UGHTRED
Bettina stood alone in her bedroom
a couple of hours later. Lady Anstruthers had
taken her to it, preparing her for its limitations
by explaining that she would find it quite different
from her room in New York. She had been pathetically
nervous and flushed about it, and Bettina had also
been aware that the apartment itself had been hastily,
and with much moving of objects from one chamber to
another, made ready for her.
The room was large and square and
low. It was panelled in small squares of white
wood. The panels were old enough to be cracked
here and there, and the paint was stained and yellow
with time, where it was not knocked or worn off.
There was a small paned, leaded window which filled
a large part of one side of the room, and its deep
seat was an agreeable feature. Sitting in it,
one looked out over several red-walled gardens, and
through breaks in the trees of the park to a fair beyond.
Bettina stood before this window for a few moments,
and then took a seat in the embrasure, that she might
gaze out and reflect at leisure.
Her genius, as has before been mentioned,
was the genius for living, for being vital. Many
people merely exist, are kept alive by others, or
continue to vegetate because the persistent action
of normal functions will allow of their doing no less.
Bettina Vanderpoel had lived vividly, and in the midst
of a self-created atmosphere of action from her first
hour. It was not possible for her to be one of
the horde of mere spectators. Wheresoever she
moved there was some occult stirring of the mental,
and even physical, air. Her pulses beat too strongly,
her blood ran too fast to allow of inaction of mind
or body. When, in passing through the village,
she had seen the broken windows and the hanging palings
of the cottages, it had been inevitable that, at once,
she should, in thought, repair them, set them straight.
Disorder filled her with a sort of impatience which
was akin to physical distress. If she had been
born a poor woman she would have worked hard for her
living, and found an interest, almost an exhilaration,
in her labour. Such gifts as she had would have
been applied to the tasks she undertook. It had
frequently given her pleasure to imagine herself earning
her livelihood as a seamstress, a housemaid, a nurse.
She knew what she could have put into her service,
and how she could have found it absorbing. Imagination
and initiative could make any service absorbing.
The actual truth was that if she had been a housemaid,
the room she set in order would have taken a character
under her touch; if she had been a seamstress, her
work would have been swiftly done, her imagination
would have invented for her combinations of form and
colour; if she had been a nursemaid, the children
under her care would never have been sufficiently bored
to become tiresome or intractable, and they also would
have gained character to which would have been added
an undeniable vividness of outlook. She could
not have left them alone, so to speak. In obeying
the mere laws of her being, she would have stimulated
them. Unconsciously she had stimulated her fellow
pupils at school; when she was his companion, her
father had always felt himself stirred to interest
and enterprise.
“You ought to have been a man,
Betty,” he used to say to her sometimes.
But Betty had not agreed with him.
“You say that,” she once
replied to him, “because you see I am inclined
to do things, to change them, if they need changing.
Well, one is either born like that, or one is not.
Sometimes I think that perhaps the people who must
act are of a distinct race. A kind of vigorous
restlessness drives them. I remember that when
I was a child I could not see a pin lying upon the
ground without picking it up, or pass a drawer which
needed closing, without giving it a push. But
there has always been as much for women to do as for
men.”
There was much to be done here of
one sort of thing and another. That was certain.
As she gazed through the small panes of her large windows,
she found herself overlooking part of a wilderness
of garden, which revealed itself through an arch in
an overgrown laurel hedge. She had glimpses of
unkempt grass paths and unclipped topiary work which
had lost its original form. Among a tangle of
weeds rose the heads of clumps of daffodils, stirred
by a passing wind of spring. In the park beyond
a cuckoo was calling.
She was conscious both of the forlorn
beauty and significance of the neglected garden, and
of the clear quaintness of the cuckoo call, as she
thought of other things.
“Her spirit and her health are
broken,” was her summing up. “Her
prettiness has faded to a rag. She is as nervous
as an ill-treated child. She has lost her wits.
I do not know where to begin with her. I must
let her tell me things as gradually as she chooses.
Until I see Nigel I shall not know what his method
with her has been. She looks as if she had ceased
to care for things, even for herself. What shall
I write to mother?”
She knew what she should write to
her father. With him she could be explicit.
She could record what she had found and what it suggested
to her. She could also make clear her reason for
hesitance and deliberation. His discretion and
affection would comprehend the thing which she herself
felt and which affection not combined with discretion
might not take in. He would understand, when she
told him that one of the first things which had struck
her, had been that Rosy herself, her helplessness
and timidity, might, for a period at least, form obstacles
in their path of action. He not only loved Rosy,
but realised how slight a sweet thing she had always
been, and he would know how far a slight creature’s
gentleness might be overpowered and beaten down.
There was so much that her mother
must be spared, there was indeed so little that it
would be wise to tell her, that Bettina sat gently
rubbing her forehead as she thought of it. The
truth was that she must tell her nothing, until all
was over, accomplished, decided. Whatsoever there
was to be “over,” whatsoever the action
finally taken, must be a matter lying as far as possible
between her father and herself. Mrs. Vanderpoel’s
trouble would be too keen, her anxiety too great to
keep to herself, even if she were not overwhelmed
by them. She must be told of the beauties and
dimensions of Stornham, all relatable details of Rosy’s
life must be generously dwelt on. Above all Rosy
must be made to write letters, and with an air of
freedom however specious.
A knock on the door broke the thread
of her reflection. It was a low-sounding knock,
and she answered the summons herself, because she
thought it might be Rosy’s.
It was not Lady Anstruthers who stood
outside, but Ughtred, who balanced himself on his
crutches, and lifted his small, too mature, face.
“May I come in?” he asked.
Here was the unexpected again, but
she did not allow him to see her surprise.
“Yes,” she said. “Certainly
you may.”
He swung in and then turned to speak to her.
“Please shut the door and lock it,” he
said.
There was sudden illumination in this,
but of an order almost whimsical. That modern
people in modern days should feel bolts and bars a
necessity of ordinary intercourse was suggestive.
She was plainly about to receive enlightenment.
She turned the key and followed the halting figure
across the room.
“What are you afraid of?” she asked.
“When mother and I talk things
over,” he said, “we always do it where
no one can see or hear. It’s the only way
to be safe.”
“Safe from what?”
His eyes fixed themselves on her as he answered her
almost sullenly.
“Safe from people who might
listen and go and tell that we had been talking.”
In his thwarted-looking, odd child-face
there was a shade of appeal not wholly hidden by his
evident wish not to be boylike. Betty felt a desire
to kneel down suddenly and embrace him, but she knew
he was not prepared for such a demonstration.
He looked like a creature who had lived continually
at bay, and had learned to adjust himself to any situation
with caution and restraint.
“Sit down, Ughtred,” she
said, and when he did so she herself sat down, but
not too near him.
Resting his chin on the handle of
a crutch, he gazed at her almost protestingly.
“I always have to do these things,”
he said, “and I am not clever enough, or old
enough. I am only eleven.”
The mention of the number of his years
was plainly not apologetic, but was a mere statement
of his limitations. There the fact was, and he
must make the best of it he could.
“What things do you mean?”
“Trying to make things easier—explaining
things when she cannot think of excuses. To-day
it is telling you what she is too frightened to tell
you herself. I said to her that you must be told.
It made her nervous and miserable, but I knew you
must.”
“Yes, I must,” Betty answered.
“I am glad she has you to depend on, Ughtred.”
His crutch grated on the floor and
his boy eyes forbade her to believe that their sudden
lustre was in any way connected with restrained emotion.
“I know I seem queer and like
a little old man,” he said. “Mother
cries about it sometimes. But it can’t
be helped. It is because she has never had anyone
but me to help her. When I was very little, I
found out how frightened and miserable she was.
After his rages,” he used no name, “she
used to run into my nursery and snatch me up in her
arms and hide her face in my pinafore. Sometimes
she stuffed it into her mouth and bit it to keep herself
from screaming. Once—before I was seven—I
ran into their room and shouted out, and tried to
fight for her. He was going out, and had his
riding whip in his hand, and he caught hold of me and
struck me with it—until he was tired.”
Betty stood upright.
“What! What! What!” she cried
out.
He merely nodded his head shortly.
She saw what the thing had been by the way his face
lost colour.
“Of course he said it was because
I was impudent, and needed punishment,” he said.
“He said she had encouraged me in American impudence.
It was worse for her than for me. She kneeled
down and screamed out as if she was crazy, that she
would give him what he wanted if he would stop.”
“Wait,” said Betty, drawing
in her breath sharply. “‘He,’ is
Sir Nigel? And he wanted something.”
He nodded again
“Tell me,” she demanded, “has he
ever struck her?”
“Once,” he answered slowly,
“before I was born—he struck her and
she fell against something. That is why I am
like this.” And he touched his shoulder.
The feeling which surged through Betty
Vanderpoel’s being forced her to go and stand
with her face turned towards the windows, her hands
holding each other tightly behind her back.
“I must keep still,” she
said. “I must make myself keep still.”
She spoke unconsciously half aloud,
and Ughtred heard her and replied hurriedly.
“Yes,” he said, “you
must make yourself keep still. That is what we
have to do whatever happens. That is one of the
things mother wanted you to know. She is afraid.
She daren’t let you——”
She turned from the window, standing
at her full height and looking very tall for a girl.
“She is afraid? She daren’t?
See—that will come to an end now. There
are things which can be done.”
He flushed nervously.
“That is what she was afraid
you would say,” he spoke fast and his hands
trembled. “She is nearly wild about it,
because she knows he will try to do something that
will make you feel as if she does not want you.”
“She is afraid of that?” Betty exclaimed.
“He’d do it! He’d do it—if
you did not know beforehand.”
“Oh!” said Betty, with unflinching clearness.
“He is a liar, is he?”
The helpless rage in the unchildish
eyes, the shaking voice, as he cried out in answer,
were a shock. It was as if he wildly rejoiced
that she had spoken the word.
“Yes, he’s a liar—a
liar!” he shrilled. “He’s a
liar and a bully and a coward. He’d—he’d
be a murderer if he dared—but he daren’t.”
And his face dropped on his arms folded on his crutch,
and he broke into a passion of crying. Then Betty
knew she might go to him. She went and knelt
down and put her arm round him.
“Ughtred,” she said, “cry,
if you like, I should do it, if I were you. But
I tell you it can all be altered—and it
shall be.”
He seemed quite like a little boy
when he put out his hand to hers and spoke sobbingly:
“She—she says—that
because you have only just come from America—and
in America people—can do things—you
will think you can do things here—and you
don’t know. He will tell lies about you
lies you can’t bear. She sat wringing her
hands when she thought of it. She won’t
let you be hurt because you want to help her.”
He stopped abruptly and clutched her shoulder.
“Aunt Betty! Aunt Betty—whatever
happens—whatever he makes her seem like—you
are to know that it is not true. Now you have
come—now she has seen you it would kill
her if you were driven away and thought she wanted
you to go.”
“I shall not think that,”
she answered, slowly, because she realised that it
was well that she had been warned in time. “Ughtred,
are you trying to tell me that above all things I
must not let him think that I came here to help you,
because if he is angry he will make us all suffer—and
your mother most of all?”
“He’ll find a way.
We always know he will. He would either be so
rude that you would not stay here—or he
would make mother seem rude—or he would
write lies to grandfather. Aunt Betty, she scarcely
believes you are real yet. If she won’t
tell you things at first, please don’t mind.”
He looked quite like a child again in his appeal to
her, to try to understand a state of affairs so complicated.
“Could you—could you wait until you
have let her get—get used to you?”
“Used to thinking that there
may be someone in the world to help her?” slowly.
“Yes, I will. Has anyone ever tried to help
her?”
“Once or twice people found
out and were sorry at first, but it only made it worse,
because he made them believe things.”
“I shall not try, Ughtred,”
said Betty, a remote spark kindling in the deeps of
the pupils of her steel-blue eyes. “I shall
not try. Now I am going to ask you some
questions.”
Before he left her she had asked many
questions which were pertinent and searching, and
she had learned things she realised she could have
learned in no other way and from no other person.
But for his uncanny sense of the responsibility he
clearly had assumed in the days when he wore pinafores,
and which had brought him to her room to prepare her
mind for what she would find herself confronted with
in the way of apparently unexplainable obstacles,
there was a strong likelihood that at the outset she
might have found herself more than once dangerously
at a loss. Yes, she would have been at a loss,
puzzled, perhaps greatly discouraged. She was
face to face with a complication so extraordinary.
That one man, through mere persistent
steadiness in evil temper and domestic tyranny, should
have so broken the creatures of his household into
abject submission and hopelessness, seemed too incredible.
Such a power appeared as remote from civilised existence
in London and New York as did that which had inflicted
tortures in the dungeons of castles of old. Prisoners
in such dungeons could utter no cry which could reach
the outside world; the prisoners at Stornham Court,
not four hours from Hyde Park Corner, could utter
none the world could hear, or comprehend if it heard
it. Sheer lack of power to resist bound them hand
and foot. And she, Betty Vanderpoel, was here
upon the spot, and, as far as she could understand,
was being implored to take no steps, to do nothing.
The atmosphere in which she had spent her life, the
world she had been born into, had not made for fearfulness
that one would be at any time defenceless against
circumstances and be obliged to submit to outrage.
To be a Vanderpoel was, it was true, to be a shining
mark for envy as for admiration, but the fact removed
obstacles as a rule, and to find one’s self
standing before a situation with one’s hands,
figuratively speaking, tied, was new enough to arouse
unusual sensations. She recalled, with an ironic
sense of bewilderment, as a sort of material evidence
of her own reality, the fact that not a week ago she
had stepped on to English soil from the gangway of
a solid Atlantic liner. It aided her to resist
the feeling that she had been swept back into the
Middle Ages.
“When he is angry,” was
one of the first questions she put to Ughtred, “what
does he give as his reason? He must profess to
have a reason.”
“When he gets in a rage he says
it is because mother is silly and common, and I am
badly brought up. But we always know he wants
money, and it makes him furious. He could kill
us with rage.”
“Oh!” said Betty. “I see.”
“It began that time when he
struck her. He said then that it was not decent
that a woman who was married should keep her own money.
He made her give him almost everything she had, but
she wants to keep some for me. He tries to make
her get more from grandfather, but she will not write
begging letters, and she won’t give him what
she is saving for me.”
It was a simple and sordid enough
explanation in one sense, and it was one of which
Bettina had known, not one parallel, but several.
Having married to ensure himself power over unquestioned
resources, the man had felt himself disgustingly taken
in, and avenged himself accordingly. In him had
been born the makings of a domestic tyrant who, even
had he been favoured by fortune, would have wreaked
his humours upon the defenceless things made his property
by ties of blood and marriage, and who, being unfavoured,
would do worse. Betty could see what the years
had held for Rosy, and how her weakness and timidity
had been considered as positive assets. A woman
who will cry when she is bullied, may be counted upon
to submit after she has cried. Rosy had submitted
up to a certain point and then, with the stubbornness
of a weak creature, had stood at timid bay for her
young.
What Betty gathered was that, after
the long and terrible illness which had followed Ughtred’s
birth, she had risen from what had been so nearly
her deathbed, prostrated in both mind and body.
Ughtred did not know all that he revealed when he
touched upon the time which he said his mother could
not quite remember—when she had sat for
months staring vacantly out of her window, trying
to recall something terrible which had happened, and
which she wanted to tell her mother, if the day ever
came when she could write to her again. She had
never remembered clearly the details of the thing
she had wanted to tell, and Nigel had insisted that
her fancy was part of her past delirium. He had
said that at the beginning of her delirium she had
attacked and insulted his mother and himself but they
had excused her because they realised afterwards what
the cause of her excitement had been. For a long
time she had been too brokenly weak to question or
disbelieve, but, later she had vaguely known that
he had been lying to her, though she could not refute
what he said. She recalled, in course of time,
a horrible scene in which all three of them had raved
at each other, and she herself had shrieked and laughed
and hurled wild words at Nigel, and he had struck her.
That she knew and never forgot. She had been
ill a year, her hair had fallen out, her skin had
faded and she had begun to feel like a nervous, tired
old woman instead of a girl. Girlhood, with all
the past, had become unreal and too far away to be
more than a dream. Nothing had remained real but
Stornham and Nigel and the little hunchbacked baby.
She was glad when the Dowager died and when Nigel
spent his time in London or on the Continent and left
her with Ughtred. When he said that he must spend
her money on the estate, she had acquiesced without
comment, because that insured his going away.
She saw that no improvement or repairs were made,
but she could do nothing and was too listless to make
the attempt. She only wanted to be left alone
with Ughtred, and she exhibited willpower only in
defence of her child and in her obstinacy with regard
to asking money of her father.
“She thought, somehow, that
grandfather and grandmother did not care for her any
more—that they had forgotten her and only
cared for you,” Ughtred explained. “She
used to talk to me about you. She said you must
be so clever and so handsome that no one could remember
her. Sometimes she cried and said she did not
want any of you to see her again, because she was
only a hideous, little, thin, yellow old woman.
When I was very little she told me stories about New
York and Fifth Avenue. I thought they were not
real places—I though they were places in
fairyland.”
Betty patted his shoulder and looked
away for a moment when he said this. In her remote
and helpless loneliness, to Rosy’s homesick,
yearning soul, noisy, rattling New York, Fifth Avenue
with its traffic and people, its brown-stone houses
and ricketty stages, had seemed like that—so
splendid and bright and heart-filling, that she had
painted them in colours which could belong only to
fairyland. It said so much.
The thing she had suspected as she
had talked to her sister was, before the interview
ended, made curiously clear. The first obstacle
in her pathway would be the shrinking of a creature
who had been so long under dominion that the mere
thought of seeing any steps taken towards her rescue
filled her with alarm. One might be prepared for
her almost praying to be let alone, because she felt
that the process of her salvation would bring about
such shocks and torments as she could not endure the
facing of.
“She will have to get used to
you,” Ughtred kept saying. “She will
have to get used to thinking things.”
“I will be careful,” Bettina
answered. “She shall not be troubled.
I did not come to trouble her.”