SETTING THEM THINKING
Old Doby, sitting at his open window,
with his pipe and illustrated papers on the table
by his side, began to find life a series of thrills.
The advantage of a window giving upon the village street
unspeakably increased. For many years he had
preferred the chimney corner greatly, and had rejoiced
at the drawing in of winter days when a fire must be
well kept up, and a man might bend over it, and rub
his hands slowly gazing into the red coals or little
pointed flames which seemed the only things alive
and worthy the watching. The flames were blue
at the base and yellow at the top, and jumped looking
merry, and caught at bits of black coal, and set them
crackling and throwing off splinters till they were
ablaze and as much alive as the rest. A man could
get comfort and entertainment therefrom. There
was naught else so good to live with. Nothing
happened in the street, and every dull face that passed
was an old story, and told an old tale of stupefying
hard labour and hard days.
But now the window was a better place
to sit near. Carts went by with men whistling
as they walked by the horses heads. Loads of things
wanted for work at the Court. New faces passed
faces of workmen—sometimes grinning, “impident
youngsters,” who larked with the young women,
and called out to them as they passed their cottages,
if a good-looking one was loitering about her garden
gate. Old Doby chuckled at their love-making
chaff, remembering dimly that seventy years ago he
had been just as proper a young chap, and had made
love in the same way. Lord, Lord, yes! He
had been a bold young chap as ever winked an eye.
Then, too, there were the vans, heavy-loaded and closed,
and coming along slowly. Every few days, at first,
there had come a van from “Lunnon.”
Going to the Court, of course. And to sit there,
and hear the women talk about what might be in them,
and to try to guess one’s self, that was a rare
pastime. Fine things going to the Court these
days—furniture and grandeur filling up
the shabby or empty old rooms, and making them look
like other big houses—same as Westerbridge
even, so the women said. The women were always
talking and getting bits of news somehow, and were
beginning to be worth listening to, because they had
something more interesting to talk about than children’s
worn-out shoes, and whooping cough.
Doby heard everything first from them.
“Dang the women, they always knowed things fust.”
It was them as knowed about the smart carriages as
began to roll through the one village street.
They were gentry’s carriages, with fine, stamping
horses, and jingling silver harness, and big coachmen,
and tall footmen, and such like had long ago dropped
off showing themselves at Stornham.
“But now the gentry has heard
about Miss Vanderpoel, and what’s being done
at the Court, and they know what it means,” said
young Mrs. Doby. “And they want to see
her, and find out what she’s like. It’s
her brings them.”
Old Doby chuckled and rubbed his hands.
He knew what she was like. That straight, slim
back of hers, and the thick twist of black hair, and
the way she had of laughing at you, as cheery as if
a bell was ringing. Aye, he knew all about that.
“When they see her once, they’ll
come agen, for sure,” he quavered shrilly, and
day by day he watched for the grand carriages with
vivid eagerness. If a day or two passed without
his seeing one, he grew fretful, and was injured,
feeling that his beauty was being neglected!
“None to-day, nor yet yest’day,”
he would cackle. “What be they folk a-doin’?”
Old Mrs. Welden, having heard of the
pipe, and come to see it, had struck up an acquaintance
with him, and dropped in almost every day to talk
and sit at his window. She was a young thing,
by comparison, and could bring him lively news, and,
indeed, so stir him up with her gossip that he was
in danger of becoming a young thing himself. Her
groceries and his tobacco were subjects whose interest
was undying.
A great curiosity had been awakened
in the county, and visitors came from distances greater
than such as ordinarily include usual calls.
Naturally, one was curious about the daughter of the
Vanderpoel who was a sort of national institution
in his own country. His name had not been so
much heard of in England when Lady Anstruthers had
arrived but there had, at first, been felt an interest
in her. But she had been a failure—a
childish-looking girl—whose thin, fair,
prettiness had no distinction, and who was obviously
overwhelmed by her surroundings. She had evidently
had no influence over Sir Nigel, and had not been able
to prevent his making ducks and drakes of her money,
which of course ought to have been spent on the estate.
Besides which a married woman represented fewer potentialities
than a handsome unmarried girl entitled to expectations
from huge American wealth.
So the carriages came and came again,
and, stately or unstately far-off neighbours sat at
tea upon the lawn under the trees, and it was observed
that the methods and appointments of the Court had
entirely changed. Nothing looked new and American.
The silently moving men-servants could not have been
improved upon, there was plainly an excellent chef
somewhere, and the massive silver was old and wonderful.
Upon everybody’s word, the change was such as
it was worth a long drive merely to see!
The most wonderful thing, however,
was Lady Anstruthers herself. She had begun to
grow delicately plump, her once drawn and haggard face
had rounded out, her skin had smoothed, and was actually
becoming pink and fair, a nimbus of pale fine hair
puffed airily over her forehead, and she wore the
most charming little clothes, all of which made her
look fifteen years younger than she had seemed when,
on the grounds of ill-health, she had retired into
seclusion. The renewed relations with her family,
the atmosphere by which she was surrounded, had evidently
given her a fresh lease of life, and awakened in her
a new courage.
When the summer epidemic of garden
parties broke forth, old Doby gleefully beheld, day
after day, the Court carriage drive by bearing her
ladyship and her sister attired in fairest shades and
tints “same as if they was flowers.”
Their delicate vaporousness, and rare colours, were
sweet delights to the old man, and he and Mrs. Welden
spent happy evenings discussing them as personal possessions.
To these two Betty was a personal possession,
bestowing upon them a marked distinction. They
were hers and she was theirs. No one else so owned
her. Heaven had given her to them that their
last years might be lighted with splendour.
On her way to one of the garden parties
she stopped the carriage before old Doby’s cottage,
and went in to him to speak a few words. She was
of pale convolvulus blue that afternoon, and Doby,
standing up touching his forelock and Mrs. Welden
curtsying, gazed at her with prayer in their eyes.
She had a few flowers in her hand, and a book of coloured
photographs of Venice.
“These are pictures of the city
I told you about—the city built in the
sea—where the streets are water. You
and Mrs. Welden can look at them together,”
she said, as she laid flowers and book down. “I
am going to Dunholm Castle to a garden party this
afternoon. Some day I will come and tell you
about it.”
The two were at the window staring
spellbound, as she swept back to the carriage between
the sweet-williams and Canterbury bells bordering the
narrow garden path.
“Do you know I really went in
to let them see my dress,” she said, when she
rejoined Lady Anstruthers. “Old Doby’s
granddaughter told me that he and Mrs. Welden have
little quarrels about the colours I wear. It seems
that they find my wardrobe an absorbing interest.
When I put the book on the table, I felt Doby touch
my sleeve with his trembling old hand. He thought
I did not know.”
“What will they do with Venice?” asked
Rosy.
“They will believe the water
is as blue as the photographs make it—and
the palaces as pink. It will seem like a chapter
out of Revelations, which they can believe is true
and not merely ’Scriptur,’—because
I have been there. I wish I had been to
the City of the Gates of Pearl, and could tell them
about that.”
On the lawns at the garden parties
she was much gazed at and commented upon. Her
height and her long slender neck held her head above
those of other girls, the dense black of her hair
made a rich note of shadow amid the prevailing English
blondness. Her mere colouring set her apart.
Rosy used to watch her with tender wonder, recalling
her memory of nine-year-old Betty, with the long slim
legs and the demanding and accusing child-eyes.
She had always been this creature even in those far-off
days. At the garden party at Dunholm Castle it
became evident that she was, after a manner, unusually
the central figure of the occasion. It was not
at all surprising, people said to each other.
Nothing could have been more desirable for Lord Westholt.
He combined rank with fortune, and the Vanderpoel
wealth almost constituted rank in itself. Both
Lord and Lady Dunholm seemed pleased with the girl.
Lord Dunholm showed her great attention. When
she took part in the dancing on the lawn, he looked
on delightedly. He walked about the gardens with
her, and it was plain to see that their conversation
was not the ordinary polite effort to accord, usually
marking the talk between a mature man and a merely
pretty girl. Lord Dunholm sometimes laughed with
unfeigned delight, and sometimes the two seemed to
talk of grave things.
“Such occasions as these are
a sort of yearly taking of the social census of the
county,” Lord Dunholm explained. “One
invites all one’s neighbours and is invited
again. It is a friendly duty one owes.”
“I do not see Lord Mount Dunstan,”
Betty answered. “Is he here?”
She had never denied to herself her
interest in Mount Dunstan, and she had looked for
him. Lord Dunholm hesitated a second, as his son
had done at Miss Vanderpoel’s mention of the
tabooed name. But, being an older man, he felt
more at liberty to speak, and gave her a rather long
kind look.
“My dear young lady,”
he said, “did you expect to see him here?”
“Yes, I think I did,”
Betty replied, with slow softness. “I believe
I rather hoped I should.”
“Indeed! You are interested in him?”
“I know him very little. But I am interested.
I will tell you why.”
She paused by a seat beneath a tree,
and they sat down together. She gave, with a
few swift vivid touches, a sketch of the red-haired
second-class passenger on the Meridiana, of whom she
had only thought that he was an unhappy, rough-looking
young man, until the brief moment in which they had
stood face to face, each comprehending that the other
was to be relied on if the worst should come to the
worst. She had understood his prompt disappearance
from the scene, and had liked it. When she related
the incident of her meeting with him when she thought
him a mere keeper on his own lands, Lord Dunholm listened
with a changed and thoughtful expression. The
effect produced upon her imagination by what she had
seen, her silent wandering through the sad beauty of
the wronged place, led by the man who tried stiffly
to bear himself as a servant, his unintended self-revelations,
her clear, well-argued point of view charmed him.
She had seen the thing set apart from its county scandal,
and so had read possibilities others had been blind
to. He was immensely touched by certain things
she said about the First Man.
“He is one of them,” she
said. “They find their way in the end—they
find their way. But just now he thinks there is
none. He is standing in the dark—where
the roads meet.”
“You think he will find his
way?” Lord Dunholm said. “Why do you
think so?”
“Because I know he will,”
she answered. “But I cannot tell you why
I know.”
“What you have said has been
interesting to me, because of the light your own thought
threw upon what you saw. It has not been Mount
Dunstan I have been caring for, but for the light
you saw him in. You met him without prejudice,
and you carried the light in your hand. You always
carry a light, my impression is,” very quietly.
“Some women do.”
“The prejudice you speak of
must be a bitter thing for a proud man to bear.
Is it a just prejudice? What has he done?”
Lord Dunholm was gravely silent for a few moments.
“It is an extraordinary thing
to reflect,”—his words came slowly—“that
it may not be a just prejudice. I do not
know that he has done anything—but seem
rather sulky, and be the son of his father, and the
brother of his brother.”
“And go to America,” said
Betty. “He could have avoided doing that—but
he cannot be called to account for his relations.
If that is all—the prejudice is not
just.”
“No, it is not,” said
Lord Dunholm, “and one feels rather awkward at
having shared it. You have set me thinking again,
Miss Vanderpoel.”