THINGS OCCUR IN STORNHAM VILLAGE
It would not have been possible for
Miss Vanderpoel to remain long in social seclusion
in London, and, before many days had passed, Stornham
village was enlivened by the knowledge that her ladyship
and her sister had returned to the Court. It
was also evident that their visit to London had not
been made to no purpose. The stagnation of the
waters of village life threatened to become a whirlpool.
A respectable person, who was to be her ladyship’s
maid, had come with them, and her ladyship had not
been served by a personal attendant for years.
Her ladyship had also appeared at the dinner-table
in new garments, and with her hair done as other ladies
wore theirs. She looked like a different woman,
and actually had a bit of colour, and was beginning
to lose her frightened way. Now it dawned upon
even the dullest and least active mind that something
had begun to stir.
It had been felt vaguely when the
new young lady from “Meriker” had walked
through the village street, and had drawn people to
doors and windows by her mere passing. After
the return from London the signs of activity were
such as made the villagers catch their breaths in uttering
uncertain exclamations, and caused the feminine element
to catch up offspring or, dragging it by its hand,
run into neighbours’ cottages and stand talking
the incredible thing over in lowered and rather breathless
voices. Yet the incredible thing in question was—had
it been seen from the standpoint of more prosperous
villagers—anything but extraordinary.
In entirely rural places the Castle, the Hall or the
Manor, the Great House—in short—still
retains somewhat of the old feudal power to bestow
benefits or withhold them. Wealth and good will
at the Manor supply work and resultant comfort in
the village and its surrounding holdings. Patronised
by the Great House the two or three small village
shops bestir themselves and awaken to activity.
The blacksmith swings his hammer with renewed spirit
over the numerous jobs the gentry’s stables,
carriage houses, garden tools, and household repairs
give to him. The carpenter mends and makes, the
vicarage feels at ease, realising that its church
and its charities do not stand unsupported. Small
farmers and larger ones, under a rich and interested
landlord, thrive and are able to hold their own even
against the tricks of wind and weather. Farm
labourers being, as a result, certain of steady and
decent wage, trudge to and fro, with stolid cheerfulness,
knowing that the pot boils and the children’s
feet are shod. Superannuated old men and women
are sure of their broth and Sunday dinner, and their
dread of the impending “Union” fades away.
The squire or my lord or my lady can be depended upon
to care for their old bones until they are laid under
the sod in the green churchyard. With wealth and
good will at the Great House, life warms and offers
prospects. There are Christmas feasts and gifts
and village treats, and the big carriage or the smaller
ones stop at cottage doors and at once confer exciting
distinction and carry good cheer.
But Stornham village had scarcely
a remote memory of any period of such prosperity.
It had not existed even in the older Sir Nigel’s
time, and certainly the present Sir Nigel’s
reign had been marked only by neglect, ill-temper,
indifference, and a falling into disorder and decay.
Farms were poorly worked, labourers were unemployed,
there was no trade from the manor household, no carriages,
no horses, no company, no spending of money.
Cottages leaked, floors were damp, the church roof
itself was falling to pieces, and the vicar had nothing
to give. The helpless and old cottagers were
carried to the “Union” and, dying there,
were buried by the stinted parish in parish coffins.
Her ladyship had not visited the cottages
since her child’s birth. And now such inspiriting
events as were everyday happenings in lucky places
like Westerbridge and Wratcham and Yangford, showed
signs of being about to occur in Stornham itself.
To begin with, even before the journey
to London, Kedgers had made two or three visits to
The Clock, and had been in a communicative mood.
He had related the story of the morning when he had
looked up from his work and had found the strange
young lady standing before him, with the result that
he had been “struck all of a heap.”
And then he had given a detailed account of their
walk round the place, and of the way in which she
had looked at things and asked questions, such as would
have done credit to a man “with a ’ead
on ’im.”
“Nay! Nay!” commented
Kedgers, shaking his own head doubtfully, even while
with admiration. “I’ve never seen
the like before—in young women—neither
in lady young women nor in them that’s otherwise.”
Afterwards had transpired the story
of Mrs. Noakes, and the kitchen grate, Mrs. Noakes
having a friend in Miss Lupin, the village dressmaker.
“I’d not put it past her,”
was Mrs. Noakes’ summing up, “to order
a new one, I wouldn’t.”
The footman in the shabby livery had
been a little wild in his statements, being rendered
so by the admiring and excited state of his mind.
He dwelt upon the matter of her “looks,”
and the way she lighted up the dingy dining-room,
and so conversed that a man found himself listening
and glancing when it was his business to be an unhearing,
unseeing piece of mechanism.
Such simple records of servitors’
impressions were quite enough for Stornham village,
and produced in it a sense of being roused a little
from sleep to listen to distant and uncomprehended,
but not unagreeable, sounds.
One morning Buttle, the carpenter,
looked up as Kedgers had done, and saw standing on
the threshold of his shop the tall young woman, who
was a sensation and an event in herself.
“You are the master of this shop?” she
asked.
Buttle came forward, touching his brow in hasty salute.
“Yes, my lady,” he answered. “Joseph
Buttle, your ladyship.”
“I am Miss Vanderpoel,”
dismissing the suddenly bestowed title with easy directness.
“Are you busy? I want to talk to you.”
No one had any reason to be “busy”
at any time in Stornham village, no such luck; but
Buttle did not smile as he replied that he was at liberty
and placed himself at his visitor’s disposal.
The tall young lady came into the little shop, and
took the chair respectfully offered to her. Buttle
saw her eyes sweep the place as if taking in its resources.
“I want to talk to you about
some work which must be done at the Court,”
she explained at once. “I want to know how
much can be done by workmen of the village. How
many men have you?”
“How many men had he?”
Buttle wavered between gratification at its being
supposed that he had “men” under him and
grumpy depression because the illusion must be dispelled.
“There’s me and Sim Soames,
miss,” he answered. “No more, an’
no less.”
“Where can you get more?” asked Miss Vanderpoel.
It could not be denied that Buttle
received a mental shock which verged in its suddenness
on being almost a physical one. The promptness
and decision of such a query swept him off his feet.
That Sim Soames and himself should be an insufficient
force to combat with such repairs as the Court could
afford was an idea presenting an aspect of unheard-of
novelty, but that methods as coolly radical as those
this questioning implied, should be resorted to, was
staggering.
“Me and Sim has always done
what work was done,” he stammered. “It
hasn’t been much.”
Miss Vanderpoel neither assented to
nor dissented from this last palpable truth.
She regarded Buttle with searching eyes. She was
wondering if any practical ability concealed itself
behind his dullness. If she gave him work, could
he do it? If she gave the whole village work,
was it too far gone in its unspurred stodginess to
be roused to carrying it out?
“There is a great deal to be
done now,” she said. “All that can
be done in the village should be done here. It
seems to me that the villagers want work—new
work. Do they?”
Work! New work! The spark
of life in her steady eyes actually lighted a spark
in the being of Joe Buttle. Young ladies in villages—gentry—usually
visited the cottagers a bit if they were well-meaning
young women—left good books and broth or
jelly, pottered about and were seen at church, and
playing croquet, and finally married and removed to
other places, or gradually faded year by year into
respectable spinsterhood. And this one comes in,
and in two or three minutes shows that she knows things
about the place and understands. A man might
then take it for granted that she would understand
the thing he daringly gathered courage to say.
“They want any work, miss—that
they are sure of decent pay for—sure of
it.”
She did understand. And she did
not treat his implication as an impertinence.
She knew it was not intended as one, and, indeed, she
saw in it a sort of earnest of a possible practical
quality in Buttle. Such work as the Court had
demanded had remained unpaid for with quiet persistence,
until even bills had begun to lag and fall off.
She could see exactly how it had been done, and comprehended
quite clearly a lack of enthusiasm in the presence
of orders from the Great House.
“All work will be paid for,”
she said. “Each week the workmen will receive
their wages. They may be sure. I will be
responsible.”
“Thank you, miss,” said
Buttle, and he half unconsciously touched his forehead
again.
“In a place like this,”
the young lady went on in her mellow voice, and with
a reflective thoughtfulness in her handsome eyes, “on
an estate like Stornham, no work that can be done
by the villagers should be done by anyone else.
The people of the land should be trained to do such
work as the manor house, or cottages, or farms require
to have done.”
“How did she think that out?”
was Buttle’s reflection. In places such
as Stornham, through generation after generation, the
thing she had just said was accepted as law, clung
to as a possession, any divergence from it being a
grievance sullenly and bitterly grumbled over.
And in places enough there was divergence in these
days—the gentry sending to London for things,
and having up workmen to do their best-paying jobs
for them. The law had been so long a law that
no village could see justice in outsiders being sent
for, even to do work they could not do well themselves.
It showed what she was, this handsome young woman—even
though she did come from America—that she
should know what was right.
She took a note-book out and opened
it on the rough table before her.
“I have made some notes here,”
she said, “and a sketch or two. We must
talk them over together.”
If she had given Joe Buttle cause
for surprise at the outset, she gave him further cause
during the next half-hour. The work that was to
be done was such as made him open his eyes, and draw
in his breath. If he was to be allowed to do
it—if he could do it—if it was
to be paid for—it struck him that he would
be a man set up for life. If her ladyship had
come and ordered it to be done, he would have thought
the poor thing had gone mad. But this one had
it all jotted down in a clear hand, without the least
feminine confusion of detail, and with here and there
a little sharply-drawn sketch, such as a carpenter,
if he could draw, which Buttle could not, might have
made.
“There’s not workmen enough
in the village to do it in a year, miss,” he
said at last, with a gasp of disappointment.
She thought it over a minute, her
pencil poised in her hand and her eyes on his face.
“Can you,” she said, “undertake
to get men from other villages, and superintend what
they do? If you can do that, the work is still
passing through your hands, and Stornham will reap
the benefit of it. Your workmen will lodge at
the cottages and spend part of their wages at the
shops, and you who are a Stornham workman will earn
the money to be made out of a rather large contract.”
Joe Buttle became quite hot.
If you have brought up a family for years on the proceeds
of such jobs as driving a ten-penny nail in here or
there, tinkering a hole in a cottage roof, knocking
up a shelf in the vicarage kitchen, and mending a
panel of fence, to be suddenly confronted with a proposal
to engage workmen and undertake “contracts”
is shortening to the breath and heating to the blood.
“Miss,” he said, “we’ve
never done big jobs, Sim Soames an’ me.
P’raps we’re not up to it—but
it’d be a fortune to us.”
She was looking down at one of her
papers and making pencil marks on it.
“You did some work last year
on a little house at Tidhurst, didn’t you?”
she said.
To think of her knowing that!
Yes, the unaccountable good luck had actually come
to him that two Tidhurst carpenters, falling ill of
the same typhoid at the same time, through living
side by side in the same order of unsanitary cottage,
he and Sim had been given their work to finish, and
had done their best.
“Yes, miss,” he answered.
“I heard that when I was inquiring
about you. I drove over to Tidhurst to see the
work, and it was very sound and well done. If
you did that, I can at least trust you to do something
at the Court which will prove to me what you are equal
to. I want a Stornham man to undertake this.”
“No Tidhurst man,” said
Joe Buttle, with sudden courage, “nor yet no
Barnhurst, nor yet no Yangford, nor Wratcham shall
do it, if I can look it in the face. It’s
Stornham work and Stornham had ought to have it.
It gives me a brace-up to hear of it.”
The tall young lady laughed beautifully and got up.
“Come to the Court to-morrow
morning at ten, and we will look it over together,”
she said. “Good-morning, Buttle.”
And she went away.
In the taproom of The Clock, when
Joe Buttle dropped in for his pot of beer, he found
Fox, the saddler, and Tread, the blacksmith, and each
of them fell upon the others with something of the
same story to tell. The new young lady from the
Court had been to see them, too, and had brought to
each her definite little note-book. Harness was
to be repaired and furbished up, the big carriage
and the old phaeton were to be put in order, and Master
Ughtred’s cart was to be given new paint and
springs.
“This is what she said,”
Fox’s story ran, “and she said it so straightforward
and business-like that the conceitedest man that lived
couldn’t be upset by it. ‘I want to
see what you can do,’ she says. ’I
am new to the place and I must find out what everyone
can do, then I shall know what to do myself.’
The way she sets them eyes on a man is a sight.
It’s the sense in them and the human nature that
takes you.”
“Yes, it’s the sense,”
said Tread, “and her looking at you as if she
expected you to have sense yourself, and understand
that she’s doing fair business. It’s
clear-headed like—her asking questions and
finding out what Stornham men can do. She’s
having the old things done up so that she can find
out, and so that she can prove that the Court work
is going to be paid for. That’s my belief.”
“But what does it all mean?”
said Joe Buttle, setting his pot of beer down on the
taproom table, round which they sat in conclave.
“Where’s the money coming from? There’s
money somewhere.”
Tread was the advanced thinker of
the village. He had come—through reverses—from
a bigger place. He read the newspapers.
“It’ll come from where
it’s got a way of coming,” he gave forth
portentously. “It’ll come from America.
How they manage to get hold of so much of it there
is past me. But they’ve got it, dang ’em,
and they’re ready to spend it for what they
want, though they’re a sharp lot. Twelve
years ago there was a good bit of talk about her ladyship’s
father being one of them with the fullest pockets.
She came here with plenty, but Sir Nigel got hold
of it for his games, and they’re the games that
cost money. Her ladyship wasn’t born with
a backbone, poor thing, but this new one was, and
her ladyship’s father is her father, and you
mark my words, there’s money coming into Stornham,
though it’s not going to be played the fool
with. Lord, yes! this new one has a backbone
and good strong wrists and a good strong head, though
I must say”—with a little masculine
chuckle of admission—“it’s a
bit unnatural with them eyelashes and them eyes looking
at you between ’em. Like blue water between
rushes in the marsh.”
Before the next twenty-four hours
had passed a still more unlooked-for event had taken
place. Long outstanding bills had been paid, and
in as matter-of-fact manner as if they had not been
sent in and ignored, in some cases for years.
The settlement of Joe Buttle’s account sent him
to bed at the day’s end almost light-headed.
To become suddenly the possessor of thirty-seven pounds,
fifteen and tenpence half-penny, of which all hope
had been lost three years ago, was almost too much
for any man. Six pounds, eight pounds, ten pounds,
came into places as if sovereigns had been sixpences,
and shillings farthings. More than one cottage
woman, at the sight of the hoarded wealth in her staring
goodman’s hand, gulped and began to cry.
If they had had it before, and in driblets, it would
have been spent long since, now, in a lump, it meant
shoes and petticoats and tea and sugar in temporary
abundance, and the sense of this abundance was felt
to be entirely due to American magic. America
was, in fact, greatly lauded and discussed, the case
of “Gaarge” Lumsden being much quoted.