Kelmscott of Tilgate.
To both Elma and her mother this meeting
between Colonel Kelmscott and Guy Waring was full
of mystery. For the Kelmscotts, of Tilgate Park,
were the oldest county family in all that part of Surrey;
and Colonel Kelmscott himself passed as the proudest
man of that haughtiest house in Southern England.
What, therefore, could have made him give so curious
and almost imperceptible a start the moment Guy Waring’s
name was mentioned in conversation? Not a word
that he said, to be sure, implied to Guy himself the
depth of his surprise; but Elma, with her marvellous
insight, could see at once, for all that, by the very
haze in his eyes, that he was fascinated by Guy’s
personality, somewhat as she herself had been fascinated
the other day in the train by Sardanapalus. Nay,
more; he seemed to wish, with all his heart, to leave
the young man’s presence, and yet to be glued
to the spot, in spite of himself, by some strange
compulsion.
It was with a dreamy, far-away tone
in his voice that the Colonel uttered those seemingly
simple words, “And is your brother here, too,
this afternoon, Mr. Waring?”
“Yes, he’s somewhere about,”
Guy answered carelessly. “He’ll turn
up by-and-by, no doubt. He’s pretty sure
to find out, sooner or later, Miss Clifford’s
here, and then he’ll come round this way to
speak to her.”
For some time they stood talking in
a little group by the bench, Colonel Kelmscott meanwhile
thawing by degrees and growing gradually interested
in what Guy had to say, while Elma looked on with a
devouring curiosity.
“Your brother’s a painter,
you say,” the Colonel murmured once under that
heavy white moustache of his; “yes, I think I
remember. A rising painter. Had a capital
landscape in the Grosvenor last year, I recollect,
and another in the Academy this spring, if I don’t
mistake—skied—skied, unfairly;
yet a very pretty thing, too; ‘At the Home of
the Curlews.’”
“He’s painting a sweet
one now,” Elma put in quickly, “down here,
close by, in Chetwood Forest. He told me about
it; it must be simply lovely—all fern and
mosses, with, oh! such a beautiful big snake in the
foreground.”
“I should like to see it,”
Colonel Kelmscott said slowly, not without a pang.
“If it’s painted in the forest—and
by your brother, Mr. Waring—that would
give it, to me, a certain personal value.”
He paused a moment; then he added, in a little explanatory
undertone, “I’m lord of the manor, you
know, at Chetwood; and I shoot the forest.”
“Cyril would be delighted to
let you see the piece when it’s finished,”
Guy answered lightly. “If you’re ever
up in town our way—we’ve rooms in
Staple Inn. I dare say you know it—that
quaint, old-fashioned looking place, with big lattice
windows, that overhangs Holborn.”
Colonel Kelmscott started, and drew
himself up still taller and stiffer than before.
“I may have some opportunity
of seeing it some day in one of the galleries,”
he answered coldly, as if not to commit himself.
“To tell you the truth, I seldom have time to
lounge about in studios. It was merely the coincidence
of the picture being painted in Chetwood Forest that
made me fancy for a moment I might like to see it.
But I’m no connoisseur. Mrs. Clifford, may
I take you to get a cup of tea? Tea, I think,
is laid out in the tent behind the shrubbery.”
It was said in a tone to dismiss Guy
politely; and Guy, taking the hint, accepted it as
such, and fell back a pace or two to his garrulous
old lady. But before Colonel Kelmscott could walk
off Mrs. Clifford and her daughter to the marquee
for refreshments, Elma gave a sudden start, and blushed
faintly pink through that olive-brown skin of hers.
“Why, there’s my
Mr. Waring!” she exclaimed, in a very pleased
tone, holding out her hand, with a delicious smile;
and as she said it, Cyril and Montague Nevitt strolled
up from behind a great clump of lilacs beside them.
Two pairs of eyes watched those young
folks closely as they shook hands once more—Guy’s
and Mrs. Clifford’s. Guy observed that
a little red spot rose on Cyril’s cheek he had
rarely seen there, and that his voice trembled slightly
as he said, “How do you do?” to his pretty
fellow-traveller of the famous adventure. Mrs.
Clifford observed that the faint pink faded out of
the olive-brown skin as Elma took Cyril Waring’s
hand in hers, and that her face grew pale for three
minutes afterwards. And Colonel Kelmscott, looking
on with a quietly observant eye, remarked to himself
that Cyril Waring was a very creditable young man
indeed, as handsome as Guy, and as like as two peas,
but if anything perhaps even a trifle more pleasing.
For the rest of that afternoon, they
six kept constantly together.
Elma noted that Colonel Kelmscott
was evidently ill at ease; a thing most unusual with
that proud, self-reliant aristocrat. He held
himself, to be sure, as straight and erect as ever,
and moved about the grounds with that same haughty
air of perfect supremacy, as of one who was monarch
of all he surveyed in the county of Surrey. But
Elma could see, for all that, that he was absent-minded
and self-contained; he answered all questions in a
distant, unthinking way; some inner trouble was undoubtedly
consuming him. His eyes were all for the two
Warings. They glanced nervously right and left
every minute in haste, but returned after each excursion
straight to Guy and Cyril. The Colonel noted
narrowly all they said and did; and Elma was sure
he was very much pleased at least with her painter.
How could he fail to be, indeed?—for Mr.
Waring was charming. Elma wished she could have
strolled off with him about the lawn alone, were it
only ten paces in front of her mother. But somehow
the fates that day were unpropitious. The party
held together as by some magnetic bond, and Mrs. Clifford’s
eye never for one moment deserted her.
The Colonel glowered. The Colonel
was moody. His speech was curt. He occupied
himself mainly in listening to Guy and Cyril.
A sort of mesmeric influence seemed to draw him towards
the two young men.
He drew them out deliberately.
Yet the start he had given as either young man came
up towards his side was a start, not of mere neutral
surprise, but of positive disinclination and regret
at the meeting. Nay, even now he was angling
hard, with all the skill of a strategist, to keep
the Warings out of Lady Emily’s way. But
the more he talked to them, the more interested he
seemed. It was clear he meant to make the most
of this passing chance—and never again,
if he could help it, Elma felt certain, to see them.
Once, and once only, Granville Kelmscott,
his son, strolled casually up and joined the group
by pure chance for a few short minutes. The heir
of Tilgate Park was tall and handsome, though less
so than his father; and Mrs. Clifford was not wholly
indisposed to throw him and Elma together as much
as possible. Younger by a full year than the
two Warings, Granville Kelmscott was not wholly unlike
them in face and manner. As a rule, his father
was proud of him, with a passing great pride, as he
was proud of every other Kelmscott possession.
But to-day, Elma’s keen eye observed that the
Colonel’s glance moved quickly in a rapid dart
from Cyril and Guy to his son Granville, and back
again from his son Granville to Guy and Cyril.
What was odder still, the hasty comparison seemed to
redound not altogether to Granville’s credit.
The Colonel paused, and stifled a sigh as he looked;
then, in spite of Mrs. Clifford’s profound attempts
to retain the heir by her side, he sent the young man
off at a moment’s notice to hunt up Lady Emily.
Now why on earth did he want to keep Granville and
the Warings apart? Mrs. Clifford and Elina racked
their brains in vain; they could make nothing of the
mystery.
It was a long afternoon, and Elma
enjoyed it, though she never got her tete-a-tete after
all with Cyril Waring. Just a rapid look, a
dart from the eyes, a faint pressure of her hand at
parting—that was all the romance she was
able to extract from it, so closely did Mrs. Clifford
play her part as chaperon. But as the two young
men and Montague Nevitt hurried off at last to catch
their train back to town, the Colonel turned to Mrs.
Clifford with a sigh of relief.
“Splendid young fellows, those,”
he exclaimed, looking after them. “I’m
not sorry I met them. Ought to have gone into
a cavalry regiment early in life; what fine leaders
they’d have made, to be sure, in a dash for
the guns or a charge against a battery! But they
seem to have done well for themselves in their own
way: carved out their own fortunes, each after
his fashion. Very plucky young fellows.
One of them’s a painter, and one’s a journalist;
and both of them are making their mark in their own
world. I really admire them.”
And on the way to the station, that
moment, Mr. Montague Nevitt, as he lit his cigarette,
was saying to Cyril, with an approving smile, “Your
Miss Clifford’s pretty.”
“Yes,” Cyril answered
drily, “she’s not bad looking. She
looked her best to-day. And she’s capital
company.”
But Guy broke out unabashed into a
sudden burst of speech.
“Not bad looking!” he
cried contemptuously. “Is that all you have
to say of her? And you a painter, too! Why,
she’s beautiful! She’s charming!
If Cyril was shut up in a tunnel with her—–”
He broke off suddenly.
And for the rest of the way home he
spoke but seldom. It was all too true. The
two Warings were cast in the self-same mould.
What attracted one, it was clear, no less surely and
certainly attracted the other.
As they went to their separate rooms
in Staple Inn that night, Guy paused for a moment,
candle in hand, by his door, and looked straight at
Cyril.
“You needn’t fear me,”
he said, in a very low tone. “She’s
yours. You found her. I wouldn’t be
mean enough for a minute to interfere with your find.
But I’m not surprised at you. I would do
the same myself, if I could have seen her first.
I won’t see her again. I couldn’t
stand it. She’s too beautiful to see and
not to fall in love with.”