A RETURN
At the close of a long, warm afternoon
Betty Vanderpoel came out upon the square stone terrace
overlooking the gardens, and that part of the park
which, enclosing them, caused them, as they melted
into its greenness, to lose all limitations and appear
to be only a more blooming bit of the landscape.
Upon the garden Betty’s eyes
dwelt, as she stood still for some minutes taking
in their effect thoughtfully.
Kedgers had certainly accomplished
much. His close-trimmed lawns did him credit,
his flower beds were flushed and azured, purpled and
snowed with bloom. Sweet tall spires, hung with
blue or white or rosy flower bells, lifted their heads
above the colour of lower growths. Only the fervent
affection, the fasting and prayer of a Kedgers could
have done such wonders with new things and old.
The old ones he had cherished and allured into a renewal
of existence—the new ones he had so coaxed
out of their earthen pots into the soil, luxuriously
prepared for their reception, and had afterwards so
nourished and bedewed with soft waterings, so supported,
watched over and adored that they had been almost
unconscious of their transplanting. Without assistants
he could have done nothing, but he had been given
a sufficient number of under gardeners, and had even
managed to inspire them with something of his own
ambition and solicitude. The result was before
Betty’s eyes in an aspect which, to such as
knew the gardens well,—the Dunholms, for
instance,—was astonishing in its success.
“I’ve had privileges,
miss, and so have the flowers,” Kedgers had said
warmly, when Miss Vanderpoel had reported to him, for
his encouragement, Dunholm Castle’s praise.
“Not one of ’em has ever had to wait for
his food and drink, nor to complain of his bed not
being what he was accustomed to. They’ve
not had to wait for rain, for we’ve given it
to ’em from watering cans, and, thank goodness,
the season’s been kind to ’em.”
Betty, descending the terrace steps,
wandered down the paths between the flower beds, glancing
about her as she went. The air of neglect and
desolation had been swept away. Buttle and Tim
Soames had been given as many privileges as Kedgers.
The chief points impressed upon them had been that
the work must be done, not only thoroughly, but quickly.
As many additional workmen as they required, as much
solid material as they needed, but there must be a
despatch which at first it staggered them to contemplate.
They had not known such methods before. They had
been accustomed to work under money limitation throughout
their lives, and, when work must be done with insufficient
aid, it must be done slowly. Economy had been
the chief factor in all calculations, speed had not
entered into them, so leisureliness had become a fixed
habit. But it seemed American to sweep leisureliness
away into space with a free gesture.
“It must be done quickly,”
Miss Vanderpoel had said. “If ten men cannot
do it quickly enough, you must have twenty—or
as many more as are needed. It is time which
must be saved just now.”
Time more than money, it appeared.
Buttle’s experience had been that you might
take time, if you did not charge for it. When
time began to mean money, that was a different matter.
If you did work by the job, you might drive in a few
nails, loiter, and return without haste; if you worked
by the hour, your absence would be inquired into.
In the present case no one could loiter. That
was realised early. The tall girl, with the deep
straight look at you, made you realise that without
spoken words. She expected energy something like
her own. She was a new force and spurred them.
No man knew how it was done, but, when she appeared
among them—even in the afternoon—“lookin’
that womany,” holding up her thin dress over
lace petticoats, the like of which had not been seen
before, she looked on with just the same straight,
expecting eyes. They did not seem to doubt in
the least that she would find that great advance had
been made.
So advance had been made, and work
accomplished. As Betty walked from one place
to another she saw the signs of it with gratification.
The place was not the one she had come to a few months
ago. Hothouses, outbuildings, stables were in
repair. Work was still being done in different
places. In the house itself carpenters or decorators
were enclosed in some rooms, and at their business,
but exterior order prevailed. In the courtyard
stablemen were at work, and her own groom came forward
touching his forehead. She paid a visit to the
horses. They were fine creatures, and, when she
entered their stalls, made room for her and whinnied
gently, in well-founded expectation of sugar and bread
which were kept in a cupboard awaiting her visits.
She smoothed velvet noses and patted satin sides,
talking to Mason a little before she went her way.
Then she strolled into the park.
The park was always a pleasure. She was in a
thoughtful mood, and the soft green shadowed silence
lured her. The summer wind hus-s-shed the branches
as it lightly waved them, the brown earth of the avenue
was sun-dappled, there were bird notes and calls to
be heard here and there and everywhere, if one only
arrested one’s attention a moment to listen.
And she was in a listening and dreaming mood—one
of the moods in which bird, leaf, and wind, sun, shade,
and scent of growing things have part.
And yet her thoughts were of mundane things.
It was on this avenue that G. Selden
had met with his accident. He was still at Dunstan
vicarage, and yesterday Mount Dunstan, in calling,
had told them that Mr. Penzance was applying himself
with delighted interest to a study of the manipulation
of the Delkoff.
The thought of Mount Dunstan brought
with it the thought of her father. This was because
there was frequently in her mind a connection between
the two. How would the man of schemes, of wealth,
and power almost unbounded, regard the man born with
a load about his neck—chained to earth
by it, standing in the midst of his hungering and thirsting
possessions, his hands empty of what would feed them
and restore their strength? Would he see any
solution of the problem? She could imagine his
looking at the situation through his gaze at the man,
and considering both in his summing up.
“Circumstances and the man,”
she had heard him say. “But always the man
first.”
Being no visionary, he did not underestimate
the power of circumstance. This Betty had learned
from him. And what could practically be done with
circumstance such as this? The question had begun
to recur to her. What could she herself have
done in the care of Rosy and Stornham, if chance had
not placed in her hand the strongest lever? What
she had accomplished had been easy—easy.
All that had been required had been the qualities
which control of the lever might itself tend to create
in one. Given—by mere chance again—imagination
and initiative, the moving of the lever did the rest.
If chance had not been on one’s side, what then?
And where was this man’s chance? She had
said to Rosy, in speaking of the wealth of America,
“Sometimes one is tired of it.” And
Rosy had reminded her that there were those who were
not tired of it, who could bear some of the burden
of it, if it might be laid on their own shoulders.
The great beautiful, blind-faced house, awaiting its
slow doom in the midst of its lonely unfed lands—what
could save it, and all it represented of race and
name, and the stately history of men, but the power
one professed to call base and sordid—mere
money? She felt a sudden impatience at herself
for having said she was tired of it. That was
a folly which took upon itself the aspect of an affectation.
And, if a man could not earn money—or
go forth to rob richer neighbours of it as in the
good old marauding days—or accept it if
it were offered to him as a gift—what could
he do? Nothing. If he had been born a village
labourer, he could have earned by the work of his hands
enough to keep his cottage roof over him, and have
held up his head among his fellows. But for such
as himself there was no mere labour which would avail.
He had not that rough honest resource. Only the
decent living and orderly management of the generations
behind him would have left to him fairly his own chance
to hold with dignity the place in the world into which
Fate had thrust him at the outset—a blind,
newborn thing of whom no permission had been asked.
“If I broke stones upon the
highway for twelve hours a day, I might earn two shillings,”
he had said to Betty, on the previous day. “I
could break stones well,” holding out a big
arm, “but fourteen shillings a week will do
no more than buy bread and bacon for a stonebreaker.”
He was ordinarily rather silent and
stiff in his conversational attitude towards his own
affairs. Betty sometimes wondered how she herself
knew so much about them—how it happened
that her thoughts so often dwelt upon them. The
explanation she had once made to herself had been half
irony, half serious reflection.
“It is a result of the first
Reuben Vanderpoel. It is because I am of the
fighting commercial stock, and, when I see a business
problem, I cannot leave it alone, even when it is
no affair of mine.”
As an exposition of the type of the
commercial fighting-stock she presented, as she paused
beneath overshadowing trees, an aspect beautifully
suggesting a far different thing.
She stood—all white from
slim shoe to tilted parasol,—and either
the result of her inspection of the work done by her
order, or a combination of her summer-day mood with
her feeling for the problem, had given her a special
radiance. It glowed on lip and cheek, and shone
in her Irish eyes.
She had paused to look at a man approaching
down the avenue. He was not a labourer, and she
did not know him. Men who were not labourers usually
rode or drove, and this one was walking. He was
neither young nor old, and, though at a distance his
aspect was not attracting, she found that she regarded
him curiously, and waited for him to draw nearer.
The man himself was glancing about
him with a puzzled look and knitted forehead.
When he had passed through the village he had seen
things he had not expected to see; when he had reached
the entrance gate, and—for reasons of his
own—dismissed his station trap, he had looked
at the lodge scrutinisingly, because he was not prepared
for its picturesque trimness. The avenue was
free from weeds and in order, the two gates beyond
him were new and substantial. As he went on his
way and reached the first, he saw at about a hundred
yards distance a tall girl in white standing watching
him. Things which were not easily explainable
always irritated him. That this place—which
was his own affair—should present an air
of mystery, did not improve his humour, which was bad
to begin with. He had lately been passing through
unpleasant things, which had left him feeling himself
tricked and made ridiculous—as only women
can trick a man and make him ridiculous, he had said
to himself. And there had been an acrid consolation
in looking forward to the relief of venting one’s
self on a woman who dare not resent.
“What has happened, confound
it!” he muttered, when he caught sight of the
girl. “Have we set up a house party?”
And then, as he saw more distinctly, “Damn!
What a figure!”
By this time Betty herself had begun
to see more clearly. Surely this was a face she
remembered—though the passing of years and
ugly living had thickened and blurred, somewhat, its
always heavy features. Suddenly she knew it,
and the look in its eyes—the look she had,
as a child, unreasoningly hated.
Nigel Anstruthers had returned from his private holiday.
As she took a few quiet steps forward
to meet him, their eyes rested on each other.
After a night or two in town his were slightly bloodshot,
and the light in them was not agreeable.
It was he who spoke first, and it
is possible that he did not quite intend to use the
expletive which broke from him. But he was remembering
things also. Here were eyes he, too, had seen
before—twelve years ago in the face of
an objectionable, long-legged child in New York.
And his own hatred of them had been founded in his
own opinion on the best of reasons. And here
they gazed at him from the face of a young beauty—for
a beauty she was.
“Damn it!” he exclaimed; “it is
Betty.”
“Yes,” she answered, with
a faint, but entirely courteous, smile. “It
is. I hope you are very well.”
She held out her hand. “A
delicious hand,” was what he said to himself,
as he took it. And what eyes for a girl to have
in her head were those which looked out at him between
shadows. Was there a hint of the devil in them?
He thought so—he hoped so, since she had
descended on the place in this way. But what
the devil was the meaning of her being on the spot
at all? He was, however, far beyond the lack of
astuteness which might have permitted him to express
this last thought at this particular juncture.
He was only betrayed into stupid mistakes, afterwards
to be regretted, when rage caused him utterly to lose
control of his wits. And, though he was startled
and not exactly pleased, he was not in a rage now.
The eyelashes and the figure gave an agreeable fillip
to his humour. Howsoever she had come, she was
worth looking at.
“How could one expect such a
delightful thing as this?” he said, with a touch
of ironic amiability. “It is more than one
deserves.”
“It is very polite of you to say that,”
answered Betty.
He was thinking rapidly as he stood
and gazed at her. There were, in truth, many
things to think of under circumstances so unexpected.
“May I ask you to excuse my
staring at you?” he inquired with what Rosy
had called his “awful, agreeable smile.”
“When I saw you last you were a fierce nine-year-old
American child. I use the word ‘fierce’
because—if you’ll pardon my saying
so—there was a certain ferocity about you.”
“I have learned at various educational
institutions to conceal it,” smiled Betty.
“May I ask when you arrived?”
“A short time after you went abroad.”
“Rosalie did not inform me of your arrival.”
“She did not know your address. You had
forgotten to leave it.”
He had made a mistake and realised
it. But she presented to him no air of having
observed his slip. He paused a few seconds, still
regarding her and still thinking rapidly. He
recalled the mended windows and roofs and palings
in the village, the park gates and entrance. Who
the devil had done all that? How could a mere
handsome girl be concerned in it? And yet—here
she was.
“When I drove through the village,”
he said next, “I saw that some remarkable changes
had taken place on my property. I feel as if you
can explain them to me.”
“I hope they are changes which meet with your
approval.”
“Quite—quite,”
a little curtly. “Though I confess they
mystify me. Though I am the son-in-law of an
American multimillionaire, I could not afford to make
such repairs myself.”
A certain small spitefulness which
was his most frequent undoing made it impossible for
him to resist adding the innuendo in his last sentence.
And again he saw it was a folly. The impersonal
tone of her reply simply left him where he had placed
himself.
“We were sorry not to be able
to reach you. As it seemed well to begin the
work at once, we consulted Messrs. Townlinson & Sheppard.”
“We?” he repeated.
“Am I to have the pleasure,” with a slight
wryness of the mouth, “of finding Mr. Vanderpoel
also at Stornham?”
“No—not yet.
As I was on the spot, I saw your solicitors and asked
their advice and approval—for my father.
If he had known how necessary the work was, it would
have been done before, for Ughtred’s sake.”
Her voice was that of a person who,
in stating obvious facts, provides no approach to
enlightening comment upon them. And there was
in her manner the merest gracious impersonality.
“Do I understand that Mr. Vanderpoel
employed someone to visit the place and direct the
work?”
“It was really not difficult
to direct. It was merely a matter of engaging
labour and competent foremen.”
An odd expression rose in his eyes.
“You suggest a novel idea, upon
my word,” he said. “Is it possible—you
see I know something of America—is it possible
I must thank you for the working of this magic?”
“You need not thank me,”
she said, rather slowly, because it was necessary
that she also should think of many things at once.
“I could not have helped doing it.”
She wished to make all clear to him
before he met Rosy. She knew it was not unnatural
that the unexpectedness of his appearance might deprive
Lady Anstruthers of presence of mind. Instinct
told her that what was needed in intercourse with
him was, above all things, presence of mind.
“I will tell you about it,”
she said. “We will walk slowly up and down
here, if you do not object.”
He did not object. He wanted
to hear the story as he could not hear it from his
nervous little fool of a wife, who would be frightened
into forgetting things and their sequence. What
he meant to discover was where he stood in the matter—where
his father-in-law stood, and, rather specially, to
have a chance to sum up the weaknesses and strengths
of the new arrival. That would be to his interest.
In talking this thing over she would unconsciously
reveal how much vanity or emotion or inexperience
he might count upon as factors safe to use in one’s
dealings with her in the future.
As he listened he was supported by
the fact that he did not lose consciousness of the
eyes and the figure. But for these it is probable
that he would have gone blind with fury at certain
points which forced themselves upon him. The
first was that there had been an absurd and immense
expenditure which would simply benefit his son and
not himself. He could not sell or borrow money
on what had been given. Apparently the place
had been re-established on a footing such as it had
not rested upon during his own generation, or his
father’s. As he loathed life in the country,
it was not he who would enjoy its luxury, but his wife
and her child. The second point was that these
people—this girl—had somehow
had the sharpness to put themselves in the right, and
to place him in a position at which he could not complain
without putting himself in the wrong. Public
opinion would say that benefits had been heaped upon
him, that the correct thing had been done correctly
with the knowledge and approval of the legal advisers
of his family. It had been a masterly thing,
that visit to Townlinson & Sheppard. He was obliged
to aid his self-control by a glance at the eyelashes.
She was a new sort of girl, this Betty, whose childhood
he had loathed, and, to his jaded taste, novelty appealed
enormously. Her attraction for him was also added
to by the fact that he was not at all sure that there
was not combined with it a pungent spice of the old
detestation. He was repelled as well as allured.
She represented things which he hated. First,
the mere material power, which no man can bully, whatsoever
his humour. It was the power he most longed for
and, as he could not hope to possess it, most sneered
at and raged against. Also, as she talked, it
was plain that her habit of self-control and her sense
of resource would be difficult to deal with.
He was a survival of the type of man whose simple
creed was that women should not possess resources,
as when they possessed them they could rarely be made
to behave themselves.
But while he thought these things,
he walked by her side and both listened and talked
smiling the agreeable smile.
“You will pardon my dull bewilderment,”
he said. “It is not unnatural, is it—in
a mere outsider?”
And Betty, with the beautiful impersonal smile, said:
“We felt it so unfortunate that
even your solicitors did not know your address.”
When, at length, they turned and strolled
towards the house, a carriage was drawing up before
the door, and at the sight of it, Betty saw her companion
slightly lift his eyebrows. Lady Anstruthers had
been out and was returning. The groom got down
from the box, and two men-servants appeared upon the
steps. Lady Anstruthers descended, laughing a
little as she talked to Ughtred, who had been with
her. She was dressed in clear, pale grey, and
the soft rose lining of her parasol warmed the colour
of her skin.
Sir Nigel paused a second and put up his glass.
“Is that my wife?” he said. “Really!
She quite recalls New York.”
The agreeable smile was on his lips
as he hastened forward. He always more or less
enjoyed coming upon Rosalie suddenly. The obvious
result was a pleasing tribute to his power.
Betty, following him, saw what occurred.
Ughtred saw him first, and spoke quick and low.
“Mother!” he said.
The tone of his voice was evidently
enough. Lady Anstruthers turned with an unmistakable
start. The rose lining of her parasol ceased to
warm her colour. In fact, the parasol itself
stepped aside, and she stood with a blank, stiff,
white face.
“My dear Rosalie,” said
Sir Nigel, going towards her. “You don’t
look very glad to see me.”
He bent and kissed her quite with
the air of a devoted husband. Knowing what the
caress meant, and seeing Rosy’s face as she submitted
to it, Betty felt rather cold. After the conjugal
greeting he turned to Ughtred.
“You look remarkably well,” he said.
Betty came forward.
“We met in the park, Rosy,”
she explained. “We have been talking to
each other for half an hour.”
The atmosphere which had surrounded
her during the last three months had done much for
Lady Anstruthers’ nerves. She had the power
to recover herself. Sir Nigel himself saw this
when she spoke.
“I was startled because I was
not expecting to see you,” she said. “I
thought you were still on the Riviera. I hope
you had a pleasant journey home.”
“I had an extraordinarily pleasant
surprise in finding your sister here,” he answered.
And they went into the house.
In descending the staircase on his
way to the drawing-room before dinner, Sir Nigel glanced
about him with interested curiosity. If the village
had been put in order, something more had been done
here. Remembering the worn rugs and the bald-headed
tiger, he lifted his brows. To leave one’s
house in a state of resigned dilapidation and return
to find it filled with all such things as comfort combined
with excellent taste might demand, was an enlivening
experience—or would have been so under
some circumstances. As matters stood, perhaps,
he might have felt better pleased if things had been
less well done. But they were very well done.
They had managed to put themselves in the right in
this also. The rich sobriety of colour and form
left no opening for supercilious comment—which
was a neat weapon it was annoying to be robbed of.
The drawing-room was fresh, brightly
charming, and full of flowers. Betty was standing
before an open window with her sister. His wife’s
shoulders, he observed at once, had absolutely begun
to suggest contours. At all events, her bones
no longer stuck out. But one did not look at
one’s wife’s shoulders when one could turn
from them to a fairness of velvet and ivory.
“You know,” he said, approaching them,
“I find all this very amazing. I have been
looking out of my window on to the gardens.”
“It is Betty who has done it all,” said
Rosy.
“I did not suspect you of doing
it, my dear Rosalie,” smiling. “When
I saw Betty standing in the avenue, I knew at once
that it was she who had mended the chimney-pots in
the village and rehung the gates.”
For the present, at least, it was
evident that he meant to be sufficiently amiable.
At the dinner table he was conversational and asked
many questions, professing a natural interest in what
had been done. It was not difficult to talk to
a girl whose eyes and shoulders combined themselves
with a quick wit and a power to attract which he reluctantly
owned he had never seen equalled. His reluctance
arose from the fact that such a power complicated
matters. He must be on the defensive until he
knew what she was going to do, what he must do himself,
and what results were probable or possible. He
had spent his life in intrigue of one order or another.
He enjoyed outwitting people and rather preferred
to attain an end by devious paths. He began every
acquaintance on the defensive. His argument was
that you never knew how things would turn out, consequently,
it was as well to conduct one’s self at the
outset with the discreet forethought of a man in the
presence of an enemy. He did not know how things
would turn out in Betty’s case, and it was a
little confusing to find one’s self watching
her with a sense of excitement. He would have
preferred to be cool—to be cold—and
he realised that he could not keep his eyes off her.
“I remember, with regret,”
he said to her later in the evening, “that when
you were a child we were enemies.”
“I am afraid we were,” was Betty’s
impartial answer.
“I am sure it was my fault,”
he said. “Pray forget it. Since you
have accomplished such wonders, will you not, in the
morning, take me about the place and explain to me
how it has been done?”
When Betty went to her room she dismissed
her maid as soon as possible, and sat for some time
alone and waiting. She had had no opportunity
to speak to Rosy in private, and she was sure she
would come to her. In the course of half an hour
she heard a knock at the door.
Yes, it was Rosy, and her newly-born
colour had fled and left her looking dragged again.
She came forward and dropped into a low chair near
Betty, letting her face fall into her hands.
“I’m very sorry, Betty,”
she half whispered, “but it is no use.”
“What is no use?” Betty asked.
“Nothing is any use. All
these years have made me such a coward. I suppose
I always was a coward, but in the old days there never
was anything to be afraid of.”
“What are you most afraid of now?”
“I don’t know. That
is the worst. I am afraid of him—just
of himself—of the look in his eyes—of
what he may be planning quietly. My strength
dies away when he comes near me.”
“What has he said to you?” she asked.
“He came into my dressing-room
and sat and talked. He looked about from one
thing to another and pretended to admire it all and
congratulated me. But though he did not sneer
at what he saw, his eyes were sneering at me.
He talked about you. He said that you were a very
clever woman. I don’t know how he manages
to imply that a very clever woman is something cunning
and debased—but it means that when he says
it. It seems to insinuate things which make one
grow hot all over.”
She put out a hand and caught one of Betty’s.
“Betty, Betty,” she implored. “Don’t
make him angry. Don’t.”
“I am not going to begin by
making him angry,” Betty said. “And
I do not think he will try to make me angry—at
first.”
“No, he will not,” cried
Rosalie. “And—and you remember
what I told you when first we talked about him?”
“And do you remember,”
was Betty’s answer, “what I said to you
when I first met you in the park? If we were
to cable to New York this moment, we could receive
an answer in a few hours.”
“He would not let us do it,”
said Rosy. “He would stop us in some way—as
he stopped my letters to mother—as he stopped
me when I tried to run away. Oh, Betty, I know
him and you do not.”
“I shall know him better every
day. That is what I must do. I must learn
to know him. He said something more to you than
you have told me, Rosy. What was it?”
“He waited until Detcham left
me,” Lady Anstruthers confessed, more than half
reluctantly. “And then he got up to go away,
and stood with his hands resting on the chairback,
and spoke to me in a low, queer voice. He said,
’Don’t try to play any tricks on me, my
good girl—and don’t let your sister
try to play any. You would both have reason to
regret it.’”
She was a half-hypnotised thing, and
Betty, watching her with curious but tender eyes,
recognised the abnormality.
“Ah, if I am a clever woman,”
she said, “he is a clever man. He is beginning
to see that his power is slipping away. That was
what G. Selden would call ‘bluff.’”