FOR LADY JANE
There is no one thing on earth of
such interest as the study of the laws of temperament,
which impel, support, or entrap into folly and danger
the being they rule. As a child, not old enough
to give a definite name to the thing she watched and
pondered on, in child fashion, Bettina Vanderpoel
had thought much on this subject. As she had grown
older, she had never been ignorant of the workings
of her own temperament, and she had looked on for
years at the laws which had wrought in her father’s
being—the laws of strength, executive capacity,
and that pleasure in great schemes, which is roused
less by a desire for gain than for a strongly-felt
necessity for action, resulting in success. She
mentally followed other people on their way, sometimes
asking herself how far the individual was to be praised
or blamed for his treading of the path he seemed to
choose. And now there was given her the opportunity
to study the workings of the nature of Nigel Anstruthers,
which was a curious thing.
He was not an individual to be envied.
Never was man more tormented by lack of power to control
his special devil, at the right moment of time, and
therefore, never was there one so inevitably his own
frustration. This Betty saw after the passing
of but a few days, and wondered how far he was conscious
or unconscious of the thing. At times it appeared
to her that he was in a state of unrest—that
he was as a man wavering between lines of action,
swayed at one moment by one thought, at another by
an idea quite different, and that he was harried because
he could not hold his own with himself.
This was true. The ball at Dunholm
Castle had been enlightening, and had wrought some
changes in his points of view. Also other factors
had influenced him. In the first place, the changed
atmosphere of Stornham, the fitness and luxury of
his surroundings, the new dignity given to his position
by the altered aspect of things, rendered external
amiability more easy. To ride about the country
on a good horse, or drive in a smart phaeton, or suitable
carriage, and to find that people who a year ago had
passed him with the merest recognition, saluted him
with polite intention, was, to a certain degree, stimulating
to a vanity which had been long ill-fed. The
power which produced these results should, of course,
have been in his own hands—his money-making
father-in-law should have seen that it was his affair
to provide for that—but since he had not
done so, it was rather entertaining that it should
be, for the present, in the hands of this extraordinarily
good-looking girl.
He had begun by merely thinking of
her in this manner—as “this extraordinarily
good-looking girl,” and had not, for a moment,
hesitated before the edifying idea of its not being
impossible to arrange a lively flirtation with her.
She was at an age when, in his opinion, girlhood was
poised for flight with adventure, and his tastes had
not led him in the direction of youth which was fastidious.
His Riviera episode had left his vanity blistered
and requiring some soothing application. His
life had worked evil with him, and he had fallen ill
on the hands of a woman who had treated him as a shattered,
useless thing whose day was done and with whom strength
and bloom could not be burdened. He had kept
his illness a hidden secret, on his return to Stornham,
his one desire having been to forget—even
to disbelieve in it, but dreams of its suggestion
sometimes awakened him at night with shudders and cold
sweat. He was hideously afraid of death and pain,
and he had had monstrous pain—and while
he had lain battling with it, upon his bed in the villa
on the Mediterranean, he had been able to hear, in
the garden outside, the low voices and laughter of
the Spanish dancer and the healthy, strong young fool
who was her new adorer.
When he had found himself face to
face with Betty in the avenue, after the first leap
of annoyance, which had suddenly died down into perversely
interested curiosity, he could have laughed outright
at the novelty and odd unexpectedness of the situation.
The ill-mannered, impudently-staring, little New York
beast had developed into this! Hang it!
No man could guess what the embryo female creature
might result in. His mere shakiness of physical
condition added strength to her attraction. She
was like a young goddess of health and life and fire;
the very spring of her firm foot upon the moss beneath
it was a stimulating thing to a man whose nerves sprung
secret fears upon him. There were sparks between
the sweep of her lashes, but she managed to carry
herself with the air of being as cool as a cucumber,
which gave spice to the effort to “upset”
her. If she did not prove suitably amenable,
there would be piquancy in getting the better of her—in
stirring up unpleasant little things, which would make
it easier for her to go away than remain on the spot—if
one should end by choosing to get rid of her.
But, for the moment, he had no desire to get rid of
her. He wanted to see what she intended to do—to
see the thing out, in fact. It amused him to
hear that Mount Dunstan was on her track. There
exists for persons of a certain type a pleasure full-fed
by the mere sense of having “got even”
with an opponent. Throughout his life he had made
a point of “getting even” with those who
had irritatingly crossed his path, or much disliked
him. The working out of small or large plans to
achieve this end had formed one of his most agreeable
recreations. He had long owed Mount Dunstan a
debt, which he had always meant to pay. He had
not intended to forget the episode of the nice little
village girl with whom Tenham and himself had been
getting along so enormously well, when the raging
young ass had found them out, and made an absurdly
exaggerated scene, even going so far as threatening
to smash the pair of them, marching off to the father
and mother, and setting the vicar on, and then scratching
together—God knows how—money
enough to pack the lot off to America, where they
had since done well. Why should a man forgive
another who had made him look like a schoolboy and
a fool? So, to find Mount Dunstan rushing down
a steep hill into this thing, was edifying. You
cannot take much out of a man if you never encounter
him. If you meet him, you are provided by Heaven
with opportunities. You can find out what he
feels most sharply, and what he will suffer most by
being deprived of. His impression was that there
was a good deal to be got out of Mount Dunstan.
He was an obstinate, haughty devil, and just the fellow
to conceal with a fury of pride a score of tender places
in his hide.
At the ball he had seen that the girl’s
effect had been of a kind which even money and good
looks uncombined with another thing might not have
produced. And she had the other thing—whatsoever
it might be. He observed the way in which the
Dunholms met and greeted her, he marked the glance
of the royal personage, and his manner, when after
her presentation he conversed with and detained her,
he saw the turning of heads and exchange of remarks
as she moved through the rooms. Most especially,
he took in the bearing of the very grand old ladies,
led by Lady Alanby of Dole. Barriers had thrown
themselves down, these portentous, rigorous old pussycats
admired her, even liked her.
“Upon my word,” he said
to himself. “She has a way with her, you
know. She is a combination of Ethel Newcome and
Becky Sharp. But she is more level-headed than
either of them, There’s a touch of Trix Esmond,
too.”
The sense of the success which followed
her, and the gradually-growing excitement of looking
on at her light whirls of dance, the carnation of
her cheek, and the laughter and pleasure she drew about
her, had affected him in a way by which he was secretly
a little exhilarated. He was conscious of a rash
desire to force his way through these laughing, vaunting
young idiots, juggle or snatch their dances away from
them, and seize on the girl himself. He had not
for so long a time been impelled by such agreeable
folly that he had sometimes felt the stab of the thought
that he was past it. That it should rise in him
again made him feel young. There was nothing
which so irritated him against Mount Dunstan as his
own rebelling recognition of the man’s youth,
the strength of his fine body, his high-held head
and clear eye.
These things and others it was which
swayed him, as was plain to Betty in the time which
followed, to many changes of mood.
“Are you sorry for a man who
is ill and depressed,” he asked one day, “or
do you despise him?”
“I am sorry.”
“Then be sorry for me.”
He had come out of the house to her
as she sat on the lawn, under a broad, level-branched
tree, and had thrown himself upon a rug with his hands
clasped behind his head.
“Are you ill?”
“When I was on the Riviera I
had a fall.” He lied simply. “I
strained some muscle or other, and it has left me
rather lame. Sometimes I have a good deal of
pain.”
“I am very sorry,” said Betty. “Very.”
A woman who can be made sorry it is
rarely impossible to manage. To dwell with pathetic
patience on your grievances, if she is weak and unintelligent,
to deplore, with honest regret, your faults and blunders,
if she is strong, are not bad ideas.
He looked at her reflectively.
“Yes, you are capable of being
sorry,” he decided. For a few moments of
silence his eyes rested upon the view spread before
him. To give the expression of dignified reflection
was not a bad idea either.
“Do you know,” he said
at length, “that you produce an extraordinary
effect upon me, Betty?”
She was occupying herself by adding
a few stitches to one of Rosy’s ancient strips
of embroidery, and as she answered, she laid it flat
upon her knee to consider its effect.
“Good or bad?” she inquired, with delicate
abstraction.
He turned his face towards her again—this
time quickly.
“Both,” he answered. “Both.”
His tone held the flash of a heat
which he felt should have startled her slightly.
But apparently it did not.
“I do not like ‘both,’”
with composed lightness. “If you had said
that you felt yourself develop angelic qualities when
you were near me, I should feel flattered, and swell
with pride. But ‘both’ leaves me
unsatisfied. It interferes with the happy little
conceit that one is an all-pervading, beneficent power.
One likes to contemplate a large picture of one’s
self—not plain, but coloured—as
a wholesale reformer.”
“I see. Thank you,”
stiffly and flushing. “You do not believe
me.”
Her effect upon him was such that,
for the moment, he found himself choosing to believe
that he was in earnest. His desire to impress
her with his mood had actually led to this result.
She ought to have been rather moved—a little
fluttered, perhaps, at hearing that she disturbed
his equilibrium.
“You set yourself against me,
as a child, Betty,” he said. “And
you set yourself against me now. You will not
give me fair play. You might give me fair play.”
He dropped his voice at the last sentence, and knew
it was well done. A touch of hopelessness is
not often lost on a woman.
“What would you consider fair play?” she
inquired.
“It would be fair to listen
to me without prejudice—to let me explain
how it has happened that I have appeared to you a—a
blackguard—I have no doubt you would call
it—and a fool.” He threw out
his hand in an impatient gesture—impatient
of himself—his fate—the tricks
of bad fortune which it implied had made of him a
more erring mortal than he would have been if left
to himself, and treated decently.
“Do not put it so strongly,”
with conservative politeness.
“I don’t refuse to admit
that I am handicapped by a devil of a temperament.
That is an inherited thing.”
“Ah!” said Betty.
“One of the temperaments one reads about—for
which no one is to be blamed but one’s deceased
relatives. After all, that is comparatively easy
to deal with. One can just go on doing what one
wants to do—and then condemn one’s
grandparents severely.”
A repellent quality in her—which
had also the trick of transforming itself into an
exasperating attraction—was that she deprived
him of the luxury he had been most tenacious of throughout
his existence. If the injustice of fate has failed
to bestow upon a man fortune, good looks or brilliance,
his exercise of the power to disturb, to enrage those
who dare not resent, to wound and take the nonsense
out of those about him, will, at all events, preclude
the possibility of his being passed over as a factor
not to be considered. If to charm and bestow gives
the sense of power, to thwart and humiliate may be
found not wholly unsatisfying.
But in her case the inadequacy of
the usual methods had forced itself upon him.
It was as if the dart being aimed at her, she caught
it in her hand in its flight, broke off its point
and threw it lightly aside without comment. Most
women cannot resist the temptation to answer a speech
containing a sting or a reproach. It was part
of her abnormality that she could let such things
go by in a detached silence, which did not express
even the germ of comment or opinion upon them.
This, he said, was the result of her beastly sense
of security, which, in its turn, was the result of
the atmosphere of wealth she had breathed since her
birth. There had been no obstacle which could
not be removed for her, no law of limitation had laid
its rein on her neck. She had not been taught
by her existence the importance of propitiating opinion.
Under such conditions, how was fear to be learned?
She had not learned it. But for the devil in
the blue between her lashes, he realised that he should
have broken loose long ago.
“I suppose I deserved that for
making a stupid appeal to sympathy,” he remarked.
“I will not do it again.”
If she had been the woman who can
be gently goaded into reply, she would have made answer
to this. But she allowed the observation to pass,
giving it free flight into space, where it lost itself
after the annoying manner of its kind.
“Have you any objection to telling
me why you decided to come to England this year?”
he inquired, with a casual air, after the pause which
she did not fill in.
The bluntness of the question did
not seem to disturb her. She was not sorry, in
fact, that he had asked it. She let her work lie
upon her knee, and leaned back in her low garden chair,
her hands resting upon its wicker arms. She turned
on him a clear unprejudiced gaze.
“I came to see Rosy. I
have always been very fond of her. I did not
believe that she had forgotten how much we had loved
her, or how much she had loved us. I knew that
if I could see her again I should understand why she
had seemed to forget us.”
“And when you saw her, you,
of course, decided that I had behaved, to quote my
own words—like a blackguard and a fool.”
“It is, of course, very rude
to say you have behaved like a fool, but—if
you’ll excuse my saying so—that is
what has impressed me very much. Don’t
you know,” with a moderation, which singularly
drove itself home, “that if you had been kind
to her, and had made her happy, you could have had
anything you wished for—without trouble?”
This was one of the unadorned facts
which are like bullets. Disgustedly, he found
himself veering towards an outlook which forced him
to admit that there was probably truth in what she
said, and he knew he heard more truth as she went
on.
“She would have wanted only
what you wanted, and she would not have asked much
in return. She would not have asked as much as
I should. What you did was not businesslike.”
She paused a moment to give thought to it. “You
paid too high a price for the luxury of indulging the
inherited temperament. Your luxury was not to
control it. But it was a bad investment.”
“The figure of speech is rather commercial,”
coldly.
“It is curious that most things
are, as a rule. There is always the parallel
of profit and loss whether one sees it or not.
The profits are happiness and friendship—enjoyment
of life and approbation. If the inherited temperament
supplies one with all one wants of such things, it
cannot be called a loss, of course.”
“You think, however, that mine has not brought
me much?”
“I do not know. It is you who know.”
“Well,” viciously, “there
has been a sort of luxury in it in lashing out
with one’s heels, and smashing things—and
in knowing that people prefer to keep clear.”
She lifted her shoulders a little.
“Then perhaps it has paid.”
“No,” suddenly and fiercely, “damn
it, it has not!”
And she actually made no reply to that.
“What do you mean to do?”
he questioned as bluntly as before. He knew she
would understand what he meant.
“Not much. To see that
Rosy is not unhappy any more. We can prevent
that. She was out of repair—as the
house was. She is being rebuilt and decorated.
She knows that she will be taken care of.”
“I know her better than you
do,” with a laugh. “She will not go
away. She is too frightened of the row it would
make—of what I should say. I should
have plenty to say. I can make her shake in her
shoes.”
Betty let her eyes rest full upon
him, and he saw that she was softly summing him up—quite
without prejudice, merely in interested speculation
upon the workings of type.
“You are letting the inherited
temperament run away with you at this moment,”
she reflected aloud—her quiet scrutiny almost
abstracted. “It was foolish to say that.”
He had known it was foolish two seconds
after the words had left his lips. But a temper
which has been allowed to leap hedges, unchecked throughout
life, is in peril of forming a habit of taking them
even at such times as a leap may land its owner in
a ditch. This last was what her interested eyes
were obviously saying. It suited him best at the
moment to try to laugh.
“Don’t look at me like
that,” he threw off. “As if you were
calculating that two and two make four.”
“No prejudice of mine can induce
them to make five or six—or three and a
half,” she said. “No prejudice of
mine—or of yours.”
The two and two she was calculating
with were the likelihoods and unlikelihoods of the
inherited temperament, and the practical powers she
could absolutely count on if difficulty arose with
regard to Rosy.
He guessed at this, and began to make
calculations himself.
But there was no further conversation
for them, as they were obliged to rise to their feet
to receive visitors. Lady Alanby of Dole and Sir
Thomas, her grandson, were being brought out of the
house to them by Rosalie.
He went forward to meet them—his
manner that of the graceful host. Lady Alanby,
having been welcomed by him, and led to the most comfortable,
tree-shaded chair, found his bearing so elegantly chastened
that she gazed at him with private curiosity.
To her far-seeing and highly experienced old mind
it seemed the bearing of a man who was “up to
something.” What special thing did he chance
to be “up to”? His glance certainly
lurked after Miss Vanderpoel oddly. Was he falling
in unholy love with the girl, under his stupid little
wife’s very nose?
She could not, however, give her undivided
attention to him, as she wished to keep her eye on
her grandson and—outrageously enough fit
happened that just as tea was brought out and Tommy
was beginning to cheer up and quite come out a little
under the spur of the activities of handing bread
and butter and cress sandwiches, who should appear
but the two Lithcom girls, escorted by their aunt,
Mrs. Manners, with whom they lived. As they were
orphans without money, if the Manners, who were rather
well off, had not taken them in, they would have had
to go to the workhouse, or into genteel amateur shops,
as they were not clever enough for governesses.
Mary, with her turned-up nose, looked
just about as usual, but Jane had a new frock on which
was exactly the colour of the big, appealing eyes,
with their trick of following people about. She
looked a little pale and pathetic, which somehow gave
her a specious air of being pretty, which she really
was not at all. The swaying young thinness of
those very slight girls whose soft summer muslins
make them look like delicate bags tied in the middle
with fluttering ribbons, has almost invariably a foolish
attraction for burly young men whose characters are
chiefly marked by lack of forethought, and Lady Alanby
saw Tommy’s robust young body give a sort of
jerk as the party of three was brought across the
grass. After it he pulled himself together hastily,
and looked stiff and pink, shaking hands as if his
elbow joint was out of order, being at once too loose
and too rigid. He began to be clumsy with the
bread and butter, and, ceasing his talk with Miss
Vanderpoel, fell into silence. Why should he
go on talking? he thought. Miss Vanderpoel was
a cracking handsome girl, but she was too clever for
him, and he had to think of all sorts of new things
to say when he talked to her. And—well,
a fellow could never imagine himself stretched out
on the grass, puffing happily away at a pipe, with
a girl like that sitting near him, smiling—the
hot turf smelling almost like hay, the hot blue sky
curving overhead, and both the girl and himself perfectly
happy—chock full of joy—though
neither of them were saying anything at all. You
could imagine it with some girls—you did
imagine it when you wakened early on a summer morning,
and lay in luxurious stillness listening to the birds
singing like mad.
Lady Jane was a nicely-behaved girl,
and she tried to keep her following blue eyes fixed
on the grass, or on Lady Anstruthers, or Miss Vanderpoel,
but there was something like a string, which sometimes
pulled them in another direction, and once when this
had happened—quite against her will—she
was terrified to find Lady Alanby’s glass lifted
and fixed upon her.
As Lady Alanby’s opinion of
Mrs. Manners was but a poor one, and as Mrs. Manners
was stricken dumb by her combined dislike and awe of
Lady Alanby, a slight stiffness might have settled
upon the gathering if Betty had not made an effort.
She applied herself to Lady Alanby and Mrs. Manners
at once, and ended by making them talk to each other.
When they left the tea table under the trees to look
at the gardens, she walked between them, playing upon
the primeval horticultural passions which dominate
the existence of all respectable and normal country
ladies, until the gulf between them was temporarily
bridged. This being achieved, she adroitly passed
them over to Lady Anstruthers, who, Nigel observed
with some curiosity, accepted the casual responsibility
without manifest discomfiture.
To the aching Tommy the manner in
which, a few minutes later, he found himself standing
alone with Jane Lithcom in a path of clipped laurels
was almost bewilderingly simple. At the end of
the laurel walk was a pretty peep of the country,
and Miss Vanderpoel had brought him to see it.
Nigel Anstruthers had been loitering behind with Jane
and Mary. As Miss Vanderpoel turned with him
into the path, she stooped and picked a blossom from
a clump of speedwell growing at the foot of a bit of
wall.
“Lady Jane’s eyes are
just the colour of this flower,” she said.
“Yes, they are,” he answered,
glancing down at the lovely little blue thing as she
held it in her hand. And then, with a thump of
the heart, “Most people do not think she is
pretty, but I—” quite desperately—“I
do.” His mood had become rash.
“So do I,” Betty Vanderpoel answered.
Then the others joined them, and Miss
Vanderpoel paused to talk a little—and
when they went on she was with Mary and Nigel Anstruthers,
and he was with Jane, walking slowly, and somehow the
others melted away, turning in a perfectly natural
manner into a side path. Their own slow pace
became slower. In fact, in a few moments, they
were standing quite still between the green walls.
Jane turned a little aside, and picked off some small
leaves, nervously. He saw the muslin on her chest
lift quiveringly.
“Oh, little Jane!” he
said in a big, shaky whisper. The following eyes
incontinently brimmed over. Some shining drops
fell on the softness of the blue muslin.
“Oh, Tommy,” giving up, “it’s
no use—talking at all.”
“You mustn’t think—you
mustn’t think—anything,”
he falteringly commanded, drawing nearer, because
it was impossible not to do it.
What he really meant, though he did
not know how decorously to say it, was that she must
not think that he could be moved by any tall beauty,
towards the splendour of whose possessions his revered
grandmother might be driving him.
“I am not thinking anything,”
cried Jane in answer. “But she is everything,
and I am nothing. Just look at her—and
then look at me, Tommy.”
“I’ll look at you as long
as you’ll let me,” gulped Tommy, and he
was boy enough and man enough to put a hand on each
of her shoulders, and drown his longing in her brimming
eyes.
. . . . .
Mary and Miss Vanderpoel were talking
with a curious intimacy, in another part of the garden,
where they were together alone, Sir Nigel having been
reattached to Lady Alanby.
“You have known Sir Thomas a
long time?” Betty had just said.
“Since we were children.
Jane reminded me at the Dunholms’ ball that she
had played cricket with him when she was eight.”
“They have always liked each
other?” Miss Vanderpoel suggested.
Mary looked up at her, and the meeting
of their eyes was frank to revelation. But for
the clear girlish liking for herself she saw in Betty
Vanderpoel’s, Mary would have known her next
speech to be of imbecile bluntness. She had heard
that Americans often had a queer, delightful understanding
of unconventional things. This splendid girl
was understanding her.
“Oh! You see!”
she broke out. “You left them together on
purpose!”
“Yes, I did.” And
there was a comprehension so deep in her look that
Mary knew it was deeper than her own, and somehow founded
on some subtler feeling than her own. “When
two people want so much—care so much to
be together,” Miss Vanderpoel added quite slowly—even
as if the words rather forced themselves from her,
“it seems as if the whole world ought to help
them—everything in the world—the
very wind, and rain, and sun, and stars—oh,
things have no right to keep them apart.”
Mary stared at her, moved and fascinated.
She scarcely knew that she caught at her hand.
“I have never been in the state
that Jane is,” she poured forth. “And
I can’t understand how she can be such a fool,
but—but we care about each other more than
most girls do—perhaps because we have had
no people. And it’s the kind of thing there
is no use talking against, it seems. It’s
killing the youngness in her. If it ends miserably,
it will be as if she had had an illness, and got up
from it a faded, done-for spinster with a stretch
of hideous years to live. Her blue eyes will look
like boiled gooseberries, because she will have cried
all the colour out of them. Oh! You understand!
I see you do.”
Before she had finished both Miss
Vanderpoel’s hands were holding hers.
“I do! I do,” she
said. And she did, as a year ago she had not known
she could. “Is it Lady Alanby?” she
ventured.
“Yes. Tommy will be helplessly
poor if she does not leave him her money. And
she won’t if he makes her angry. She is
very determined. She will leave it to an awful
cousin if she gets in a rage. And Tommy is not
clever. He could never earn his living. Neither
could Jane. They could never marry.
You can’t defy relatives, and marry on nothing,
unless you are a character in a book.”
“Has she liked Lady Jane in
the past?” Miss Vanderpoel asked, as if she
was, mentally, rapidly going over the ground, that
she might quite comprehend everything.
“Yes. She used to make
rather a pet of her. She didn’t like me.
She was taken by Jane’s meek, attentive, obedient
ways. Jane was born a sweet little affectionate
worm. Lady Alanby can’t hate her, even now.
She just pushes her out of her path.”
“Because?” said Betty Vanderpoel.
Mary prefaced her answer with a brief, half-embarrassed
laugh.
“Because of you.”
“Because she thinks——?”
“I don’t see how she can
believe he has much of a chance. I don’t
think she does—but she will never forgive
him if he doesn’t make a try at finding out
whether he has one or not.”
“It is very businesslike,” Betty made
observation.
Mary laughed.
“We talk of American business
outlook,” she said, “but very few of us
English people are dreamy idealists. We are of
a coolness and a daring—when we are dealing
with questions of this sort. I don’t think
you can know the thing you have brought here.
You descend on a dull country place, with your money
and your looks, and you simply stay and amuse
yourself by doing extraordinary things, as if there
was no London waiting for you. Everyone knows
this won’t last. Next season you will be
presented, and have a huge success. You will be
whirled about in a vortex, and people will sit on
the edge, and cast big strong lines, baited with the
most glittering things they can get together.
You won’t be able to get away. Lady Alanby
knows there would be no chance for Tommy then.
It would be too idiotic to expect it. He must
make his try now.”
Their eyes met again, and Miss Vanderpoel
looked neither shocked nor angry, but an odd small
shadow swept across her face. Mary, of course,
did not know that she was thinking of the thing she
had realised so often—that it was not easy
to detach one’s self from the fact that one
was Reuben S. Vanderpoel’s daughter. As
a result of it here one was indecently and unwillingly
disturbing the lives of innocent, unassuming lovers.
“And so long as Sir Thomas has
not tried—and found out—Lady
Jane will be made unhappy?”
“If he were to let you escape
without trying, he would not be forgiven. His
grandmother has had her own way all her life.”
“But suppose after I went away someone else
came?”
Mary shook her head.
“People like you don’t
happen in one neighbourhood twice in a lifetime.
I am twenty-six and you are the first I have seen.”
“And he will only be safe if?”
Mary Lithcom nodded.
“Yes—if,” she answered.
“It’s silly—and frightful—but
it is true.”
Miss Vanderpoel looked down on the
grass a few moments, and then seemed to arrive at
a decision.
“He likes you? You can make him understand
things?” she inquired.
“Yes.”
“Then go and tell him that if
he will come here and ask me a direct question, I
will give him a direct answer—which will
satisfy Lady Alanby.”
Lady Mary caught her breath.
“Do you know, you are the most
wonderful girl I ever saw!” she exclaimed.
“But if you only knew what I feel about Janie!”
And tears rushed into her eyes.
“I feel just the same thing
about my sister,” said Miss Vanderpoel.
“I think Rosy and Lady Jane are rather alike.”
. . . . .
When Tommy tramped across the grass
towards her he was turning red and white by turns,
and looking somewhat like a young man who was being
marched up to a cannon’s mouth. It struck
him that it was an American kind of thing he was called
upon to do, and he was not an American, but British
from the top of his closely-cropped head to the rather
thick soles of his boots. He was, in truth, overwhelmed
by his sense of his inadequacy to the demands of the
brilliantly conceived, but unheard-of situation.
Joy and terror swept over his being in waves.
The tall, proud, wood-nymph look of
her as she stood under a tree, waiting for him, would
have struck his courage dead on the spot and caused
him to turn and flee in anguish, if she had not made
a little move towards him, with a heavenly, every-day
humanness in her eyes. The way she managed it
was an amazing thing. He could never have managed
it at all himself.
She came forward and gave him her
hand, and really it was her hand which held his
own comparatively steady.
“It is for Lady Jane,”
she said. “That prevents it from being ridiculous
or improper. It is for Lady Jane. Her eyes,”
with a soft-touched laugh, “are the colour of
the blue speedwell I showed you. It is the colour
of babies’ eyes. And hers look as theirs
do—as if they asked everybody not to hurt
them.”
He actually fell upon his knee, and
bending his head over her hand, kissed it half a dozen
times with adoration. Good Lord, how she saw
and knew!
“If Jane were not Jane, and
you were not you,” the words rushed from
him, “it would be the most outrageous—the
most impudent thing a man ever had the cheek to do.”
“But it is not.”
She did not draw her hand away, and oh, the girlish
kindness of her smiling, supporting look. “You
came to ask me if——”
“If you would marry me, Miss
Vanderpoel,” his head bending over her hand
again. “I beg your pardon, I beg your pardon.
Oh Lord, I do.’
“I thank you for the compliment
you pay me,” she answered. “I like
you very much, Sir Thomas—and I like you
just now more than ever—but I could not
marry you. I should not make you happy, and I
should not be happy myself. The truth is——”
thinking a moment, “each of us really belongs
to a different kind of person. And each of knows
the fact.”
“God bless you,” he said.
“I think you know everything in the world a
woman can know—and remain an angel.”
It was an outburst of eloquence, and
she took it in the prettiest way—with the
prettiest laugh, which had in it no touch of mockery
or disbelief in him.
“What I have said is quite final—if
Lady Alanby should inquire,” she said—adding
rather quickly, “Someone is coming.”
It pleased her to see that he did
not hurry to his feet clumsily, but even stood upright,
with a shade of boyish dignity, and did not release
her hand before he had bent his head low over it again.
Sir Nigel was bringing with him Lady
Alanby, Mrs. Manners, and his wife, and when Betty
met his eyes, she knew at once that he had not made
his way to this particular garden without intention.
He had discovered that she was with Tommy, and it
had entertained him to break in upon them.
“I did not intend to interrupt
Sir Thomas at his devotions,” he remarked to
her after dinner. “Accept my apologies.”
“It did not matter in the least, thank you,”
said Betty.
. . . . .
“I am glad to be able to say,
Thomas, that you did not look an entire fool when
you got up from your knees, as we came into the rose
garden.” Thus Lady Alanby, as their carriage
turned out of Stornham village.
“I’m glad myself,” Tommy answered.
“What were you doing there?
Even if you were asking her to marry you, it was not
necessary to go that far. We are not in the seventeenth
century.”
Then Tommy flushed.
“I did not intend to do it.
I could not help it. She was so—so
nice about everything. That girl is an angel.
I told her so.”
“Very right and proper spirit
to approach her in,” answered the old woman,
watching him keenly. “Was she angel enough
to say she would marry you?”
Tommy, for some occult reason, had
the courage to stare back into his grandmother’s
eyes, quite as if he were a man, and not a hobbledehoy,
expecting to be bullied.
“She does not want me,”
he answered. “And I knew she wouldn’t.
Why should she? I did what you ordered me to
do, and she answered me as I knew she would.
She might have snubbed me, but she has such a way with
her—such a way of saying things and understanding,
that—that—well, I found myself
on one knee, kissing her hand—as if I was
being presented at court.”
Old Lady Alanby looked out on the passing landscape.
“Well, you did your best,”
she summed the matter up at last, “if you went
down on your knees involuntarily. If you had done
it on purpose, it would have been unpardonable.”