AT STORNHAM AND AT BROADMORLANDS
The exulting wind had swept the clouds
away, and the moon rode in a dark blue sea of sky,
making the night light purely clear, when they drew
a little apart, that they might better see the wonderfulness
in each other’s faces. It was so mysteriously
great a thing that they felt near to awe.
“I fought too long. I wore
out my body’s endurance, and now I am quaking
like a boy. Red Godwyn did not begin his wooing
like this. Forgive me,” Mount Dunstan said
at last.
“Do you know,” with lovely
trembling lips and voice, “that for long—long—you
have been unkind to me?”
It was merely human that he should
swiftly enfold her again, and answer with his lips
against her cheek.
“Unkind! Unkind! Oh,
the heavenly woman’s sweetness of your telling
me so—the heavenly sweetness of it!”
he exclaimed passionately and low. “And
I was one of those who are ‘by the roadside everywhere,’
an unkempt, raging beggar, who might not decently
ask you for a crust.”
“It was all wrong—wrong!”
she whispered back to him, and he poured forth the
tenderest, fierce words of confession and prayer, and
she listened, drinking them in, with now and then
a soft sob pressed against the roughness of the enrapturing
tweed. For a space they had both forgotten her
hurt, because there are other things than terror which
hypnotise pain. Mount Dunstan was to be praised
for remembering it first. He must take her back
to Stornham and her sister without further delay.
“I will put your saddle on Anstruthers’
horse, or mine, and lift you to your seat. There
is a farmhouse about two miles away, where I will take
you first for food and warmth. Perhaps it would
be well for you to stay there to rest for an hour
or so, and I will send a message to Lady Anstruthers.”
“I will go to the place, and
eat and drink what you advise,” she answered.
“But I beg you to take me back to Rosalie without
delay. I feel that I must see her.”
“I feel that I must see her,
too,” he said. “But for her—God
bless her!” he added, after his sudden pause.
Betty knew that the exclamation meant
strong feeling, and that somehow in the past hours
Rosalie had awakened it. But it was only when,
after their refreshment at the farm, they had taken
horse again and were riding homeward together, that
she heard from him what had passed between them.
“All that has led to this may
seem the merest chance,” he said. “But
surely a strange thing has come about. I know
that without understanding it.” He leaned
over and touched her hand. “You, who are
Life—without understanding I ride here
beside you, believing that you brought me back.”
“I tried—I tried! With all my
strength, I tried.”
“After I had seen your sister
to-day, I guessed—I knew. But not at
first. I was not ill of the fever, as excited
rumour had it; but I was ill, and the doctors and
the vicar were alarmed. I had fought too long,
and I was giving up, as I have seen the poor fellows
in the ballroom give up. If they were not dragged
back they slipped out of one’s hands. If
the fever had developed, all would have been over quickly.
I knew the doctors feared that, and I am ashamed to
say I was glad of it. But, yesterday, in the
morning, when I was letting myself go with a morbid
pleasure in the luxurious relief of it—something
reached me—some slow rising call to effort
and life.”
She turned towards him in her saddle,
listening, her lips parted.
“I did not even ask myself what
was happening, but I began to be conscious of being
drawn back, and to long intensely to see you again.
I was gradually filled with a restless feeling that
you were near me, and that, though I could not physically
hear your voice, you were surely calling to me.
It was the thing which could not be—but
it was—and because of it I could not let
myself drift.”
“I did call you! I was
on my knees in the church asking to be forgiven if
I prayed mad prayers—but praying the same
thing over and over. The villagers were kneeling
there, too. They crowded in, leaving everything
else. You are their hero, and they were in deep
earnest.”
His look was gravely pondering.
His life had not made a mystic of him—it
was Penzance who was the mystic—but he felt
himself perplexed by mysteriously suggestive thought.
“I was brought back—I
was brought back,” he said. “In the
afternoon I fell asleep and slept profoundly until
the morning. When I awoke, I realised that I
was a remade man. The doctors were almost awed
when I first spoke to them. Old Dr. Fenwick died
later, and, after I had heard about it, the church
bell was tolled. It was heard at Weaver’s
farmhouse, and, as everybody had been excitedly waiting
for the sound, it conveyed but one idea to them—and
the boy was sent racing across the fields to Stornham
village. Dearest! Dearest!” he exclaimed.
She had bowed her head and burst into
passionate sobbing. Because she was not of the
women who wept, her moment’s passion was strong
and bitter.
“It need not have been!”
she shuddered. “One cannot bear it—because
it need not have been!”
“Stop your horse a moment,”
he said, reining in his own, while, with burning eyes
and swelling throat, he held and steadied her.
But he did not know that neither her sister nor her
father had ever seen her in such mood, and that she
had never so seen herself.
“You shall not remember it,” he said to
her.
“I will not,” she answered,
recovering herself. “But for one moment
all the awful hours rushed back. Tell me the
rest.”
“We did not know that the blunder
had been made until a messenger from Dole rode over
to inquire and bring messages of condolence. Then
we understood what had occurred and I own a sort of
frenzy seized me. I knew I must see you, and,
though the doctors were horribly nervous, they dare
not hold me back. The day before it would not
have been believed that I could leave my room.
You were crying out to me, and though I did not know,
I was answering, body and soul. Penzance knew
I must have my way when I spoke to him—mad
as it seemed. When I rode through Stornham village,
more than one woman screamed at sight of me. I
shall not be able to blot out of my mind your sister’s
face. She will tell you what we said to each
other. I rode away from the Court quite half mad——”
his voice became very gentle, “because of something
she had told me in the first wild moments.”
Lady Anstruthers had spent the night
moving restlessly from one room to another, and had
not been to bed when they rode side by side up the
avenue in the early morning sunlight. An under
keeper, crossing the park a few hundred yards above
them, after one glance, dashed across the sward to
the courtyard and the servants’ hall. The
news flashed electrically through the house, and Rosalie,
like a small ghost, came out upon the steps as they
reined in. Though her lips moved, she could not
speak aloud, as she watched Mount Dunstan lift her
sister from her horse.
“Childe Harold stumbled and
I hurt my foot,” said Betty, trying to be calm.
“I knew he would find you!”
Rosalie answered quite faintly. “I knew
you would!” turning to Mount Dunstan, adoring
him with all the meaning of her small paled face.
She would have been afraid of her
memory of what she had said in the strange scene which
had taken place before them a few hours ago, but almost
before either of the two spoke she knew that a great
gulf had been crossed in some one inevitable, though
unforeseen, leap. How it had been taken, when
or where, did not in the least matter, when she clung
to Betty and Betty clung to her.
After a few moments of moved and reverent
waiting, the admirable Jennings stepped forward and
addressed her in lowered voice.
“There’s been little sleep
in the village this night, my lady,” he murmured
earnestly. “I promised they should have
a sign, with your permission. If the flag was
run up—they’re all looking out, and
they’d know.”
“Run it up, Jennings,”
Lady Anstruthers answered, “at once.”
When it ran up the staff on the tower
and fluttered out in gay answering to the morning
breeze, children in the village began to run about
shouting, men and women appeared at cottage doors,
and more than one cap was thrown up in the air.
But old Doby and Mrs. Welden, who had been waiting
for hours, standing by Mrs. Welden’s gate, caught
each other’s dry, trembling old hands and began
to cry.
The Broadmorlands divorce scandal,
having made conversation during a season quite forty
years before Miss Vanderpoel appeared at Stornham
Court, had been laid upon a lower shelf and buried
beneath other stories long enough to be forgotten.
Only one individual had not forgotten it, and he was
the Duke of Broadmorlands himself, in whose mind it
remained hideously clear. He had been a young
man, honestly and much in love when it first revealed
itself to him, and for a few months he had even thought
it might end by being his death, notwithstanding that
he was strong and in first-rate physical condition.
He had been a fine, hearty young man of clean and
rather dignified life, though he was not understood
to be brilliant of mind. Privately he had ideals
connected with his rank and name which he was not
fluent enough clearly to express. After he had
realised that he should not die of the public humiliation
and disgrace, which seemed to point him out as having
been the kind of gullible fool it is scarcely possible
to avoid laughing at—or, so it seemed to
him in his heart-seared frenzy—he thought
it not improbable that he should go mad. He was
harried so by memories of lovely little soft ways
of Edith’s (his wife’s name was Edith),
of the pretty sound of her laugh, and of her innocent,
girlish habit of kneeling down by her bedside every
night and morning to say her prayers. This had
so touched him that he had sometimes knelt down to
say his, too, saying to her, with slight awkward boyishness,
that a fellow who had a sort of angel for his wife
ought to do his best to believe in the things she
believed in.
“And all the time——!”
a devil who laughed used to snigger in his ear over
and over again, until it was almost like the ticking
of a clock during the worst months, when it did not
seem probable that a man could feel his brain whirling
like a Catherine wheel night and day, and still manage
to hold on and not reach the point of howling and shrieking
and dashing his skull against wails and furniture.
But that passed in time, and he told
himself that he passed with it. Since then he
had lived chiefly at Broadmorlands Castle, and was
spoken of as a man who had become religious, which
was not true, but, having reached the decision that
religion was good for most people, he paid a good
deal of attention to his church and schools, and was
rigorous in the matter of curates.
He had passed seventy now, and was
somewhat despotic and haughty, because a man who is
a Duke and does not go out into the world to rub against
men of his own class and others, but lives altogether
on a great and splendid estate, saluted by every creature
he meets, and universally obeyed and counted before
all else, is not unlikely to forget that he is a quite
ordinary human being, and not a sort of monarch.
He had done his best to forget Edith,
who had soon died of being a shady curate’s
wife in Australia, but he had not been able to encompass
it. He used, occasionally, to dream she was kneeling
by the bed in her childish nightgown saying her prayers
aloud, and would waken crying—as he had
cried in those awful young days. Against social
immorality or village light-mindedness he was relentlessly
savage. He allowed for no palliating or exonerating
facts. He began to see red when he heard of or
saw lightness in a married woman, and the outside world
frequently said that this characteristic bordered
on monomania.
Nigel Anstruthers, having met him
once or twice, had at first been much amused by him,
and had even, by giving him an adroitly careful lead,
managed to guide him into an expression of opinion.
The Duke, who had heard men of his class discussed,
did not in the least like him, notwithstanding his
sympathetic suavity of manner and his air of being
intelligently impressed by what he heard. Not
long afterwards, however, it transpired that the aged
rector of Broadmorlands having died, the living had
been given to Ffolliott, and, hearing it, Sir Nigel
was not slow to conjecture that quite decently utilisable
tools would lie ready to his hand if circumstances
pressed; this point of view, it will be seen, being
not illogical. A man who had not been a sort of
hermit would have heard enough of him to be put on
his guard, and one who was a man of the world, looking
normally on existence, would have reasoned coolly,
and declined to concern himself about what was not
his affair. But a parallel might be drawn between
Broadmorlands and some old lion wounded sorely in
his youth and left to drag his unhealed torment through
the years of age. On one subject he had no point
of view but his own, and could be roused to fury almost
senseless by wholly inadequately supported facts.
He presented exactly the material required—and
that in mass.
About the time the flag was run up
on the tower at Stornham Court a carter, driving whistling
on the road near the deserted cottage, was hailed
by a man who was walking slowly a few yards ahead of
him. The carter thought that he was a tramp,
as his clothes were plainly in bad case, which seeing,
his answer was an unceremonious grunt, and it certainly
did not occur to him to touch his forehead. A
minute later, however, he “got a start,”
as he related afterwards. The tramp was a gentleman
whose riding costume was torn and muddied, and who
looked “gashly,” though he spoke with
the manner and authority which Binns, the carter,
recognised as that of one of the “gentry”
addressing a day-labourer.
“How far is it from here to Medham?” he
inquired.
“Medham be about four mile,
sir,” was the answer. “I be carryin’
these ’taters there to market.”
“I want to get there. I
have met with an accident. My horse took fright
at a pheasant starting up rocketting under his nose.
He threw me into a hedge and bolted. I’m
badly enough bruised to want to reach a town and see
a doctor. Can you give me a lift?”
“That I will, sir, ready enough,”
making room on the seat beside him. “You
be bruised bad, sir,” he said sympathetically,
as his passenger climbed to his place, with a twisted
face and uttering blasphemies under his breath.
“Damned badly,” he answered. “No
bones broken, however.”
“That cut on your cheek and neck’ll need
plasterin’, sir.”
“That’s a scratch. Thorn bush,”
curtly.
Sympathy was plainly not welcome.
In fact Binns was soon of the opinion that here was
an ugly customer, gentleman or no gentleman. A
jolting cart was, however, not the best place for
a man who seemed sore from head to foot, and done
for out and out. He sat and ground his teeth,
as he clung to the rough seat in the attempt to steady
himself. He became more and more “gashly,”
and a certain awful light in his eyes alarmed the
carter by leaping up at every jolt. Binns was
glad when he left him at Medham Arms, and felt he
had earned the half-sovereign handed to him.
Four days Anstruthers lay in bed in
a room at the Inn. No one saw him but the man
who brought him food. He did not send for a doctor,
because he did not wish to see one. He sent for
such remedies as were needed by a man who had been
bruised by a fall from his horse. He made no remark
which could be considered explanatory, after he had
said irritably that a man was a fool to go loitering
along on a nervous brute who needed watching.
Whatsoever happened was his own damned fault.
Through hours of day and night he
lay staring at the whitewashed beams or the blue roses
on the wall paper. They were long hours, and filled
with things not pleasant enough to dwell on in detail.
Physical misery which made a man writhe at times was
not the worst part of them. There were a thousand
things less endurable. More than once he foamed
at the mouth, and recognised that he gibbered like
a madman.
There was but one memory which saved
him from feeling that this was the very end of things.
That was the memory of Broadmorlands. While a
man had a weapon left, even though it could not save
him, he might pay up with it—get almost
even. The whole Vanderpoel lot could be plunged
neck deep in a morass which would leave mud enough
sticking to them, even if their money helped them
to prevent its entirely closing over their heads.
He could attend to that, and, after he had set it well
going, he could get out. There were India, South
Africa, Australia—a dozen places that would
do. And then he would remember Betty Vanderpoel,
and curse horribly under the bed clothes. It
was the memory of Betty which outdid all others in
its power to torment.
On the morning of the fifth day the
Duke of Broadmorlands received a note, which he read
with somewhat annoyed curiosity. A certain Sir
Nigel Anstruthers, whom it appeared he ought to be
able to recall, was in the neighbourhood, and wished
to see him on a parochial matter of interest.
“Parochial matter” was vague, and so was
the Duke’s recollection of the man who addressed
him. If his memory served him rightly, he had
met him in a country house in Somersetshire, and had
heard that he was the acquaintance of the disreputable
eldest son. What could a person of that sort
have to say of parochial matters? The Duke considered,
and then, in obedience to a rigorous conscience, decided
that one ought, perhaps, to give him half an hour.
There was that in the intruder’s
aspect, when he arrived in the afternoon, which produced
somewhat the effect of shock. In the first place,
a man in his unconcealable physical condition had no
right to be out of his bed. Though he plainly
refused to admit the fact, his manner of bearing himself
erect, and even with a certain touch of cool swagger,
was, it was evident, achieved only by determined effort.
He looked like a man who had not yet recovered from
some evil fever. Since the meeting in Somersetshire
he had aged more than the year warranted. Despite
his obstinate fight with himself it was obvious that
he was horribly shaky. A disagreeable scratch
or cut, running from cheek to neck, did not improve
his personal appearance.
He pleased his host no more than he
had pleased him at their first encounter; he, in fact,
repelled him strongly, by suggesting a degree of abnormality
of mood which was smoothed over by an attempt at entire
normality of manner. The Duke did not present
an approachable front as, after Anstruthers had taken
a chair, he sat and examined him with bright blue
old eyes set deep on either side of a dominant nose
and framed over by white eyebrows. No, Nigel
Anstruthers summed him up, it would not be easy to
open the matter with the old fool. He held himself
magnificently aloof, with that lack of modernity in
his sense of place which, even at this late day, sometimes
expressed itself here and there in the manner of the
feudal survival.
“I am afraid you have been ill,” with
rigid civility.
“A man feels rather an outsider
in confessing he has let his horse throw him into
a hedge. It was my own fault entirely. I
allowed myself to forget that I was riding a dangerously
nervous brute. I was thinking of a painful and
absorbing subject. I was badly bruised and scratched,
but that was all.”
“What did your doctor say?”
“That I was in luck not to have broken my neck.”
“You had better have a glass
of wine,” touching a bell. “You do
not look equal to any exertion.”
In gathering himself together, Sir
Nigel felt he was forced to use enormous effort.
It had cost him a gruesome physical struggle to endure
the drive over to Broadmorlands, though it was only
a few miles from Medham. There had been something
unnatural in the exertion necessary to sit upright
and keep his mind decently clear. That was the
worst of it. The fever and raging hours of the
past days and nights had so shaken him that he had
become exhausted, and his brain was not alert.
He was not thinking rapidly, and several times he
had lost sight of a point it was important to remember.
He grew hot and cold and knew his hands and voice
shook, as he answered. But, perhaps—he
felt desperately—signs of emotion were
not bad.
“I am not quite equal to exertion,”
he began slowly. “But a man cannot lie
on his bed while some things are undone—a
man cannot.”
As the old Duke sat upright, the blue
eyes under his bent brows were startled, as well as
curious. Was the man going out of his mind about
something? He looked rather like it, with the
dampness starting out on his haggard face, and the
ugly look suddenly stamped there. The fact was
that the insensate fury which had possessed and torn
Anstruthers as he had writhed in his inn bedroom had
sprung upon him again in full force, and his weakness
could not control it, though it would have been wiser
to hold it in check. He also felt frightfully
ill, which filled him with despair, and, through this
fact, he lost sight of the effect he produced, as
he stood up, shaking all over.
“I come to you because you are
the one man who can most easily understand the thing
I have been concealing for a good many years.”
The Duke was irritated. Confound
the objectionable idiot, what did he mean by taking
that intimate tone with a man who was not prepared
to concern himself in his affairs?
“Excuse me,” he said,
holding up an authoritative hand, “are you going
to make a confession? I don’t like such
things. I prefer to be excused. Personal
confidences are not parochial matters.”
“This one is.” And
Sir Nigel was sickeningly conscious that he was putting
the statement rashly, while at the same time all better
words escaped him. “It is as much a parochial
matter,” losing all hold on his wits and stammering,
“as was—as was—the affair
of—your wife.”
It was the Duke who stood up now,
scarlet with anger. He sprang from his chair
as if he had been a young man in whom some insult had
struck blazing fire.
“You—you dare!”
he shouted. “You insolent blackguard!
You force your way in here and dare—dare——!”
And he clenched his fist, wildly shaking it.
Nigel Anstruthers, staggering on his
uncertain feet, would have shouted also, but could
not, though he tried, and he heard his own voice come
forth brokenly.
“Yes, I dare! I—your—my
own—my——!”
Swaying and tottering, he swung round
to the chair he had left, and fell into it, even while
the old Duke, who stood raging before him, started
back in outraged amazement. What was the fellow
doing? Was he making faces at him? The drawn
malignant mouth and muscles suggested it. Was
he a lunatic, indeed? But the sense of disgusted
outrage changed all at once to horror, as, with a
countenance still more hideously livid and twisted,
his visitor slid helplessly from his seat and lay a
huddling heap of clothes on the floor.