“We began to marry them,
my good fellow!”
Lord Dunholm and his eldest son, Lord
Westholt, sauntered together smoking their after-dinner
cigars on the broad-turfed terrace overlooking park
and gardens which seemed to sweep without boundary
line into the purplish land beyond. The grey mass
of the castle stood clear-cut against the blue of
a sky whose twilight was still almost daylight, though
in the purity of its evening stillness a star already
hung, here and there, and a young moon swung low.
The great spaces about them held a silence whose exquisite
entirety was marked at intervals by the distant bark
of a shepherd dog driving his master’s sheep
to the fold, their soft, intermittent plaints—the
mother ewes’ mellow answering to the tender,
fretful lambs—floated on the air, a lovely
part of the ending day’s repose. Where two
who are friends stroll together at such hours, the
great beauty makes for silence or for thoughtful talk.
These two men—father and son—were
friends and intimates, and had been so from Westholt’s
first memory of the time when his childish individuality
began to detach itself from the background of misty
and indistinct things. They had liked each other,
and their liking and intimacy had increased with the
onward moving and change of years. After sixty
sane and decently spent active years of life, Lord
Dunholm, in either country tweed or evening dress,
was a well-built and handsome man; at thirty-three
his son was still like him.
“Have you seen her?” he was saying.
“Only at a distance. She
was driving Lady Anstruthers across the marshes in
a cart. She drove well and——”
he laughed as he flicked the ash from his cigar—“the
back of her head and shoulders looked handsome.”
“The American young woman is
at present a factor which is without doubt to be counted
with,” Lord Dunholm put the matter without lightness.
“Any young woman is a factor, but the American
young woman just now—just now——”
He paused a moment as though considering. “It
did not seem at all necessary to count with them at
first, when they began to appear among us. They
were generally curiously exotic, funny little creatures
with odd manners and voices. They were often most
amusing, and one liked to hear them chatter and see
the airy lightness with which they took superfluous,
and sometimes unsuperfluous, conventions, as a hunter
takes a five-barred gate. But it never occurred
to us to marry them. We did not take them seriously
enough. But we began to marry them—we
began to marry them, my good fellow!”
The final words broke forth with such
a suggestion of sudden anxiety that, in spite of himself,
Westholt laughed involuntarily, and his father, turning
to look at him, laughed also. But he recovered
his seriousness.
“It was all rather a muddle
at first,” he went on. “Things were
not fairly done, and certain bad lots looked on it
as a paying scheme on the one side, while it was a
matter of silly, little ambitions on the other.
But that it is an extraordinary country there is no
sane denying—huge, fabulously resourceful
in every way—area, variety of climate, wealth
of minerals, products of all sorts, soil to grow anything,
and sun and rain enough to give each thing what it
needs; last, or rather first, a people who, considered
as a nation, are in the riot of youth, and who began
by being English—which we Englishmen have
an innocent belief is the one method of ‘owning
the earth.’ That figure of speech is an
Americanism I carefully committed to memory.
Well, after all, look at the map—look at
the map! There we are.”
They had frequently discussed together
the question of the development of international relations.
Lord Dunholm, a man of far-reaching and clear logic,
had realised that the oddly unaccentuated growth of
intercourse between the two countries might be a subject
to be reflected on without lightness.
“The habit we have of regarding
America and Americans as rather a joke,” he
had once said, “has a sort of parallel in the
condescendingly amiable amusement of a parent at the
precocity or whimsicalness of a child. But the
child is shooting up amazingly—amazingly.
In a way which suggests divers possibilities.”
The exchange of visits between Dunholm
and Stornham had been rare and formal. From the
call made upon the younger Lady Anstruthers on her
marriage, the Dunholms had returned with a sense of
puzzled pity for the little American bride, with her
wonderful frock and her uneasy, childish eyes.
For some years Lady Anstruthers had been too delicate
to make or return calls. One heard painful accounts
of her apparent wretched ill-health and of the condition
of her husband’s estate.
“As the relations between the
two families have evidently been strained for years,”
Lord Dunholm said, “it is interesting to hear
of the sudden advent of the sister. It seems
to point to reconciliation. And you say the girl
is an unusual person.
“From what one hears, she would
be unusual if she were an English girl who had spent
her life on an English estate. That an American
who is making her first visit to England should seem
to see at once the practical needs of a neglected
place is a thing to wonder at. What can she know
about it, one thinks. But she apparently does
know. They say she has made no mistakes—even
with the village people. She is managing, in
one way or another, to give work to every man who wants
it. Result, of course—unbounded rustic
enthusiasm.”
Lord Dunholm laughed between the soothing
whiffs of his cigar.
“How clever of her! And
what sensible good feeling! Yes—yes!
She evidently has learned things somewhere. Perhaps
New York has found it wise to begin to give young
women professional training in the management of English
estates. Who knows? Not a bad idea.”
It was the rustic enthusiasm, Westholt
explained, which had in a manner spread her fame.
One heard enlightening and illustrative anecdotes of
her. He related several well worth hearing.
She had evidently a sense of humour and unexpected
perceptions.
“One detail of the story of
old Doby’s meerschaum,” Westholt said,
“pleased me enormously. She managed to convey
to him—without hurting his aged feelings
or overwhelming him with embarrassment—that
if he preferred a clean churchwarden or his old briarwood,
he need not feel obliged to smoke the new pipe.
He could regard it as a trophy. Now, how did
she do that without filling him with fright and confusion,
lest she might think him not sufficiently grateful
for her present? But they tell me she did it,
and that old Doby is rapturously happy and takes the
meerschaum to bed with him, but only smokes it on Sundays—sitting
at his window blowing great clouds when his neighbours
are coming from church. It was a clever girl
who knew that an old fellow might secretly like his
old pipe best.”
“It was a deliciously clever
girl,” said Lord Dunholm. “One wants
to know and make friends with her. We must drive
over and call. I confess, I rather congratulate
myself that Anstruthers is not at home.”
“So do I,” Westholt answered.
“One wonders a little how far he and his sister-in-law
will ‘foregather’ when he returns.
He’s an unpleasant beggar.”
A few days later Mrs. Brent, returning
from a call on Mrs. Charley Jenkins, was passed by
a carriage whose liveries she recognised half way
up the village street. It was the carriage from
Dunholm Castle. Lord and Lady Dunholm and Lord
Westholt sat in it. They were, of course, going
to call at the Court. Miss Vanderpoel was beginning
to draw people. She naturally would. She
would be likely to make quite a difference in the
neighbourhood now that it had heard of her and Lady
Anstruthers had been seen driving with her, evidently
no longer an unvisitable invalid, but actually decently
clothed and in her right mind. Mrs. Brent slackened
her steps that she might have the pleasure of receiving
and responding gracefully to salutations from the
important personages in the landau. She felt
that the Dunholms were important. There were earldoms
and earldoms, and that of Dunholm was dignified
and of distinction.
A common-looking young man on a bicycle,
who had wheeled into the village with the carriage,
riding alongside it for a hundred yards or so, stopped
before the Clock Inn and dismounted, just as Mrs. Brent
neared him. He saw her looking after the equipage,
and lifting his cap spoke to her civilly.
“This is Stornham village, ain’t it, ma’am?”
he inquired.
“Yes, my man.” His
costume and general aspect seemed to indicate that
he was of the class one addressed as “my man,”
though there was something a little odd about him.
“Thank you. That wasn’t
Miss Vanderpoel’s eldest sister in that carriage,
was it?”
“Miss Vanderpoel’s——”
Mrs. Brent hesitated. “Do you mean Lady
Anstruthers?”
“I’d forgotten her name.
I know Miss Vanderpoel’s eldest sister lives
at Stornham—Reuben S. Vanderpoel’s
daughter.”
“Lady Anstruthers’ younger
sister is a Miss Vanderpoel, and she is visiting at
Stornham Court now.” Mrs. Brent could not
help adding, curiously, “Why do you ask?”
“I am going to see her. I’m an American.”
Mrs. Brent coughed to cover a slight
gasp. She had heard remarkable things of the
democratic customs of America. It was painful
not to be able to ask questions.
“The lady in the carriage was
the Countess of Dunholm,” she said rather grandly.
“They are going to the Court to call on Miss
Vanderpoel.”
“Then Miss Vanderpoel’s
there yet. That’s all right. Thank
you, ma’am,” and lifting his cap again
he turned into the little public house.
The Dunholm party had been accustomed
on their rare visits to Stornham to be received by
the kind of man-servant in the kind of livery which
is a manifest, though unwilling, confession. The
men who threw open the doors were of regulation height,
well dressed, and of trained bearing. The entrance
hall had lost its hopeless shabbiness. It was
a complete and picturesquely luxurious thing.
The change suggested magic. The magic which had
been used, Lord Dunholm reflected, was the simplest
and most powerful on earth. Given surroundings,
combined with a gift for knowing values of form and
colour, if you have the power to spend thousands of
guineas on tiger skins, Oriental rugs, and other beauties,
barrenness is easily transformed.
The drawing-room wore a changed aspect,
and at a first glance it was to be seen that in poor
little Lady Anstruthers, as she had generally been
called, there was to be noted alteration also.
In her case the change, being in its first stages,
could not perhaps be yet called transformation, but,
aided by softly pretty arrangement of dress and hair,
a light in her eyes, and a suggestion of pink under
her skin, one recalled that she had once been a pretty
little woman, and that after all she was only about
thirty-two years old.
That her sister, Miss Vanderpoel,
had beauty, it was not necessary to hesitate in deciding.
Neither Lord Dunholm nor his wife nor their son did
hesitate. A girl with long limbs an alluring profile,
and extraordinary black lashes set round lovely Irish-blue
eyes, possesses physical capital not to be argued
about.
She was not one of the curious, exotic
little creatures, whose thin, though sometimes rather
sweet, and always gay, high-pitched young voices Lord
Dunholm had been so especially struck by in the early
days of the American invasion. Her voice had
a tone one would be likely to remember with pleasure.
How well she moved—how well her black head
was set on her neck! Yes, she was of the new
type—the later generation.
These amazing, oddly practical people
had evolved it—planned it, perhaps, bought—figuratively
speaking—the architects and material to
design and build it—bought them in whatever
country they found them, England, France, Italy Germany—pocketing
them coolly and carrying them back home to develop,
complete, and send forth into the world when their
invention was a perfected thing. Struck by the
humour of his fancy, Lord Dunholm found himself smiling
into the Irish-blue eyes. They smiled back at
him in a way which warmed his heart. There were
no pauses in the conversation which followed.
In times past, calls at Stornham had generally held
painfully blank moments. Lady Dunholm was as pleased
as her husband. A really charming girl was an
enormous acquisition to the neighbourhood.
Westholt, his father saw, had found
even more than the story of old Doby’s pipe
had prepared him to expect.
Country calls were not usually interesting
or stimulating, and this one was. Lord Dunholm
laid subtly brilliant plans to lead Miss Vanderpoel
to talk of her native land and her views of it.
He knew that she would say things worth hearing.
Incidentally one gathered picturesque detail.
To have vibrated between the two continents since
her thirteenth year, to have spent a few years at
school in one country, a few years in another, and
yet a few years more in still another, as part of an
arranged educational plan; to have crossed the Atlantic
for the holidays, and to have journeyed thousands
of miles with her father in his private car; to make
the visits of a man of great schemes to his possessions
of mines, railroads, and lands which were almost principalities—these
things had been merely details of her life, adding
interest and variety, it was true, but seeming the
merely normal outcome of existence. They were
normal to Vanderpoels and others of their class who
were abnormalities in themselves when compared with
the rest of the world.
Her own very lack of any abnormality
reached, in Lord Dunholm’s mind, the highest
point of illustration of the phase of life she beautifully
represented—for beautiful he felt its rare
charms were.
When they strolled out to look at
the gardens he found talk with her no less a stimulating
thing. She told her story of Kedgers, and showed
the chosen spot where thickets of lilies were to bloom,
with the giants lifting white archangel trumpets above
them in the centre.
“He can be trusted,” she
said. “I feel sure he can be trusted.
He loves them. He could not love them so much
and not be able to take care of them.”
And as she looked at him in frank appeal for sympathy,
Lord Dunholm felt that for the moment she looked like
a tall, queenly child.
But pleased as he was, he presently
gave up his place at her side to Westholt. He
must not be a selfish old fellow and monopolise her.
He hoped they would see each other often, he said
charmingly. He thought she would be sure to like
Dunholm, which was really a thoroughly English old
place, marked by all the features she seemed so much
attracted by. There were some beautiful relics
of the past there, and some rather shocking ones—certain
dungeons, for instance, and a gallows mount, on which
in good old times the family gallows had stood.
This had apparently been a working adjunct to the
domestic arrangements of every respectable family,
and that irritating persons should dangle from it
had been a simple domestic necessity, if one were to
believe old stories.
“It was then that nobles were
regarded with respect,” he said, with his fine
smile. “In the days when a man appeared
with clang of arms and with javelins and spears before,
and donjon keeps in the background, the attitude of
bent knees and awful reverence were the inevitable
results. When one could hang a servant on one’s
own private gallows, or chop off his hand for irreverence
or disobedience—obedience and reverence
were a rule. Now, a month’s notice is the
extremity of punishment, and the old pomp of armed
servitors suggests comic opera. But we can show
you relics of it at Dunholm.”
He joined his wife and began at once
to make himself so delightful to Rosy that she ceased
to be afraid of him, and ended by talking almost gaily
of her London visit.
Betty and Westholt walked together.
The afternoon being lovely, they had all sauntered
into the park to look at certain views, and the sun
was shining between the trees. Betty thought the
young man almost as charming as his father, which
was saying much. She had fallen wholly in love
with Lord Dunholm—with his handsome, elderly
face, his voice, his erect bearing, his fine smile,
his attraction of manner, his courteous ease and wit.
He was one of the men who stood for the best of all
they had been born to represent. Her own father,
she felt, stood for the best of all such an American
as himself should be. Lord Westholt would in
time be what his father was. He had inherited
from him good looks, good feeling, and a sense of
humour. Yes, he had been given from the outset
all that the other man had been denied. She was
thinking of Mount Dunstan as “the other man,”
and spoke of him.
“You know Lord Mount Dunstan?” she said.
Westholt hesitated slightly.
“Yes—and no,”
he answered, after the hesitation. “No one
knows him very well. You have not met him?”
with a touch of surprise in his tone.
“He was a passenger on the Meridiana
when I last crossed the Atlantic. There was a
slight accident and we were thrown together for a few
moments. Afterwards I met him by chance again.
I did not know who he was.”
Lord Westholt showed signs of hesitation
anew. In fact, he was rather disturbed.
She evidently did not know anything whatever of the
Mount Dunstans. She would not be likely to hear
the details of the scandal which had obliterated them,
as it were, from the decent world.
The present man, though he had not
openly been mixed up with the hideous thing, had borne
the brand because he had not proved himself to possess
any qualities likely to recommend him. It was
generally understood that he was a bad lot also.
To such a man the allurements such a young woman as
Miss Vanderpoel would present would be extraordinary.
It was unfortunate that she should have been thrown
in his way. At the same time it was not possible
to state the case clearly during one’s first
call on a beautiful stranger.
“His going to America was rather
spirited,” said the mellow voice beside him.
“I thought only Americans took their fates in
their hands in that way. For a man of his class
to face a rancher’s life means determination.
It means the spirit——” with
a low little laugh at the leap of her imagination—“of
the men who were Mount Dunstans in early days and
went forth to fight for what they meant to have.
He went to fight. He ought to have won.
He will win some day.”
“I do not know about fighting,”
Lord Westholt answered. Had the fellow been telling
her romantic stories? “The general impression
was that he went to America to amuse himself.”
“No, he did not do that,”
said Betty, with simple finality. “A sheep
ranch is not amusing——” She
stopped short and stood still for a moment. They
had been walking down the avenue, and she stopped because
her eyes had been caught by a figure half sitting,
half lying in the middle of the road, a prostrate
bicycle near it. It was the figure of a cheaply
dressed young man, who, as she looked, seemed to make
an ineffectual effort to rise.
“Is that man ill?” she
exclaimed. “I think he must be.”
They went towards him at once, and when they reached
him he lifted a dazed white face, down which a stream
of blood was trickling from a cut on his forehead.
He was, in fact, very white indeed, and did not seem
to know what he was doing.
“I am afraid you are hurt,”
Betty said, and as she spoke the rest of the party
joined them. The young man vacantly smiled, and
making an unconscious-looking pass across his face
with his hand, smeared the blood over his features
painfully. Betty kneeled down, and drawing out
her handkerchief, lightly wiped the gruesome smears
away. Lord Westholt saw what had happened, having
given a look at the bicycle.
“His chain broke as he was coming
down the incline, and as he fell he got a nasty knock
on this stone,” touching with his foot a rather
large one, which had evidently fallen from some cartload
of building material.
The young man, still vacantly smiling,
was fumbling at his breast pocket. He began to
talk incoherently in good, nasal New York, at the
mere sound of which Lady Anstruthers made a little
yearning step forward.
“Superior any other,”
he muttered. “Tabulator spacer—marginal
release key—call your ’tention—instantly—’justable—Delkoff—no
equal on market.” And having found what
he had fumbled for, he handed a card to Miss Vanderpoel
and sank unconscious on her breast.
“Let me support him, Miss Vanderpoel,”
said Westholt, starting forward.
“Never mind, thank you,”
said Betty. “If he has fainted I suppose
he must be laid flat on the ground. Will you
please to read the card.”
It was the card Mount Dunstan had read the day before.
J. BURRIDGE & son,
Delkoff typewriter co.
Broadway, new York. G. Selden.
“He is probably G. Selden,”
said Westholt. “Travelling in the interests
of his firm, poor chap. The clue is not of much
immediate use, however.”
They were fortunately not far from
the house, and Westholt went back quickly to summon
servants and send for the village doctor. The
Dunholms were kindly sympathetic, and each of the
party lent a handkerchief to staunch the bleeding.
Lord Dunholm helped Miss Vanderpoel to lay the young
man down carefully.
“I am afraid,” he said;
“I am really afraid his leg is broken. It
was twisted under him. What can be done with
him?”
Miss Vanderpoel looked at her sister.
“Will you allow him to be carried
to the house temporarily, Rosy?” she asked.
“There is apparently nothing else to be done.”
“Yes, yes,” said Lady
Anstruthers. “How could one send him away,
poor fellow! Let him be carried to the house.”
Miss Vanderpoel smiled into Lord Dunholm’s
much approving, elderly eyes.
“G. Selden is a compatriot,”
she said. “Perhaps he heard I was here and
came to sell me a typewriter.”
Lord Westholt returning with two footmen
and a light mattress, G. Selden was carried with cautious
care to the house. The afternoon sun, breaking
through the branches of the ancestral oaks, kindly
touched his keen-featured, white young face.
Lord Dunholm and Lord Westholt each lent a friendly
hand, and Miss Vanderpoel, keeping near, once or twice
wiped away an insistent trickle of blood which showed
itself from beneath the handkerchiefs. Lady Dunholm
followed with Lady Anstruthers.
Afterwards, during his convalescence,
G. Selden frequently felt with regret that by his
unconsciousness of the dignity of his cortege at the
moment he had missed feeling himself to be for once
in a position he would have designated as “out
of sight” in the novelty of its importance.
To have beheld him, borne by nobles and liveried menials,
accompanied by ladies of title, up the avenue of an
English park on his way to be cared for in baronial
halls, would, he knew, have added a joy to the final
moments of his grandmother, which the consolations
of religion could scarcely have met equally in competition.
His own point of view, however, would not, it is true,
have been that of the old woman in the black net cap
and purple ribbons, but of a less reverent nature.
His enjoyment, in fact, would have been based upon
that transatlantic sense of humour, whose soul is
glee at the incompatible, which would have been full
fed by the incongruity of “Little Willie being
yanked along by a bunch of earls, and Reuben S. Vanderpoel’s
daughters following the funeral.” That
he himself should have been unconscious of the situation
seemed to him like “throwing away money.”
The doctor arriving after he had been
put to bed found slight concussion of the brain and
a broken leg. With Lady Anstruthers’ kind
permission, it would certainly be best that he should
remain for the present where he was. So, in a
bedroom whose windows looked out upon spreading lawns
and broad-branched trees, he was as comfortably established
as was possible. G. Selden, through the capricious
intervention of Fate, if he had not “got next”
to Reuben S. Vanderpoel himself, had most undisputably
“got next” to his favourite daughter.
As the Dunholm carriage rolled down
the avenue there reigned for a few minutes a reflective
silence. It was Lady Dunholm who broke it.
“That,” she said in her softly decided
voice, “that is a nice girl.”
Lord Dunholm’s agreeable, humorous
smile flickered into evidence.
“That is it,” he said.
“Thank you, Eleanor, for supplying me with a
quite delightful early Victorian word. I believe
I wanted it. She is a beauty and she is clever.
She is a number of other things—but she
is also a nice girl. If you will allow me to
say so, I have fallen in love with her.”
“If you will allow me to say
so,” put in Westholt, “so have I—quite
fatally.”
“That,” said his father,
with speculation in his eye, “is more serious.”