CHAPTER XXIX
Miss Lily Dale’s Logic
Lady Julia De Guest always lunched at one
exactly, and it was not much past twelve when John Eames made his
appearance at the cottage. He was of course told to stay, and of
course said that he would stay. It had been his purpose to lunch
with Lady Julia; but then he had not expected to find Lily Dale at
the cottage. Lily herself would have been quite at her ease,
protected by Lady Julia, and somewhat protected also by her own
powers of fence, had it not been that Grace was there also. But
Grace Crawley, from the moment that she had heard the description
of the gentleman who looked out of the window with his glass in his
eye, had by no means been at her ease. Lily saw at once that she
could not be brought to join in any conversation, and both John and
Lady Julia, in their ignorance of the matter in hand, made matters
worse.
“So that was Major Grantly?” said John. “I
have heard of him before, I think. He is a son of the old
archdeacon, is he not?”
“I don’t know about old archdeacon,” said
Lady Julia. “The archdeacon is the son of the old bishop, whom I
remember very well. And it is not so very long since the bishop
died, either.”
“I wonder what he’s doing at Allington,” said
Johnny.
“I think he knows my uncle,” said Lily.
“But he’s going to call on your mother, he
said.” Then Johnny remembered that the major had said something as
to knowing Miss Crawley, and for the moment he was silent.
“I remember when they talked of making the
son a bishop also,” said Lady Julia.
“What—this same man who is now a major?” said
Johnny.
“No, you goose. He is not the son; he is the
grandson. They were going to make the archdeacon a bishop, and I
remember hearing that he was terribly disappointed. He is getting
to be an old man now, I suppose; and yet, dear me, how well I
remember his father.”
“He didn’t look like a bishop’s son,” said
Johnny.
“How does a bishop’s son look,” Lily
asked.
“I suppose he ought to have some sort of
clerical tinge about him; but this fellow had nothing of that
kind.”
“But then this fellow, as you call him,” said
Lily, “is only the son of an archdeacon.”
“That accounts for it, I suppose,” said
Johnny.
But during all this time Grace did not say a
word, and Lily perceived it. Then she bethought herself as to what
she had better do. Grace, she knew, could not be comfortable where
she was. Nor, indeed, was it probable that Grace would be very
comfortable in returning home. There could not be much ease for
Grace till the coming meeting between her and Major Grantly should
be over. But it would be better that Grace should go back to
Allington at once; and better also, perhaps, for Major Grantly that
it should be so. “Lady Julia,” she said, “I don’t think we’ll mind
stopping for lunch to-day.”
“Nonsense, my dear; you promised.”
“I think we must break our promise; I do
indeed. You mustn’t be angry with us.” And Lily looked at Lady
Julia, as though there were something which Lady Julia ought to
understand, which she, Lily, could not quite explain. I fear that
Lily was false, and intended her old friend to believe that she was
running away because John Eames had come there.
“But you will be famished,” said Lady
Julia.
“We shall live through it,” said Lily.
“It is out of the question that I should let
you walk all the way here from Allington and all the way back
without taking something.”
“We shall just be home in time for lunch if
we go now,” said Lily. “Will not that be best, Grace?”
Grace hardly knew what would be best. She
only knew that Major Grantly was at Allington, and that he had come
thither to see her. The idea of hurrying back after him was
unpleasant to her, and yet she was so flurried that she felt
thankful to Lily for taking her away from the cottage. The matter
was compromised at last. They remained for half-an-hour, and ate
some biscuits and pretended to drink a glass of wine, and then they
started. John Eames, who in truth believed that Lily Dale was
running away from him, was by no means well pleased, and when the
girls were gone, did not make himself so agreeable to his old
friend as he should have done. “What a fool I am to come here at
all,” he said, throwing himself into an arm-chair as soon as the
front door was closed.
“That’s very civil to me, John!”
“You know what I mean, Lady Julia. I am a
fool to come near her, until I can do so without thinking more of
her than I do of any other girl in the county.”
“I don’t think you have anything to complain
of as yet,” said Lady Julia, who had in some sort perceived that
Lily’s retreat had been on Grace’s account, and not on her own. “It
seems to me that Lily was very glad to see you, and when I told her
that you were coming to stay here, and would be near them for some
days, she seemed to be quite pleased—she did indeed.”
“Then why did she run away the moment I came
in?” said Johnny.
“I think it was something you said about that
man who has gone to Allington.”
“What difference can the man make to her? The
truth is, I despise myself—I do indeed, Lady Julia. Only think of
my meeting Crosbie at dinner the other day, and his having the
impertinence to come up and shake hands with me.”
“I suppose he didn’t say anything about what
happened at the Paddington Station?”
“No; he didn’t speak about that. I wish I
knew whether she cares for him still. If I thought she did, I would
never speak another word to her—I mean about myself. Of course I am
not going to quarrel with them. I am not such a fool as that.” Then
Lady Julia tried to comfort him, and succeeded so far that he was
induced to eat the mince veal that had been intended for the
comfort and support of the two young ladies who had run away.
“Do you think it is he?” were the first words
which Grace said when they were fairly on their way back
together.
“I should think it must be. What other man
can there be, of that sort, who would be likely to come to
Allington to see you?”
“His coming is not likely. I cannot
understand that he should come. He let me leave Silverbridge
without seeing me—and I thought that he was quite right.”
“And I think he is quite right to come here.
I am very glad he has come. It shows that he has really something
like a heart inside him. Had he not come, or sent, or written, or
taken some step before the trial comes on, to make you know that he
was thinking of you, I should have said that he was as hard—as hard
as any other man that I ever heard of. Men are so hard! But I don’t
think he is, now. I am beginning to regard him as the one chevalier
sans peur et sans reproche, and to
fancy that you ought to go down on your knees before him, and kiss
his highness’s shoe-buckle. In judging of men one’s mind vacillates
so quickly between the scorn which is due to a false man and the
worship which is due to a true man.” Then she was silent for a
moment, but Grace said nothing, and Lily continued, “I tell you
fairly, Grace, that I shall expect very much from you now.”
“Much in what way, Lily?”
“In the way of worship. I shall not be
content that you should merely love him. If he has come here, as he
must have done, to say that the moment of the world’s reproach is
the moment he has chosen to ask you to be his wife, I think that
you will owe him more than love.”
“I shall owe him more than love, and I will
pay him more than love,” said Grace. There was something in the
tone of her voice as she spoke which made Lily stop her and look up
into her face. There was a smile there which Lily had never seen
before, and which gave a beauty to her which was wonderful to
Lily’s eyes. Surely this lover of Grace’s must have seen her smile
like that, and therefore had loved her and was giving such
wonderful proof of his love. “Yes,” continued Grace, standing and
looking at her friend, “you may stare at me, Lily, but you may be
sure that I will do for Major Grantly all the good that I can do
for him.”
“What do you mean, Grace?”
“Never mind what I mean. You are very
imperious in managing your own affairs, and you must let me be so
equally in mine.”
“But I tell you everything.”
“Do you suppose that if—if—if in real truth
it can possibly be the case that Major Grantly shall have come here
to offer me his hand when we are all ground down in the dust, as we
are, do you think that I will let him sacrifice himself? Would
you?”
“Certainly. Why not? There will be no
sacrifice. He will be asking for that which he wishes to get; and
you will be bound to give it to him.”
“If he wants it, where is his nobility? If it
be as you say, he will have shown himself noble, and his nobility
will have consisted in this, that he has been willing to take that
which he does not want, in order that he may succour the one whom
he loves. I also will succour one whom I love, as best I know how.”
Then she walked on quickly before her friend, and Lily stood for a
moment thinking before she followed her. They were now on a
field-path, by which they were enabled to escape the road back to
Allington for the greater part of the distance, and Grace had
reached a stile, and had clambered over it before Lily had caught
her.
“You must not go away by yourself,” said
Lily.
“I don’t wish to go away by myself.”
“I want you to stop a moment and listen to
me. I am sure you are wrong in this—wrong for both your sakes. You
believe that he loves you?”
“I thought he did once; and if he has come
here to see me, I suppose he does still.”
“If that be the case, and if you also love
him—”
“I do. I make no mystery about that to you. I
do love him with all my heart. I love him to-day, now that I
believe him to be here, and that I suppose I shall see him, perhaps
this very afternoon. And I loved him yesterday, when I thought that
I should never see him again. I do love him. I do. I love him so
well that I will never do him an injury.”
“That being so, if he makes you an offer you
are bound to accept it. I do not think that you have an
alternative.”
“I have an alternative, and I shall use it.
Why don’t you take my cousin John?”
“Because I like somebody else better. If you
have got as good a reason, I won’t say another word to you.”
“And why don’t you take that other
person?”
“Because I cannot trust his love; that is
why. It is not very kind of you, opening my sores afresh, when I am
trying to heal yours.”
“Oh, Lily, am I unkind—unkind to you, who
have been so generous to me?”
“I’ll forgive you all that and a deal more if
you will only listen to me and try to take my advice. Because this
major of yours does a generous thing, which is for the good of you
both—the infinite good of both of you—you are to emulate his
generosity by doing a thing which will be for the good of neither
of you. That is about it. Yes, it is, Grace. You cannot doubt that
he has been meaning this for some time past; and of course, if he
looks upon you as his own—and I dare say, if the whole truth is to
be told, he does—”
“But I am not his own.”
“Yes you are, in one sense; you have just
said so with a great deal of energy. And if it is so—let me see,
where was I?”
“Oh, Lily, you need not mind where you
were.”
“But I do mind, and I hate to be interrupted
in my arguments. Yes, just that. If he saw his cow sick, he’d try
to doctor the cow in her sickness. He sees that you are sick, and
of course he comes to your relief.”
“I am not Major Grantly’s cow.”
“Yes, you are.”
“Nor his dog, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor
anything that is his, except—except, Lily, the dearest friend that
he has on the face of the earth. He cannot have a friend that will
go further for him than I will. He will never know how far I will
go to serve him. You don’t know his people. Nor do I know them. But
I know what they are. His sister is married to a marquis.”
“What has that to do with it?” said Lily,
sharply. “If she were married to an archduke, what difference would
that make?”
“And they are proud people—all of them—and
rich; and they live with high persons in the world.”
“I didn’t care though they lived with the
royal family, and had the Prince of Wales for their bosom friend.
It only shows how much better he is than they are.”
“But think what my family is—how we are
situated. When my father was simply poor I did not care about it,
because he has been born and bred a gentleman. But now he is
disgraced. Yes, Lily, he is. I am bound to say so, at any rate to
myself, when I am thinking of Major Grantly; and I will not carry
that disgrace into a family which would feel it so keenly as they
would do.” Lily, however, went on with her arguments, and was still
arguing when they turned the corner of the lane, and came upon
Lily’s uncle and the major himself.