CHAPTER L
Mrs. Dale Is Thankful for a Good Thing
On that day they dined early at the Small
House, as they had been in the habit of doing since the packing had
commenced. And after dinner Mrs. Dale went through the gardens, up
to the other house, with a written note in her hand. In that note
she had told Lady Julia, with many protestations of gratitude, that
Lily was unable to go out so soon after her illness, and that she
herself was obliged to stay with Lily. She explained also, that the
business of moving was in hand, and that, therefore, she could not
herself accept the invitation. But her other daughter, she said,
would be very happy to accompany her uncle to Guestwick Manor.
Then, without closing her letter, she took it up to the squire in
order that it might be decided whether it would or would not suit
his views. It might well be that he would not care to go to Lord De
Guest’s with Bell alone.
“Leave it with me,” he said; “that is, if you
do not object.”
“Oh dear, no!”
“I’ll tell you the plain truth at once, Mary.
I shall go over myself with it, and see the earl. Then I will
decline it or not, according to what passes between me and him. I
wish Lily would have gone.”
“Ah! she could not.”
“I wish she could. I wish she could. I wish
she could.” As he repeated the words over and over again, there was
an eagerness in his voice that filled Mrs. Dale’s heart with
tenderness towards him.
“The truth is,” said Mrs. Dale, “she could
not go there to meet John Eames.”
“Oh, I know,” said the squire: “I understand
it. But that is just what we want her to do. Why should she not
spend a week in the same house with an honest young man whom we all
like.”
“There are reasons why she would not wish
it.”
“Ah, exactly; the very reasons which should
make us induce her to go there if we can. Perhaps I had better tell
you all. Lord De Guest has taken him by the hand, and wishes him to
marry. He has promised to settle on him an income which will make
him comfortable for life.”
“That is very generous; and I am delighted to
hear it—for John’s sake.”
“And they have promoted him at his
office.”
“Ah! then he will do well.”
“He will do very well. He is private
secretary now to their head man. And, Mary, so that she, Lily,
should not be empty-handed if their marriage can be arranged, I
have undertaken to settle a hundred a year on her—on her and her
children, if she will accept him. Now you know it all. I did not
mean to tell you; but it is as well that you should have the means
of judging. That other man was a villain. This man is honest. Would
it not be well that she should learn to like him? She always did
like him, I thought, before that other fellow came down here among
us.”
“She has always liked him—as a friend.”
“She will never get a better lover.”
Mrs. Dale sat silent, thinking over it all.
Every word that the squire said was true. It would be a healing of
wounds most desirable and salutary; an arrangement advantageous to
them all; a destiny for Lily most devoutly to be desired—if only it
were possible. Mrs. Dale firmly believed that if her daughter could
be made to accept John Eames as her second lover in a year or two
all would be well. Crosbie would then be forgotten or thought of
without regret, and Lily would become the mistress of a happy home.
But there are positions which cannot be reached, though there be no
physical or material objection in the way. It is the view which the
mind takes of a thing which creates the sorrow that arises from it.
If the heart were always malleable and the feelings could be
controlled, who would permit himself to be tormented by any of the
reverses which affection meets? Death would create no sorrow,
ingratitude would lose its sting; and the betrayal of love would do
no injury beyond that which it might entail upon worldly
circumstances. But the heart is not malleable; nor will the
feelings admit of such control.
“It is not possible for her,” said Mrs. Dale.
“I fear it is not possible. It is too soon.”
“Six months,” pleaded the squire.
“It will take years—not months,” said Mrs.
Dale.
“And she will lose all her youth.”
“Yes; he has done all that by his treachery.
But it is done, and we cannot now go back. She loves him yet as
dearly as she ever loved him.”
Then the squire muttered certain words below
his breath—ejaculations against Crosbie, which were hardly
voluntary; but even as involuntary ejaculations were very improper.
Mrs. Dale heard them, and was not offended either by their
impropriety or their warmth. “But you can understand,” she said,
“that she cannot bring herself to go there.” The squire struck the
table with his fist, and repeated his ejaculations. If he could
only have known how very disagreeable Lady Alexandrina was making
herself, his spirit might, perhaps, have been less vehemently
disturbed. If, also, he could have perceived and understood the
light in which an alliance with the De Courcy family was now
regarded by Crosbie, I think that he would have received some
consolation from that consideration. Those who offend us are
generally punished for the offence they give; but we so frequently
miss the satisfaction of knowing that we are avenged! It is
arranged, apparently, that the injurer shall be punished, but that
the person injured shall not gratify his desire for
vengeance.
“And will you go to Guestwick yourself?”
asked Mrs. Dale.
“I will take the note,” said the squire, “and
will let you know to-morrow. The earl has behaved so kindly that
every possible consideration is due to him. I had better tell him
the whole truth, and go or stay, as he may wish. I don’t see the
good of going. What am I to do at Guestwick Manor? I did think that
if we had all been there it might have cured some
difficulties.”
Mrs. Dale got up to leave him, but she could
not go without saying some word of gratitude for all that he had
attempted to do for them. She well knew what he meant by the curing
of difficulties. He had intended to signify that had they lived
together for a week at Guestwick the idea of flitting from
Allington might possibly have been abandoned. It seemed now to Mrs.
Dale as though her brother-in-law were heaping coals of fire on her
head in return for that intention. She felt half-ashamed of what
she was doing, almost acknowledging to herself that she should have
borne with his sternness in return for the benefits he had done to
her daughters. Had she not feared their reproaches she would, even
now, have given way.
“I do not know what I ought to say to you for
your kindness.”
“Say nothing—either for my kindness or
unkindness; but stay where you are, and let us live like Christians
together, striving to think good and not evil.” These were kind,
loving words, showing in themselves a spirit of love and
forbearance; but they were spoken in a harsh, unsympathising voice,
and the speaker, as he uttered them, looked gloomily at the fire.
In truth the squire, as he spoke, was half-ashamed of the warmth of
what he said.
“At any rate I will not think evil,” Mrs.
Dale answered, giving him her hand. After that she left him, and
returned home. It was too late for her to abandon her project of
moving and remain at the Small House; but as she went across the
garden she almost confessed to herself that she repented of what
she was doing.
In these days of the cold early spring, the
way from the lawn into the house, through the drawing-room window,
was not as yet open, and it was necessary to go round by the
kitchen-garden on to the road, and thence in by the front door; or
else to pass through the back door, and into the house by the
kitchen. This latter mode of entrance Mrs. Dale now adopted; and as
she made her way into the hall Lily came upon her, with very silent
steps, out from the parlour, and arrested her progress. There was a
smile upon Lily’s face as she lifted up her finger as if in
caution, and no one looking at her would have supposed that she was
herself in trouble. “Mamma,” she said, pointing to the drawing-room
door, and speaking almost in a whisper, “you must not go in there;
come into the parlour.”
“Who’s there? Where’s Bell?” and Mrs. Dale
went into the parlour as she was bidden. “But who is there?” she
repeated.
“He’s there!”
“Who is he?”
“Oh, mamma, don’t be a goose! Dr. Crofts is
there, of course. He’s been nearly an hour. I wonder how he is
managing, for there is nothing on earth to sit upon but the old
lump of a carpet. The room is strewed about with crockery, and Bell
is such a figure! She has got on your old checked apron, and when
he came in she was rolling up the fire-irons in brown paper. I
don’t suppose she was ever in such a mess before. There’s one thing
certain—he can’t kiss her hand.”
“It’s you are the goose, Lily.”
“But he’s in there certainly, unless he has
gone out through the window, or up the chimney.”
“What made you leave them?”
“He met me here, in the passage, and spoke to
me ever so seriously. ‘Come in,’ I said, ‘and see Bell packing the
pokers and tongs.’ ‘I will go in,’ he said, ‘but don’t come with
me.’ He was ever so serious, and I’m sure he had been thinking of
it all the way along.”
“And why should he not be serious?”
“Oh, no, of course he ought to be serious;
but are you not glad, mamma? I am so glad. We shall live alone
together, you and I; but she will be so close to us! My belief is
that he’ll stay there for ever unless somebody does something. I
have been so tired of waiting and looking out for you. Perhaps he’s
helping her to pack the things. Don’t you think we might go in; or
would it be ill-natured?”
“Lily, don’t be in too great a hurry to say
anything. You may be mistaken, you know; and there’s many a slip
between the cup and the lip.”
“Yes, mamma, there is,” said Lily, putting
her hand inside her mother’s arm, “that’s true enough.”
“Oh, my darling, forgive me,” said the
mother, suddenly remembering that the use of the old proverb at the
present moment had been almost cruel.
“Do not mind it,” said Lily, “it does not
hurt me, it does me good; that is to say, when there is nobody by
except yourself. But, with God’s help, there shall be no slip here,
and she shall be happy. It is all the difference between one thing
done in a hurry, and another done with much thinking. But they’ll
remain there for ever if we don’t go in. Come, mamma, you open the
door.”
Then Mrs. Dale did open the door, giving some
little premonitory notice with the handle, so that the couple
inside might be warned of approaching footsteps. Crofts had not
escaped, either through the window or up the chimney, but was
seated in the middle of the room on an empty box, just opposite to
Bell, who was seated upon the lump of carpeting. Bell still wore
the checked apron as described by her sister. What might have been
the state of her hands I will not pretend to say; but I do not
believe that her lover had found anything amiss with them. “How do
you do, doctor?” said Mrs. Dale, striving to use her accustomed
voice, and to look as though there were nothing of special
importance in his visit. “I have just come down from the Great
House.”
“Mamma,” said Bell, jumping up, “you must not
call him doctor any more.”
“Must I not? Has anyone undoctored
him?”
“Oh, mamma, you understand,” said Bell.
“I understand,” said Lily, going up to the
doctor, and giving him her cheek to kiss, “he is to be my brother,
and I mean to claim him as such from this moment. I expect him to
do everything for us, and not to call a moment of his time his
own.”
“Mrs. Dale,” said the doctor, “Bell has
consented that it shall be so, if you will consent.”
“There is but little doubt of that,” said
Mrs. Dale.
“We shall not be rich—” began the
doctor.
“I hate to be rich,” said Bell. “I hate even
to talk about it. I don’t think it quite manly even to think about
it; and I’m sure it isn’t womanly.”
“Bell was always a fanatic in praise of
poverty,” said Mrs. Dale.
“No; I’m no fanatic. I’m very fond of money
earned. I would like to earn some myself if I knew how.”
“Let her go out and visit the lady patients,”
said Lily. “They do in America.”
Then they all went into the parlour and sat
round the fire talking as though they were already one family. The
proceeding, considering the nature of it—that a young lady,
acknowledged to be of great beauty and known to be of good birth,
had on the occasion been asked and given in marriage—was carried on
after a somewhat humdrum fashion, and in a manner that must be
called commonplace. How different had it been when Crosbie had made
his offer! Lily for the time had been raised to a pinnacle—a
pinnacle which might be dangerous, but which was, at any rate,
lofty. With what a pretty speech had Crosbie been greeted! How it
had been felt by all concerned that the fortunes of the Small House
were in the ascendant—felt, indeed, with some trepidation, but
still with much inward triumph. How great had been the occasion,
forcing Lily almost to lose herself in wonderment at what had
occurred! There was no great occasion now, and no wonderment. No
one, unless it was Crofts, felt very triumphant. But they were all
very happy, and were sure that there was safety in their happiness.
It was but the other day that one of them had been thrown rudely to
the ground through the treachery of a lover, but yet none of them
feared treachery from this lover. Bell was as sure of her lot in
life as though she were already being taken home to her modest
house in Guestwick. Mrs. Dale already looked upon the man as her
son, and the party of four as they sat round the fire grouped
themselves as though they already formed one family.
But Bell was not seated next to her lover.
Lily, when she had once accepted Crosbie, seemed to think that she
could never be too near to him. She had been in no wise ashamed of
her love, and had shown it constantly by some little caressing
motion of her hand, leaning on his arm, looking into his face, as
though she were continually desirous of some palpable assurance of
his presence. It was not so at all with Bell. She was happy in
loving and in being loved, but she required no overt testimonies of
affection. I do not think it would have made her unhappy if some
sudden need had required that Crofts should go to India and back
before they were married. The thing was settled, and that was
enough for her. But, on the other hand, when he spoke of the
expediency of an immediate marriage, she raised no difficulty. As
her mother was about to go into a new residence, it might be as
well that that residence should be fitted to the wants of two
persons instead of three. So they talked about chairs and tables,
carpets and kitchens, in a most unromantic, homely, useful manner!
A considerable portion of the furniture in the house they were now
about to leave belonged to the squire—or to the house rather, as
they were in the habit of saying. The older and more solid
things—articles of household stuff that stand the wear of half a
century—had been in the Small House when they came to it. There
was, therefore, a question of buying new furniture for a house in
Guestwick—a question not devoid of importance to the possessor of
so moderate an income as that owned by Mrs. Dale. In the first
month or two they were to live in lodgings, and their goods were to
be stored in some friendly warehouse. Under such circumstances
would it not be well that Bell’s marriage should be so arranged
that the lodging question might not be in any degree complicated by
her necessities? This was the last suggestion made by Dr. Crofts,
induced no doubt by the great encouragement he had received.
“That would be hardly possible,” said Mrs.
Dale. “It only wants three weeks—and with the house in such a
condition!”
“James is joking,” said Bell.
“I was not joking at all,” said the
doctor.
“Why not send for Mr. Boyce, and carry her
off at once on a pillion behind you?” said Lily. “It’s just the
sort of thing for primitive people to do, like you and Bell. All
the same, Bell, I do wish you could have been married from this
house.”
“I don’t think it will make much difference,”
said Bell.
“Only if you would have waited till summer we
would have had such a nice party on the lawn. It sounds so ugly,
being married from lodgings; doesn’t it, mamma?”
“It doesn’t sound at all ugly to me,” said
Bell.
“I shall always call you Dame Commonplace
when you’re married,” said Lily.
Then they had tea, and after tea Dr. Crofts
got on his horse and rode back to Guestwick.
“Now may I talk about him?” said Lily, as
soon as the door was closed behind his back.
“No; you may not.”
“As if I hadn’t known it all along! And
wasn’t it hard to bear that you should have scolded me with such
pertinacious austerity, and that I wasn’t to say a word in
answer!”
“I don’t remember the austerity,” said Mrs.
Dale.
“Nor yet Lily’s silence,” said Bell.
“But it’s all settled now,” said Lily, “and
I’m downright happy. I never felt more satisfaction—never,
Bell!”
“Nor did I,” said her mother; “I may truly
say that I thank God for this good thing.”