CHAPTER LIV
The Second Visit to the Guestwick
Bridge
Bell had declared that her sister would be
very happy to see John Eames if he would go over to Allington, and
he had replied that of course he would go there. So much having
been, as it were, settled, he was able to speak of his visit as a
matter of course at the breakfast-table, on the morning after the
earl’s dinner-party. “I must get you to come round with me, Dale,
and see what I am doing to the land,” the earl said. And then he
proposed to order saddle-horses. But the squire preferred walking,
and in this way they were disposed of soon after breakfast.
John had it in his mind to get Bell to
himself for half-an-hour, and hold a conference with her; but it
either happened that Lady Julia was too keen in her duties as a
hostess, or else, as was more possible, Bell avoided the meeting.
No opportunity for such an interview offered itself, though he hung
about the drawing-room all the morning. “You had better wait for
luncheon, now,” Lady Julia said to him about twelve. But this he
declined; and taking himself away hid himself about the place for
the next hour and a half. During this time he considered much
whether it would be better for him to ride or walk. If she should
give him any hope, he could ride back triumphant as a
field-marshal. Then the horse would be delightful to him. But if
she should give him no hope—if it should be his destiny to be
rejected utterly on that morning—then the horse would be terribly
in the way of his sorrow. Under such circumstances what could he do
but roam wide across the fields, resting when he might choose to
rest, and running when it might suit him to run. “And she is not
like other girls,” he thought to himself. “She won’t care for my
boots being dirty.” So at last he elected to walk.
“Stand up to her boldly, man,” the earl had
said to him. “By George, what is there to be afraid of? It’s my
belief they’ll give most to those who ask for most. There’s nothing
sets ‘em against a man like being sheepish.” How the earl knew so
much, seeing that he had not himself given signs of any success in
that walk of life, I am not prepared to say. But Eames took his
advice as being in itself good, and resolved to act upon it. “Not
that any resolution will be of any use,” he said to himself, as he
walked along. “When the moment comes I know that I shall tremble
before her, and I know that she’ll see it; but I don’t think it
will make any difference in her.”
He had last seen her on the lawn behind the
Small House, just at that time when her passion for Crosbie was at
the strongest. Eames had gone thither impelled by a foolish desire
to declare to her his hopeless love, and she had answered him by
telling him that she loved Mr. Crosbie better than all the world
besides. Of course she had done so, at that time; but,
nevertheless, her manner of telling him had seemed to him to be
cruel. And he also had been cruel. He had told her that he hated
Crosbie—calling him “that man,” and assuring her that no earthly
consideration should induce him to go into “that man’s house.” Then
he had walked away moodily wishing him all manner of evil. Was it
not singular that all the evil things which he, in his mind, had
meditated for the man, had fallen upon him. Crosbie had lost his
love! He had so proved himself to be a villain that his name might
not be so much as mentioned! He had been ignominiously thrashed!
But what good would all this be if his image were still dear to
Lily’s heart? “I told her that I loved her then,” he said to
himself, “though I had no right to do so. At any rate I have a
right to tell her now.”
When he reached Allington he did not go in
through the village and up to the front of the Small House by the
cross street, but turned by the church gate and passed over the
squire’s terrace, and by the end of the Great House through the
garden. Here he encountered Hopkins. “Why, if that b’aint Mr.
Eames!” said the gardener. “Mr. John, may I make so bold!” and
Hopkins held out a very dirty hand, which Eames of course took,
unconscious of the cause of this new affection.
“I’m just going to call at the Small House,
and I thought I’d come this way.”
“To be sure; this way, or that way, or any
way, who’s so welcome, Mr. John? I envies you; I envies you more
than I envies any man. If I could a got him by the scuff of the
neck, I’d a treated him jist like any wermin—I would, indeed! He
was wermin! I ollays said it. I hated him ollays! I did indeed, Mr.
John, from the first moment when he used to be nigging away at them
foutry balls, knocking them in among the rhododendrons, as though
there weren’t no flower blossoms for next year. He never looked at
one as though one were a Christian; did he, Mr. John?”
“I wasn’t very fond of him myself,
Hopkins.”
“Of course you weren’t very fond of him. Who
was?—only she, poor young lady. She’ll be better now, Mr. John, a
deal better. He wasn’t a wholesome lover—not like you are. Tell me,
Mr. John, did you give it him well when you got him? I heard you
did—two black eyes, and all his face one mash of gore!” And
Hopkins, who was by no means a young man, stiffly put himself into
a fighting attitude.
Eames passed on over the little bridge, which
seemed to be in a state of fast decay, unattended to by any
friendly carpenter, now that the days of its use were so nearly at
an end; and on into the garden, lingering on the spot where he had
last said farewell to Lily. He looked about as though he expected
still to find her there; but there was no one to be seen in the
garden, and no sound to be heard. As every step brought him nearer
to her whom he was seeking, he became more and more conscious of
the hopelessness of his errand. Him she had never loved, and why
should he venture to hope that she would love him now? He would
have turned back had he not been aware that his promise to others
required that he should persevere. He had said that he would do
this thing, and he would be as good as his word. But he hardly
ventured to hope that he might be successful. In this frame of mind
he slowly made his way up across the lawn.
“My dear, there is John Eames,” said Mrs.
Dale, who had first seen him from the parlour window.
“Don’t go, mamma.”
“I don’t know; perhaps it will be better that
I should.”
“No, mamma, no; what good can it do? It can
do no good. I like him as well as I can like anyone. I love him
dearly. But it can do no good. Let him come in here, and be very
kind to him; but do not go away and leave us. Of course I knew he
would come, and I shall be very glad to see him.”
Then Mrs. Dale went round to the other room,
and admitted her visitor through the window of the drawing-room.
“We are in terrible confusion, John, are we not?
“And so you are really going to live in
Guestwick?”
“Well, it looks like it, does it not? But, to
tell you a secret—only it must be a secret; you must not mention it
at Guestwick Manor; even Bell does not know—we have half made up
our minds to unpack all our things and stay where we are.”
Eames was so intent on his own purpose, and
so fully occupied with the difficulty of the task before him, that
he could hardly receive Mrs. Dale’s tidings with all the interest
which they deserved. “Unpack them all again,” he said. “That will
be very troublesome. Is Lily with you, Mrs. Dale?”
“Yes, she is in the parlour. Come and see
her.” So he followed Mrs. Dale through the hall, and found himself
in the presence of his love.
“How do you do, John?” “How do you do, Lily?”
We all know the way in which such meetings are commenced. Each
longed to be tender and affectionate to the other—each in a
different way; but neither knew how to throw any tenderness into
this first greeting. “So you’re staying at the Manor House,” said
Lily.
“Yes; I’m staying there. Your uncle and Bell
came yesterday afternoon.”
“Have you heard about Bell?” said Mrs.
Dale.
“Oh, yes; Mary told me. I’m so glad of it. I
always liked Dr. Crofts very much. I have not congratulated her,
because I didn’t know whether it was a secret. But Crofts was there
last night, and if it is a secret he didn’t seem to be very careful
about keeping it.”
“It is no secret,” said Mrs. Dale. “I don’t
know that I am fond of such secrets.” But as she said this, she
thought of Crosbie’s engagement, which had been told to everyone,
and of its consequences.
“Is it to be soon?” he asked.
“Well, yes; we think so. Of course nothing is
settled.”
“It was such fun,” said Lily. “James, who
took, at any rate, a year or two to make his proposal, wanted to be
married the next day afterwards.”
“No, Lily; not quite that.”
“Well, mamma, it was very nearly that. He
thought it could all be done this week. It has made us so happy,
John! I don’t know anybody I should so much like for a brother. I’m
very glad you like him—very glad. I hope you’ll be friends always.”
There was some little tenderness in this—as John acknowledged to
himself.
“I’m sure we shall—if he likes it. That is,
if I ever happen to see him. I’ll do anything for him I can if he
ever comes up to London. Wouldn’t it be a good thing, Mrs. Dale, if
he settled himself in London?”
“No, John; it would be a very bad thing. Why
should he wish to rob me of my daughter?”
Mrs. Dale was speaking of her eldest
daughter; but the very allusion to any such robbery covered John
Eames’s face with a blush, made him hot up to the roots of his
hair, and for the moment silenced him.
“You think he would have a better career in
London?” said Lily, speaking under the influence of her superior
presence of mind.
She had certainly shown defective judgment in
desiring her mother not to leave them alone; and of this Mrs. Dale
soon felt herself aware. The thing had to be done, and no little
precautionary measure, such as this of Mrs. Dale’s enforced
presence, would prevent it. Of this Mrs. Dale was well aware; and
she felt, moreover, that John was entitled to an opportunity of
pleading his own cause. It might be that such opportunity would
avail him nothing, but not the less should he have it of right,
seeing that he desired it. But yet Mrs. Dale did not dare to get up
and leave the room. Lily had asked her not to do so, and at the
present period of their lives all Lily’s requests were sacred. They
continued for some time to talk of Crofts and his marriage; and
when that subject was finished, they discussed their own
probable—or, as it seemed now, improbable—removal to Guestwick.
“It’s going too far, mamma,” said Lily, “to say that you think we
shall not go. It was only last night that you suggested it. The
truth is, John, that Hopkins came in and discoursed with the most
wonderful eloquence. Nobody dared to oppose Hopkins. He made us
almost cry; he was so pathetic.”
“He has just been talking to me, too,” said
John, “as I came through the squire’s garden.”
“And what has he been saying to you?” said
Mrs. Dale.
“Oh, I don’t know; not much.” John, however,
remembered well, at this moment, all that the gardener had said to
him. Did she know of that encounter between him and Crosbie? and if
she did know of it, in what light did she regard it?
They had sat thus for an hour together, and
Eames was not as yet an inch nearer to his object. He had sworn to
himself that he would not leave the Small House without asking Lily
to be his wife. It seemed to him as though he would be guilty of
falsehood towards the earl if he did so. Lord De Guest had opened
his house to him, and had asked all the Dales there, and had
offered himself up as a sacrifice at the cruel shrine of a serious
dinner-party, to say nothing of that easier and lighter sacrifice
which he had made in a pecuniary point of view, in order that this
thing might be done. Under such circumstances Eames was too honest
a man not to do it, let the difficulties in his way be what they
might.
He had sat there for an hour, and Mrs. Dale
still remained with her daughter. Should he get up boldly and ask
Lily to put on her bonnet and come out into the garden? As the
thought struck him, he rose and grasped at his hat. “I am going to
walk back to Guestwick,” said he.
“It was very good of you to come so far to
see us.”
“I was always fond of walking,” he said. “The
earl wanted me to ride, but I prefer being on foot when I know the
country, as I do here.”
“Have a glass of wine before you go.”
“Oh, dear, no. I think I’ll go back through
the squire’s fields, and out on the road at the white gate. The
path is quite dry now.”
“I dare say it is,” said Mrs. Dale.
“Lily, I wonder whether you would come as far
as that with me.” As the request was made Mrs. Dale looked at her
daughter almost beseechingly. “Do, pray do,” said he; “it is a
beautiful day for walking.”
The path proposed lay right across the field
into which Lily had taken Crosbie when she made her offer to let
him off from his engagement. Could it be possible that she should
ever walk there again with another lover? “No, John,” she said;
“not to-day, I think. I am almost tired, and I had rather not go
out.”
“It would do you good,” said Mrs. Dale.
“I don’t want to be done good to, mamma.
Besides, I should have to come back by myself.”
“I’ll come back with you,” said Johnny.
“Oh, yes; and then I should have to go again
with you. But, John, really I don’t wish to walk to-day.” Whereupon
John Eames again put down his hat.
“Lily,” said he; and then he stopped. Mrs.
Dale walked away to the window, turning her back upon her daughter
and visitor. “Lily, I have come over here on purpose to speak to
you. Indeed, I have come down from London only that I might see
you.”
“Have you, John?”
“Yes, I have. You know well all that I have
got to tell you. I loved you before he ever saw you; and now that
he has gone, I love you better than I ever did. Dear Lily!” and he
put out his hand to her.
“No, John; no,” she answered.
“Must it be always no?”
“Always no to that. How can it be otherwise?
You would not have me marry you while I love another!”
“But he is gone. He has taken another
wife.”
“I cannot change myself because he is
changed. If you are kind to me you will let that be enough.”
“But you are so unkind to me!”
“No, no; oh, I would wish to be so kind to
you! John, here; take my hand. It is the hand of a friend who loves
you, and will always love you. Dear John, I will do
anything—everything for you but that.”
“There is only one thing,” said he, still
holding her by the hand, but with his face turned from her.
“Nay; do not say so. Are you worse off than I
am? I could not have that one thing, and I was nearer to my heart’s
longings than you have ever been. I cannot have that one thing; but
I know that there are other things, and I will not allow myself to
be broken-hearted.”
“You are stronger than I am,” he said.
“Not stronger, but more certain. Make
yourself as sure as I am, and you, too, will be strong. Is it not
so, mamma?”
“I wish it could be otherwise—I wish it could
be otherwise! If you can give him any hope—”
“Mamma!”
“Tell me that I may come again—in a year,” he
pleaded.
“I cannot tell you so. You may not come
again—not in this way. Do you remember what I told you before, in
the garden; that I loved him better than all the world besides? It
is still the same. I still love him better than all the world. How,
then, can I give you any hope?”
“But it will not be so for ever, Lily.”
“For ever! Why should he not be mine as well
as hers when that for ever comes? John, if you understand what it
is to love, you will say nothing more of it. I have spoken to you
more openly about this than I have ever done to anybody, even to
mamma, because I have wished to make you understand my feelings. I
should be disgraced in my own eyes if I admitted the love of
another man, after—after—. It is to me almost as though I had
married him. I am not blaming him, remember. These things are
different with a man.”
She had not dropped his hand, and as she made
her last speech was sitting in her old chair with her eyes fixed
upon the ground. She spoke in a low voice, slowly, almost with
difficulty; but still the words came very clearly, with a clear,
distinct voice which caused them to be remembered with accuracy,
both by Eames and Mrs. Dale. To him it seemed to be impossible that
he should continue his suit after such a declaration. To Mrs. Dale
they were terrible words, speaking of a perpetual widowhood, and
telling of an amount of suffering greater even than that which she
had anticipated. It was true that Lily had never said so much to
her as she had now said to John Eames, or had attempted to make so
clear an exposition of her own feelings. “I should be disgraced in
my own eyes if I admitted the love of another man!” They were
terrible words, but very easy to be understood. Mrs. Dale had felt,
from the first, that Eames was coming too soon, that the earl and
the squire together were making an effort to cure the wound too
quickly after its infliction; that time should have been given to
her girl to recover. But now the attempt had been made, and words
had been forced from Lily’s lips, the speaking of which would never
be forgotten by herself.
“I knew that it would be so,” said
John.
“Ah, yes; you know it, because your heart
understands my heart. And you will not be angry with me, and say
naughty, cruel words, as you did once before. We will think of each
other, John, and pray for each other; and will always love one
another. When we do meet let us be glad to see each other. No other
friend shall ever be dearer to me than you are. You are so true and
honest! When you marry I will tell your wife what an infinite
blessing God has given her.”
“You shall never do that.”
“Yes, I will. I understand what you mean; but
yet I will.”
“Good-bye, Mrs. Dale,” he said.
“Good-bye, John. If it could have been
otherwise with her, you should have had all my best wishes in the
matter. I would have loved you dearly as my son; and I will love
you now.” Then she put up her lips and kissed his face.
“And so will I love you,” said Lily, giving
him her hand again. He looked longingly into her face as though he
had thought it possible that she also might kiss him: then he
pressed her hand to his lips, and without speaking any further
farewell, took up his hat and left the room.
“Poor fellow!” said Mrs. Dale.
“They should not have let him come,” said
Lily. “But they don’t understand. They think that I have lost a
toy, and they mean to be good-natured, and to give me another.”
Very shortly after that Lily went away by herself, and sat alone
for hours; and when she joined her mother again at tea-time,
nothing further was said of John Eames’s visit.
He made his way out by the front door, and
through the churchyard, and in this way on to the field through
which he had asked Lily to walk with him. He hardly began to think
of what had passed till he had left the squire’s house behind him.
As he made his way through the tombstones he paused and read one,
as though it interested him. He stood a moment under the tower
looking up at the clock, and then pulled out his own watch, as
though to verify the one by the other. He made, unconsciously, a
struggle to drive away from his thoughts the facts of the late
scene, and for some five or ten minutes he succeeded. He said to
himself a word or two about Sir Raffle and his letters, and laughed
inwardly as he remembered the figure of Rafferty bringing in the
knight’s shoes. He had gone some half mile upon his way before he
ventured to stand still and tell himself that he had failed in the
great object of his life.
Yes; he had failed: and he acknowledged to
himself, with bitter reproaches, that he had failed, now and for
ever. He told himself that he had obtruded upon her in her sorrow
with an unmannerly love, and rebuked himself as having been not
only foolish but ungenerous. His friend the earl had been wont, in
his waggish way, to call him the conquering hero, and had so talked
him out of his common sense as to have made him almost think that
he would be successful in his suit. Now, as he told himself that
any such success must have been impossible, he almost hated the
earl for having brought him to this condition. A conquering hero,
indeed! How should he manage to sneak back among them all at the
Manor House, crestfallen and abject in his misery? Everybody knew
the errand on which he had gone, and everybody must know of his
failure. How could he have been such a fool as to undertake such a
task under the eyes of so many lookers-on? Was it not the case that
he had so fondly expected success, as to think only of his triumph
in returning, and not of his more probable disgrace? He had allowed
others to make a fool of him, and had so made a fool of himself
that now all hope and happiness were over for him. How could he
escape at once out of the country, back to London? How could he get
away without saying a word further to anyone? That was the thought
that at first occupied his mind.
He crossed the road at the end of the
squire’s property, where the parish of Allington divides itself
from that of Abbot’s Guest in which the earl’s house stands, and
made his way back along the copse which skirted the field in which
they had encountered the bull, into the high woods which were at
the back of the park. Ah, yes; it had been well for him that he had
not come out on horseback. That ride home along the high road and
up to the Manor House stables would, under his present
circumstances, have been almost impossible to him. As it was, he
did not think it possible that he should return to his place in the
earl’s house. How could he pretend to maintain his ordinary
demeanour under the eyes of those two old men? It would be better
for him to get home to his mother—to send a message from thence to
the Manor, and then to escape back to London. So thinking, but with
no resolution made, he went on through the woods, and down from the
hill back towards the town till he again came to the little bridge
over the brook. There he stopped and stood a while with his broad
hand spread over the letters which he had cut in those early days,
so as to hide them from his sight. “What an ass I have been—always
and ever!” he said to himself.
It was not only of his late disappointment
that he was thinking, but of his whole past life. He was conscious
of his hobbledehoyhood—of that backwardness on his part in assuming
manhood which had rendered him incapable of making himself
acceptable to Lily before she had fallen into the clutches of
Crosbie. As he thought of this he declared to himself that if he
could meet Crosbie again he would again thrash him—that he would so
belabour him as to send him out of the world, if such sending might
possibly be done by fair beating, regardless whether he himself
might be called upon to follow him. Was it not hard that for the
two of them—for Lily and for him also—there should be such
punishment because of the insincerity of that man? When he had thus
stood upon the bridge for some quarter of an hour, he took out his
knife, and, with deep rough gashes in the wood, cut out Lily’s name
from the rail.
He had hardly finished, and was still looking
at the chips as they were being carried away by the stream, when a
gentle step came close up to him, and turning round, he saw that
Lady Julia was on the bridge. She was close to him, and had already
seen his handiwork. “Has she offended you, John?” she said.
“Oh, Lady Julia!”
“Has she offended you?”
“She has refused me, and it is all
over.”
“It may be that she has refused you, and that
yet it need not be all over. I am sorry that you have cut out the
name. John. Do you mean to cut it out from your heart?”
“Never. I would if I could, but I never
shall.”
“Keep to it as to a great treasure. It will
be a joy to you in after years, and not a sorrow. To have loved
truly, even though you shall have loved in vain, will be a
consolation when you are as old as I am. It is something to have
had a heart.”
“I don’t know. I wish that I had none.”
“And, John—I can understand her feeling now;
and, indeed, I thought all through that you were asking her too
soon; but the time may yet come when she will think better of your
wishes.”
“No, no; never. I begin to know her
now.”
“If you can be constant in your love you may
win her yet. Remember how young she is; and how young you both are.
Come again in two years’ time, and then, when you have won her, you
shall tell me that I have been a good old woman to you both.”
“I shall never win her, Lady Julia.” As he
spoke these last words the tears were running down his cheeks, and
he was weeping openly in presence of his companion. It was well for
him that she had come upon him in his sorrow. When he once knew
that she had seen his tears, he could pour out to her the whole
story of his grief; and as he did so she led him back quietly to
the house.