find out what
Old Nicholas is up to, and that if he doesn’t
give them the same treat on the same date next year,
they’ll hold an indignation meeting about being
swindled out of their rights. And I’ll
pledge you my word John Thomas knows the men he’s
talking about. However, Nicholas is close with
his money, and it will do him good happen to lose
a bit. Blood-letting is healthy for the body,
and perhaps gold-letting may help the soul more than
we think for.”
This news stimulated Ethel’s
thinking, and when she also stood beside the two cradles,
and the little Nicholas opened his big blue eyes and
began to “bawl for what he wanted,” a
certain idea took fast hold of her, and she nursed
it silently for the next month, watch-ing Tyrrel
at the same time. It was near October, however,
before she found the proper opportunity for speaking.
There had been a long letter from the Judge.
It said Ruth and he were home again after a wonderful
trip over the Northern Pacific road. He wrote
with enthusiasm of the country and its opportunities,
and of the big cities they had visited on their return
from the Pacific coast. Every word was alive,
the magnitude and stir of traffic and wrestling humanity
seemed to rustle the paper. He described New
York as overflowing with business. His own plans,
the plans of others, the jar of politics, the thrill
of music and the drama—all the multitudinous
vitality that crowded the streets and filled the air,
even to the roofs of the twenty-story buildings,
contributed to the potent exhilaration of the letter.
“Great George!” exclaimed
Tyrrel. “That is life! That is living!
I wish we were back in America!”
“So do I, Tyrrel.”
“I am so glad. When shall
we go? It is now the twenty-eighth of September.”
“Are you very weary of Rawdon Court”’
“Yes. If a man could live
for the sake of eating and sleeping and having a pleasant
time, why Rawdon Court would be a heaven to him; but
if he wants to do something with his life, he
would be most unhappy here.”
“And you want to do something?”
“You would not have loved a
man who did not want to do. We have
been here four months. Think of it! If I
take four months out of every year for twenty years,
I shall lose, with travel, about seven years of my
life, and the other things to be dropped with them
may be of incalculable value.”
“I see, Tyrrel. I am not
bound in any way to keep Rawdon Court. I can
sell it to-morrow.”
“But you would be grieved to do so?”
“Not at all. Being a lady
of the Manor does not flatter me. The other squires
would rather have a good man in my place.”
“Why did you buy it?”
“As I have told you, to keep
Mostyn out, and to keep a Rawdon here. But Nicholas
Rawdon craves the place, and will pay well for his
desire. It cost me eighty thousand pounds.
He told father he would gladly give me one hundred
thousand pounds whenever I was tired of my bargain.
I will take the hundred thousand pounds to-morrow.
There would then be four good heirs to Rawdon on
the place.”
Here the conversation was interrupted
by Mrs. Nicholas, who came to invite them to the
christening feast of the twins. Tyrrel soon left
the ladies together, and Ethel at once opened the
desired conversation.
“I am afraid we may have left
the Court before the christening,” she said.
“Mr. Rawdon is very unhappy here. He is
really homesick.”
“But this is his home, isn’t
it? And a very fine one.”
“He cannot feel it so.
He has large interests in America. I doubt if
I ever induce him to come here again. You see,
this visit has been our marriage trip.”
“And you won’t live here!
I never heard the line. What will you do with
the Court? It will be badly used if it is left
to servants seven or eight months every year.”
“I suppose I must sell it.
I see no——”
“If you only would let Nicholas
buy it. You might be sure then it would be well
cared for, and the little lads growing up in it, who
would finally heir it. Oh, Ethel, if you would
think of Nicholas first. He would honor the place
and be an honor to it.”
Out of this conversation the outcome
was as satisfactory as it was certain, and within
two weeks Nicholas Rawdon was Squire of Rawdon Manor,
and possessor of the famous old Manor House.
Then there followed a busy two weeks for Tyrrel, who
had the superintendence of the packing, which was
no light business. For though Ethel would not
denude the Court of its ancient furniture and ornaments,
there were many things belonging to the personal estate
of the late Squire which had been given to her by
his will, and could not be left behind. But by
the end of October cases and trunks were all sent
off to the steamship in which their passage was taken;
and the Rawdon estate, which had played such a momentous
part in Ethel’s life having finished its mission,
had no further influence, and without regret passed
out of her physical life forever.
Indeed, their willingness to resign
all claims to the old home was a marvel to both Tyrrel
and Ethel. On their last afternoon there they
walked through the garden, and stood under the plane
tree where their vows of love had been pledged, and
smiled and wondered at their indifference. The
beauteous glamor of first love was gone as com-pletely
as the flowers and scents and songs that had then
filled the charming place. But amid the sweet
decay of these things they once more clasped hands,
looking with supreme confidence into each other’s
eyes. All that had then been promised was now
certain; and with an affection infinitely sweeter
and surer, Tyrrel drew Ethel to his heart, and on
her lips kissed the tenderest, proudest words a woman
hears, “My dear wife!”
This visit was their last adieu, all
the rest had been said, and early the next morning
they left Monk-Rawdon station as quietly as they had
arrived. During their short reign at Rawdon Court
they had been very popular, and perhaps their resignation
was equally so. After all, they were foreigners,
and Nicholas Rawdon was Yorkshire, root and branch.
“Nice young people,” said
Justice Manningham at a hunt dinner, “but our
ways are not their ways, nor like to be. The
young man was born a fighter, and there are neither
bears nor Indians here for him to fight; and our politics
are Greek to him; and the lady, very sweet and beautiful,
but full of new ideas—ideas not suitable
for women, and we do not wish our women changed.”
“Good enough as they are,”
mumbled Squire Oakes.
“Nicest Americans I ever met,”
added Earl Danvers, “but Nicholas Rawdon will
be better at Rawdon Court.” To which statement
there was a general assent, and then the subject was
considered settled.
In the meantime Tyrrel and Ethel had
reached London and gone to the Metropole Hotel; because,
as Ethel said, no one knew where Dora was; but if
in England, she was likely to be at the Savoy.
They were to be two days in London. Tyrrel had
banking and other business to fully occupy the time,
and Ethel remembered she had some shopping to do,
a thing any woman would discover if she found herself
in the neighborhood of Regent Street and Piccadilly.
On the afternoon of the second day this duty was
finished, and she returned to her hotel satisfied
but a little weary. As she was going up the steps
she noticed a woman coming slowly down them.
It was Dora Mostyn. They met with great enthusiasm
on Dora’s part, and she turned back and went
with Ethel to her room.
Ethel looked at her with astonishment.
She was not like any Dora she had previously seen.
Her beauty had developed wondrously, she had grown
much taller, and her childish manner had been superseded
by a carriage and air of superb grace and dignity.
She had now a fine color, and her eyes were darker,
softer, and more dreamy than ever. “Take
off your hat, Dora,” said Ethel, “and
tell me what has happened. You are positively
splendid. Where is Mr. Mostyn?”
“I neither know nor care.
He is tramping round the world after me, and I intend
to keep him at it. But I forget. I must
tell you how that has come about.”
“We heard from Mrs. Denning.
She said she had received you safely.”
“My dear mother! She met
me like an angel; comforted and cared for me, never
said one word of blame, only kissed and pitied me.
We talked things over, and she advised me to go to
New York. So we took three passages under the
names of Mrs. John Gifford, Miss Gifford, and Miss
Diana Gifford. Miss Diana was my maid, but mother
thought a party of three would throw Mostyn off our
track.”
“A very good idea.”
“We sailed at once. On
the second day out I had a son. The poor little
fellow died in a few hours, and was buried at sea.
But his birth has given me the power to repay to
Fred Mostyn some of the misery he caused me.”
“How so? I do not see.”
“Oh, you must see, if you will
only remember how crazy Englishmen are about their
sons. Daughters don’t count, you know,
but a son carries the property in the family name.
He is its representative for the next generation.
As I lay suffering and weeping, a fine scheme of revenge
came clearly to me. Listen! Soon after we
got home mother cabled Mostyn’s lawyer that
`Mrs. Mostyn had had a son.’ Nothing was
said of the boy’s death. Almost immediately
I was notified that Mr. Mostyn would insist on the
surrender of the child to his care. I took no
notice of the letters. Then he sent his lawyer
to claim the child and a woman to take care of it.
I laughed them to scorn, and defied them to find the
child. After them came Mostyn himself. He
interviewed doctors, overlooked baptismal registers,
advertised far and wide, bribed our servants, bearded
father in his office, abused Bryce on the avenue,
waylaid me in all my usual resorts, and bombarded
me with letters, but he knows no more yet than the
cable told him. And the man is becoming a monomaniac
about his son.”
“Are you doing right, Dora?”
“If you only knew how he had
tortured me! Father and mother think he deserves
all I can do to him. Anyway, he will have it
to bear. If he goes to the asylum he threatened
me with, I shall be barely satisfied. The `cat-faced
woman’ is getting her innings now.”
“Have you never spoken to him
or written to him? Surely”
“He caught me one day as I came
out of our house, and said, `Madam, where is my son?’
And I answered, `You have no son. The child was
mine. You shall never see his face in this
world. I have taken good care of that.’
“`I will find him some day,’
he said, and I laughed at him, and answered, `He is
too cunningly hid. Do you think I would let the
boy know he had such a father as you? No, indeed.
Not unless there was property for the disgrace.’
I touched him on the raw in that remark, and then
I got into my carriage and told the coachman to drive
quickly. Mostyn attempted to follow me, but the
whip lashing the horses was in the way.”
And Dora laughed, and the laugh was cruel and mocking
and full of meaning.
“Dora, how can you? How
can you find pleasure in such revenges,”
“I am having the greatest satisfaction
of my life. And I am only beginning the just
retribution, for my beauty is enthralling the man
again, and he is on the road to a mad jealousy of
me.”
“Why don’t you get a divorce?
This is a case for that remedy. He might then
marry again, and you also.”
“Even so, I should still torment
him. If he had sons he would be miserable in
the thought that his unknown son might, on his death,
take from them the precious Mostyn estate, and that
wretched, old, haunted house of his. I am binding
him to misery on every hand.”
“Is Mrs. Denning here with you?”
“Both my father and mother are
with me. Father is going to take a year’s
rest, and we shall visit Berlin, Vienna, Rome, Paris
or wherever our fancy leads us.”
“And Mr. Mostyn?”
“He can follow me round, and
see nobles and princes and kings pay court to the
beauty of the `cat-faced woman.’ I shall
never notice him, never speak to him; but you need
not look so suspicious, Ethel. Neither by word
nor deed will I break a single convention of the strictest
respectability.”
“Mr. Mostyn ought to give you
your freedom.”
“I have given freedom to myself.
I have already divorced him. When they brought
my dead baby for me to kiss, I slipped into its little
hand the ring that made me his mother. They went
to the bottom of the sea together. As for ever
marrying again, not in this life. I have had
enough of it. My first husband was the sweetest
saint out of heaven, and my second was some mean little
demon that had sneaked his way out of hell; and I
found both insupportable.” She lifted her
hat as she spoke, and began to pin it on her beautifully
dressed hair. “Have no fear for me,”
she continued. “I am sure Basil watches
over me. Some day I shall be good, and he will
be happy.” Then, hand in hand, they walked
to the door together, and there were tears in both
voices as they softly said “Good-by.”