“I thought you had all forgotten.”
As, after a singular half hour spent
among the bracken under the trees, they began their
return to the house, Bettina felt that her sense of
adventure had altered its character. She was still
in the midst of a remarkable sort of exploit, which
might end anywhere or in anything, but it had become
at once more prosaic in detail and more intense in
its significance. What its significance might
prove likely to be when she faced it, she had not
known, it is true. But this was different from—from
anything. As they walked up the sun-dappled avenue
she kept glancing aside at Rosy, and endeavouring
to draw useful conclusions. The poor girl’s
air of being a plain, insignificant frump, long past
youth, struck an extraordinary and, for the time,
unexplainable note. Her ill-cut, out-of-date
dress, the cheap suit of the hunchbacked boy, who
limped patiently along, helped by his crutch, suggested
possible explanations which were without doubt connected
with the thought which had risen in Bettina’s
mind, as she had been driven through the broken-hinged
entrance gate. What extraordinary disposal was
being made of Rosy’s money? But her each
glance at her sister also suggested complication upon
complication.
The singular half hour under the trees
by the pool, spent, after the first hysteric moments
were over, in vague exclaimings and questions, which
seemed half frightened and all at sea, had gradually
shown her that she was talking to a creature wholly
other than the Rosalie who had so well known and loved
them all, and whom they had so well loved and known.
They did not know this one, and she did not know them,
she was even a little afraid of the stir and movement
of their life and being. The Rosy they had known
seemed to be imprisoned within the wall the years
of her separated life had built about her. At
each breath she drew Bettina saw how long the years
had been to her, and how far her home had seemed to
lie away, so far that it could not touch her, and was
only a sort of dream, the recalling of which made
her suddenly begin to cry again every few minutes.
To Bettina’s sensitively alert mind it was plain
that it would not do in the least to drag her suddenly
out of her prison, or cloister, whichsoever it might
be. To do so would be like forcing a creature
accustomed only to darkness, to stare at the blazing
sun. To have burst upon her with the old impetuous,
candid fondness would have been to frighten and shock
her as if with something bordering on indecency.
She could not have stood it; perhaps such fondness
was so remote from her in these days that she had
even ceased to be able to understand it.
“Where are your little girls?”
Bettina asked, remembering that there had been notice
given of the advent of two girl babies.
“They died,” Lady Anstruthers
answered unemotionally. “They both died
before they were a year old. There is only Ughtred.”
Betty glanced at the boy and saw a
small flame of red creep up on his cheek. Instinctively
she knew what it meant, and she put out her hand and
lightly touched his shoulder.
“I hope you’ll like me, Ughtred,”
she said.
He almost started at the sound of
her voice, but when he turned his face towards her
he only grew redder, and looked awkward without answering.
His manner was that of a boy who was unused to the
amenities of polite society, and who was only made
shy by them.
Without warning, a moment or so later,
Bettina stopped in the middle of the avenue, and looked
up at the arching giant branches of the trees which
had reached out from one side to the other, as if to
clasp hands or encompass an interlacing embrace.
As far as the eye reached, they did this, and the
beholder stood as in a high stately pergola, with breaks
of deep azure sky between. Several mellow, cawing
rooks were floating solemnly beneath or above the
branches, now wand then settling in some highest one
or disappearing in the thick greenness.
Lady Anstruthers stopped when her
sister did so, and glanced at her in vague inquiry.
It was plain that she had outlived even her sense of
the beauty surrounding her.
“What are you looking at, Betty?” she
asked.
“At all of it,” Betty answered. “It
is so wonderful.”
“She likes it,” said Ughtred,
and then rather slunk a step behind his mother, as
if he were ashamed of himself.
“The house is just beyond those trees,”
said Lady Anstruthers.
They came in full view of it three
minutes later. When she saw it, Betty uttered
an exclamation and stopped again to enjoy effects.
“She likes that, too,”
said Ughtred, and, although he said it sheepishly,
there was imperfectly concealed beneath the awkwardness
a pleasure in the fact.
“Do you?” asked Rosalie, with her small,
painful smile.
Betty laughed.
“It is too picturesque, in its
special way, to be quite credible,” she said.
“I thought that when I first saw it,”
said Rosy.
“Don’t you think so, now?”
“Well,” was the rather
uncertain reply, “as Nigel says, there’s
not much good in a place that is falling to pieces.”
“Why let it fall to pieces?”
Betty put it to her with impartial promptness.
“We haven’t money enough
to hold it together,” resignedly.
As they climbed the low, broad, lichen-blotched
steps, whose broken stone balustrades were almost
hidden in clutching, untrimmed ivy, Betty felt them
to be almost incredible, too. The uneven stones
of the terrace the steps mounted to were lichen-blotched
and broken also. Tufts of green growths had forced
themselves between the flags, and added an untidy
beauty. The ivy tossed in branches over the red
roof and walls of the house. It had been left
unclipped, until it was rather an endlessly clambering
tree than a creeper. The hall they entered had
the beauty of spacious form and good, old oaken panelling.
There were deep window seats and an ancient high-backed
settle or so, and a massive table by the fireless
hearth. But there were no pictures in places where
pictures had evidently once hung, and the only coverings
on the stone floor were the faded remnants of a central
rug and a worn tiger skin, the head almost bald and
a glass eye knocked out.
Bettina took in the unpromising details
without a quiver of the extravagant lashes. These,
indeed, and the eyes pertaining to them, seemed rather
to sweep the fine roof, and a certain minstrel’s
gallery and staircase, than which nothing could have
been much finer, with the look of an appreciative
admirer of architectural features and old oak.
She had not journeyed to Stornham Court with the intention
of disturbing Rosy, or of being herself obviously
disturbed. She had come to observe situations
and rearrange them with that intelligence of which
unconsidered emotion or exclamation form no part.
“It is the first old English
house I have seen,” she said, with a sigh of
pleasure. “I am so glad, Rosy—I
am so glad that it is yours.”
She put a hand on each of Rosy’s
thin shoulders—she felt sharply defined
bones as she did so—and bent to kiss her.
It was the natural affectionate expression of her
feeling, but tears started to Rosy’s eyes, and
the boy Ughtred, who had sat down in a window seat,
turned red again, and shifted in his place.
“Oh, Betty!” was Rosy’s
faint nervous exclamation, “you seem so beautiful
and—so—so strange—that
you frighten me.”
Betty laughed with the softest possible
cheerfulness, shaking her a little.
“I shall not seem strange long,”
she said, “after I have stayed with you a few
weeks, if you will let me stay with you.”
“Let you! Let you!” in a sort of
gasp.
Poor little Lady Anstruthers sank
on to a settle and began to cry again. It was
plain that she always cried when things occurred.
Ughtred’s speech from his window seat testified
at once to that.
“Don’t cry, mother,”
he said. “You know how we’ve talked
that over together. It’s her nerves,”
he explained to Bettina. “We know it only
makes things worse, but she can’t stop it.”
Bettina sat on the settle, too.
She herself was not then aware of the wonderful feeling
the poor little spare figure experienced, as her softly
strong young arms curved about it. She was only
aware that she herself felt that this was a heart-breaking
thing, and that she must not—must
not let it be seen how much she recognised its woefulness.
This was pretty, fair Rosy, who had never done a harm
in her happy life—this forlorn thing was
her Rosy.
“Never mind,” she said,
half laughing again. “I rather want to cry
myself, and I am stronger than she is. I am immensely
strong.”
“Yes! Yes!” said
Lady Anstruthers, wiping her eyes, and making a tremendous
effort at self-respecting composure. “You
are strong. I have grown so weak in—well,
in every way. Betty, I’m afraid this is
a poor welcome. You see—I’m
afraid you’ll find it all so different from—from
New York.”
“I wanted to find it different,” said
Betty.
“But—but—I
mean—you know——”
Lady Anstruthers turned helplessly to the boy.
Bettina was struck with the painful truth that she
looked even silly as she turned to him. “Ughtred—tell
her,” she ended, and hung her head.
Ughtred had got down at once from
his seat and limped forward. His unprepossessing
face looked as if he pulled his childishness together
with an unchildish effort.
“She means,” he said,
in his awkward way, “that she doesn’t know
how to make you comfortable. The rooms are all
so shabby—everything is so shabby.
Perhaps you won’t stay when you see.”
Bettina perceptibly increased the
firmness of her hold on her sister’s body.
It was as if she drew it nearer to her side in a kind
of taking possession. She knew that the moment
had come when she might go this far, at least, without
expressing alarming things.
“You cannot show me anything
that will frighten me,” was the answer she made.
“I have come to stay, Rosy. We can make
things right if they require it. Why not?”
Lady Anstruthers started a little,
and stared at her. She knew ten thousand reasons
why things had not been made right, and the casual
inference that such reasons could be lightly swept
away as if by the mere wave of a hand, implied a power
appertaining to a time seeming so lost forever that
it was too much for her.
“Oh, Betty, Betty!” she
cried, “you talk as if—you are so——!”
The fact, so simple to the members
of the abnormal class to which she of a truth belonged,
the class which heaped up its millions, the absolute
knowledge that there was a great deal of money in the
world and that she was of those who were among its
chief owners, had ceased to seem a fact, and had vanished
into the region of fairy stories.
That she could not believe it a reality
revealed itself to Bettina, as by a flash, which was
also a revelation of many things. There would
be unpleasing truths to be learned, and she had not
made her pilgrimage for nothing. But—in
any event—there were advantages without
doubt in the circumstance which subjected one to being
perpetually pointed out as a daughter of a multi-millionaire.
As this argued itself out for her with rapid lucidity,
she bent and kissed Rosy once more. She even tried
to do it lightly, and not to allow the rush of love
and pity in her soul to betray her.
“I talk as if—as
if I were Betty,” she said. “You have
forgotten. I have not. I have been looking
forward to this for years. I have been planning
to come to you since I was eleven years old. And
here we sit.”
“You didn’t forget?
You didn’t?” faltered the poor wreck of
Rosy. “Oh! Oh! I thought you
had all forgotten me—quite—quite!”
And her face went down in her spare,
small hands, and she began to cry again.