CHAPTER LIX
A Lady Presents her Compliments to Miss L.
D.
One morning, while Lily Dale was staying with
Mrs. Thorne in London, there was brought up to her room, as she was
dressing for dinner, a letter which the postman had just left for
her. The address was written with a feminine hand, and Lily was at
once aware that she did not know the writing. The angles were very
acute, and the lines were very straight, and the vowels looked to
be cruel and false, with their sharp points and their open eyes.
Lily at once knew that it was the performance of a woman who had
been taught to write at school, and not at home, and she became
prejudiced against the writer before she opened the letter. When
she had opened the letter and read it, her feelings towards the
writer were not of a kindly nature. It was as follows:—
“A lady presents her compliments to Miss L.
D., and earnestly implores Miss L. D. to give her an answer to the
following question. Is Miss L. D. engaged to marry Mr. J. E.? The
lady in question pledges herself not to interfere with Miss L. D.
in any way, should the answer be in the affirmative. The lady
earnestly requests that a reply to this question may be sent to M.
D., Post-office, 455 Edgware Road. In order that L. D. may not
doubt that M. D. has an interest in J. E., M. D. encloses the last
note she received from him before he started for the Continent.”
Then there was a scrap, which Lily well knew to be in the
handwriting of John Eames, and the scrap was as follows—”Dearest
M.—punctually at 8.30. Ever and always your unalterable J. E.”
Lily, as she read this, did not comprehend that John’s note to M.
D. had been in itself a joke.
Lily Dale had heard of anonymous letters
before, but had never received one, or even seen one. Now that she
had one in her hand, it seemed to her that there could be nothing
more abominable than the writing of such a letter. She let it drop
from her as though the receiving, and opening, and reading it had
been a stain to her. As it lay on the ground at her feet, she trod
upon it.
Of what sort could a woman be who wrote such
a letter as that? Answer it! Of course she would not answer it. It
never occurred to her for a moment that it could become her to
answer it. Had she been at home or with her mother, she would have
called her mother to her, and Mrs. Dale would have taken it from
the ground, and have read it, and then destroyed it. As it was, she
must pick it up herself. She did so, and declared to herself that
there should be an end to it. It might be right that somebody
should see it, and therefore she would show it to Emily Dunstable;
after that it should be destroyed.
Of course the letter could have no effect
upon her. So she told herself. But it did have a very strong
effect, and probably the exact effect which the writer had intended
that it should have. J. E. was, of course, John Eames. There was no
doubt about that. What a fool the writer must have been to talk of
L. D. in the letter, when the outside cover was plainly addressed
to Miss Lilian Dale! But there are some people for whom the
pretended mystery of initial letters has a charm, and who love the
darkness of anonymous letters. As Lily thought of this, she stamped
on the letter again. Who was the M. D. to whom she was required to
send an answer—with whom John Eames corresponded in the most
affectionate terms? She had resolved not even to ask herself a
question about M. D., and yet she could not divert her mind from
the inquiry. It was, at any rate, a fact that there must be some
woman designated by the letters—some woman who had, at any rate,
chosen to call herself M. D. And John Eames had called her M. There
must, at any rate, be such a woman. This female, be she who she
might, had thought it worth her while to make this inquiry about
John Eames, and had manifestly learned something of Lily’s own
history. And the woman had pledged herself not to interfere with
John Eames, if L. D. would only condescend to say that she was
engaged to him! As Lily thought of the proposition, she trod upon
the letter for the third time. Then she picked it up, and having no
place of custody under lock and key ready to her hand she put it in
her pocket.
At night, before she went to bed, she showed
the letter to Emily Dunstable. “Is it not surprising that any woman
could bring herself to write such a letter?” said Lily.
But Miss Dunstable hardly saw it in the same
light. “If anybody were to write me such a letter about Bernard,”
said she, “I should show to him as a good joke.”
“That would be very different. You and
Bernard, of course, understand each other.”
“And so will you and Mr. Eames—some day, I
hope.”
“Never more than we do now, dear. The thing
that annoys me is that such a woman as that should have even heard
my name at all.”
“As long as people have got ears and tongues,
people will hear other people’s names.”
Lily paused a moment, and then spoke again,
asking another question. “I suppose this woman does know him? She
must know him, because he has written to her.”
“She knows something about him, no doubt, and
has some reason for wishing that you should quarrel with him. If I
were you, I should take care not to gratify her. As for Mr. Eames’s
note, it is a joke.”
“It is nothing to me,” said Lily.
“I suppose,” continued Emily, “that most
gentlemen become acquainted with some people that they would not
wish all their friends to know that they knew. They go about so
much more than we do, and meet people of all sorts.”
“No gentleman should become intimately
acquainted with a woman who could write such a letter as that,”
said Lily. And as she spoke she remembered a certain episode to
John Eames’s early life, which had reached her from a source which
she had not doubted, and which had given her pain and offended her.
She had believed that John Eames had in that case behaved very
cruelly to a young woman, and had thought that her offence had come
simply from that feeling. “But of course it is nothing to me,” she
said. “Mr. Eames can choose his friends as he likes. I only wish
that my name might not be mentioned to them.”
“It is not from him that she has heard
it.”
“Perhaps not. As I said before, of course it
does not signify; only there is something very disagreeable in the
whole thing. The idea is so hateful! Of course this woman means me
to understand that she considers herself to have a claim upon Mr.
Eames, and that I stand in her way.”
“And why should you stand in her way?”
“I will stand in nobody’s way. Mr. Eames has
a right to give his hand to anyone that he pleases. I, at any rate,
can have no cause of offence against him. The only thing is that I
do wish that my name could be left alone.” Lily, when she was in
her own room again, did destroy the letter; but before she did so
she read it again, and it became so indelibly impressed on her
memory that she could not forget even the words of it. The lady who
wrote had pledged herself, under certain conditions, “not to
interfere with Miss L. D.” “Interfere with me!” Lily said to
herself; “nobody can interfere with me; nobody has power to do so.”
As she turned it over in her mind, her heart became hard against
John Eames. No woman would have troubled herself to write such a
letter without some cause for the writing. That the writer was
vulgar, false, and unfeminine, Lily thought that she could perceive
from the letter itself; but no doubt the woman knew John Eames, had
some interest in the question of his marriage, and was entitled to
some answer to her question—only was not entitled to such answer
from Lily Dale.
For some weeks past now, up to the hour at
which the anonymous letter had reached her hands, Lily’s heart had
been growing soft and still softer towards John Eames; and now
again it had become hardened. I think that the appearance of
Adolphus Crosbie in the Park, that momentary vision of the real man
by which the divinity of the imaginary Apollo had been dashed to
the ground, had done a service to the cause of the other lover; of
the lover who had never been a god, but who of late years had at
any rate grown into the full dimensions of a man. Unfortunately for
the latter, he had commenced his love-making when he was but little
more than a boy. Lily, as she had thought of the two together, in
the days of her solitude, after she had been deserted by Crosbie,
had ever pictured to herself the lover whom she had preferred as
having something god-like in his favour, as being far the superior
in wit, in manner, in acquirement, and in personal advantage. There
had been good-nature and true hearty love on the side of the other
man; but circumstances had seemed to show that his good-nature was
equal to all, and that he was able to share even his hearty love
among two or three. A man of such a character, known by a girl from
his boyhood as John Eames had been known by Lily Dale, was likely
to find more favour as a friend than as a lover. So it had been
between John Eames and Lily. While the untrue memory of what
Crosbie was, or ever had been, was present to her, she could hardly
bring herself to accept in her mind the idea of a lover who was
less noble in his manhood than the false picture which that untrue
memory was ever painting for her. Then had come before her eyes the
actual man; and though he had been seen but for a moment, the false
image had been broken into shivers. Lily had discovered that she
had been deceived, and that her forgiveness had been asked, not by
a god, but by an ordinary human being. As regarded the ungod-like
man himself, this could make no difference. Having thought upon the
matter deeply, she had resolved that she would not marry Mr.
Crosbie, and had pledged herself to that effect to friends who
never could have brought themselves to feel affection for him, even
had she married him. But the shattering of the false image might
have done John Eames a good turn. Lily knew that she had at any
rate full permission from all her friends to throw in her lot with
his—if she could persuade herself to do so. Mother, uncle, sister,
brother-in-law, cousin—and now this new cousin’s bride that was to
be—together with Lady Julia and a whole crowd of Allington and
Guestwick friends, were in favour of such a marriage. There had
been nothing against it but the fact that the other man had been
dearer to her; and that other fact that poor Johnny lacked
something—something of earnestness, something of manliness,
something of that Phoebus divinity with which Crosbie had contrived
to invest his own image. But, as I have said above, John had
gradually grown, if not into divinity, at least into manliness; and
the shattering of the false image had done him yeoman’s service.
Now had come this accursed letter, and Lily, despite herself,
despite her better judgment, could not sweep it away from her mind
and make the letter as nothing to her. M. D. had promised not to
interfere with her! There was no room for such interference, no
possibility that such interference should take place. She hoped
earnestly—so she told herself—that her old friend John Eames might
have nothing to do with a woman so impudent and vulgar as must be
this M. D.; but except as regarded old friendship, M. D. and John
Eames, apart or together, could be as nothing to her. Therefore, I
say that the letter had had the effect which the writer of it had
desired.
All London was new to Lily Dale, and Mrs.
Thorne was very anxious to show her everything that could be seen.
She was to return to Allington before the flowers of May would have
come, and the crowd and the glare and the fashion and the art of
the Academy’s great exhibition must therefore remain unknown to
her; but she was taken to see many pictures, and among others she
was taken to see the pictures belonging to a certain nobleman who,
with that munificence which is so amply enjoyed and so little
recognised in England, keeps open house for the world to see the
treasures which the wealth of his family had collected. The
necessary order was procured, and on a certain brilliant April
afternoon, Mrs. Thorne and her party found themselves in this
nobleman’s drawing-room. Lily was with her, of course, and Emily
Dunstable was there, and Bernard Dale, and Mrs. Thorne’s dear
friend Mrs. Harold Smith, and Mrs. Thorne’s constant and useful
attendant, Siph Dunn. They had nearly completed their delightful
but wearying task of gazing at pictures, and Mrs. Harold Smith had
declared that she would not look at another painting till the
exhibition was open; three of the ladies were seated in the
drawing-room, and Siph Dunn was standing before them, lecturing
about art as though he had been brought up on the ancient masters;
Emily and Bernard were lingering behind, and the others were simply
delaying their departure till the truant lovers should have caught
them. At this moment two gentlemen entered the room from the
gallery, and the two gentlemen were Fowler Pratt and Adolphus
Crosbie.
All the party except Mrs. Thorne knew Crosbie
personally, and all of them except Mrs. Harold Smith knew something
of the story of what had occurred between Crosbie and Lily. Siph
Dunn had learned it all since the meeting in the park, having
nearly learned it all from what he had seen with there with his
eyes. But Mrs. Thorne, who knew Lily’s story, did not know
Crosbie’s appearance. But there was his friend Fowler Pratt, who,
as will be remembered, had dined with her but the other day; and
she, with that outspoken and somewhat loud impulse which was
natural to her, addressed him at once across the room, calling him
by name. Had she not done so, the two men might probably have
escaped through the room, in which case they would have met Bernard
Dale and Emily Dunstable in the doorway. Fowler Pratt would have
endeavoured so to escape, and to carry Crosbie with him, as he was
quite alive to the expedience of saving Lily from such a meeting.
But, as things turned out, escape from Mrs. Thorne was
impossible.
“There’s Fowler Pratt,” she had said when
they first entered, quite loud enough for Fowler Pratt to hear her.
“Mr. Pratt, come here. How d’ye do? You dined with me last Tuesday,
and you’ve never been to call.”
“I never recognise that obligation till after
the middle of May,” said Mr. Pratt, shaking hands with Mrs. Thorne
and Mrs. Smith, and bowing to Miss Dale.
“I don’t see the justice of that at all,”
said Mrs. Thorne. “It seems to me that a good dinner is as much
entitled to a morsel of pasteboard in April as at any other time.
You won’t have another till you have called—unless you’re specially
wanted.”
Crosbie would have gone on, but that in his
attempt to do so he passed close by the chair on which Mrs. Harold
Smith was sitting, and that he was accosted by her. “Mr. Crosbie,”
she said, “I haven’t seen you for an age. Has it come to pass that
you have buried yourself entirely?” He did not know how to
extricate himself so as to move on at once. He paused, and
hesitated, and then stopped, and made an attempt to talk to Mrs.
Smith as though he were at his ease. The attempt was anything but
successful; but having once stopped, he did not know how to put
himself in motion again, so that he might escape. At this moment
Bernard Dale and Emily Dunstable came up and joined the group; but
neither of them had discovered who Crosbie was till they were close
upon him.
Lily was seated between Mrs. Thorne and Mrs.
Smith, and Siph Dunn had been standing immediately opposite to
them. Fowler Pratt, who had been drawn into the circle against his
will, was now standing close to Dunn, almost between him and
Lily—and Crosbie was standing within two yards of Lily, on the
other side of Dunn. Emily and Bernard had gone behind Pratt and
Crosbie to Mrs. Thorne’s side before they had recognised the two
men—and in this way Lily was completely surrounded. Mrs. Thorne,
who in spite of her eager, impetuous ways, was as thoughtful of
others as any woman could be, as soon as she heard Crosbie’s name
understood it all, and knew that it would be well that she should
withdraw Lily from her plight. Crosbie, in his attempt to talk to
Mrs. Smith, had smiled and simpered, and had then felt that to
smile and simper before Lily Dale, with a pretended indifference to
her presence, was false on his part, and would seem to be mean. He
would have avoided Lily for both their sakes, had it been possible;
but it was no longer possible, and he could not keep his eyes from
her face. Hardly knowing what he did, he bowed to her, lifted his
hat, and uttered some word of greeting.
Lily, from the moment that she had perceived
his presence, had looked straight before her, with something almost
of fierceness in her eyes. Both Pratt and Siph Dunn had observed
her narrowly. It had seemed as though Crosbie had been altogether
outside the ken of her eyes, or the notice of her ears, and yet she
had seen every motion of his body, and had heard every word which
had fallen from his lips. Now, when he saluted her, she turned her
face full upon him, and bowed to him. Then she rose from her seat,
and made her way, between Siph Dunn and Pratt, out of the circle.
The blood had mounted to her face and suffused it all, and her
whole manner was such that it could escape the observation of none
who stood there. Even Mrs. Harold Smith had seen it, and had read
the story. As soon as she was on her feet, Bernard had dropped
Emily’s hand, and offered his arm to his cousin. “Lily,” he had
said out loud, “you had better let me take you away. It is a
misfortune that you have been subjected to the insult of such a
greeting.” Bernard and Crosbie had been early friends, and Bernard
had been the unfortunate means of bringing Crosbie and Lily
together. Up to this day, Bernard had never had his revenge for the
ill-treatment which his cousin had received. Some morsel of that
revenge came to him now. Lily almost hated her cousin for what he
said; but she took his arm, and walked with him from the room. It
must be acknowledged in excuse for Bernard Dale, and as an apology
for the apparent indiscretion of his words, that all the
circumstances of the meeting had become apparent to everyone there.
The misfortune of the encounter had become too plain to admit of
its being hidden under any of the ordinary veils of society.
Crosbie’s salutation had been made before the eyes of them all, and
in the midst of absolute silence, and Lily had risen with so
queen-like a demeanour, and had moved with so stately a step, that
it was impossible that anyone concerned should pretend to ignore
the facts of the scene that had occurred. Crosbie was still
standing close to Mrs. Harold Smith, Mrs. Thorne had risen from her
seat, and the words which Bernard Dale had uttered were still
sounding in the ears of them all. “Shall I see after the carriage?”
said Siph Dunn. “Do,” said Mrs. Thorne; “or, stay a moment; the
carriage will of course be there, and we will go together.
Good-morning, Mr. Pratt. I expect that, at any rate, you will send
me your card by post.” Then they all passed on, and Crosbie and
Fowler Pratt were left among the pictures.
“I think you will agree with me now that you
had better give her up,” said Fowler Pratt.
“I will never give her up,” said Crosbie,
“till I hear that she has married some one else.”
“You may take my word for it, that she will
never marry you after what has just now occurred.”
“Very likely not; but still the attempt, even
the idea of the attempt will be a comfort to me. I shall be
endeavouring to do that which I ought to have done.”
“What you have got to think of, I should
suppose, is her comfort—not your own.”
Crosbie stood for a while silent, looking at
a portrait which was hung just within the doorway of a smaller room
into which they had passed, as though his attention were entirely
rivetted by the picture. But he was thinking of the picture not at
all, and did not even know what kind of painting was on the canvas
before him.
“Pratt,” he said at last, “you are always
hard to me.”
“I will say nothing more to you on the
subject, if you wish me to be silent.”
“I do wish you to be silent about
that.”
“That shall be enough,” said Pratt.
“You do not quite understand me. You do not
know how thoroughly I have repented of the evil that I have done,
or how far I would go to make retribution, if retribution were
possible.”
Fowler Pratt, having been told to hold his
tongue as regarded that subject, made no reply to this, and began
to talk about the pictures.
Lily, leaning on her cousin’s arm, was out in
the courtyard in front of the house before Mrs. Thorne and Siph
Dunn. It was but for a minute, but still there was a minute in
which Bernard felt that he ought to say a word to her.
“I hope you are not angry with me, Lily, for
having spoken.”
“I wish, of course, that you had not spoken;
but I am not angry. I have no right to be angry. I made the
misfortune for myself. Do not say anything more about it, dear
Bernard—that is all.”
They had walked to the picture-gallery; but,
by agreement, two carriages had come to take them away—Mrs.
Thorne’s and Mrs. Harold Smith’s. Mrs. Thorne easily managed to
send Emily Dunstable and Bernard away with her friend, and to tell
Siph Dunn that he must manage for himself. In this way it was
contrived that no one but Mrs. Thorne should be with Lily
Dale.
“My dear,” said Mrs. Thorne, “it seemed to me
that you were a little put out, and so I thought it best to send
them all away.”
“It was very kind.”
“He ought to have passed on and not to have
stood an instant when he saw you,” said Mrs. Thorne, with
indignation. “There are moments when it is a man’s duty simply to
vanish, to melt into the air, or to sink into the ground—in which
he is bound to overcome the difficulties of such sudden
self-removal, or must ever after be accounted poor and mean.”
“I did not want him to vanish—if only he had
not spoken to me.”
“He should have vanished. A man is sometimes
bound in honour to do so, even when he himself has done nothing
wrong—when the sin has been all with the woman. Her femininity has
still a right to expect that so much shall be done in its behalf.
But when the sin has been all his own, as it was in this case—and
such damning sin too—”
“Pray do not go on, Mrs. Thorne.”
“He ought to go out and hang himself simply
for having allowed himself to be seen. I thought Bernard behaved
very well, and I shall tell him so.”
“I wish you could manage to forget it all,
and say no word more about it.”
“I won’t trouble you with it, my dear; I will
promise you that. But, Lily, I can hardly understand you. This man
who must have been and must ever be a brute—”
“Mrs. Thorne, you promised me this instant
that you would not talk of him.”
“After this I will not; but you must let me
have my way now for one moment. I have so often longed to speak to
you, but have not done so from fear of offending you. Now the
matter has come up by chance, and it was impossible that what has
occurred should pass by without a word. I cannot conceive why the
memory of that bad man should be allowed to destroy your whole
life.”
“My life is not destroyed. My life is
anything but destroyed. It is a very happy life.”
“But, my dear, if all that I hear is true,
there is a most estimable young man, whom everybody likes, and
particularly your own family, and whom you like very much yourself;
and you will have nothing to say to him, though his constancy is
like the constancy of an old Paladin—and all because of this wretch
who just now came in your way.”
“Mrs. Thorne, it is impossible to explain it
all.”
“I do not want you to explain it all. Of
course I would not ask any young woman to marry a man whom she did
not love. Such marriages are abominable to me. But I think that a
young woman ought to get married if the thing fairly comes in her
way, and if her friends approve, and if she is fond of the man who
is fond of her. It may be that some memory of what has gone before
is allowed to stand in your way, and that it should not be so
allowed. It sometimes happens that a horrid morbid sentiment will
destroy a life. Excuse me, then, Lily, if I say too much to you in
my hope that you may not suffer after this fashion.”
“I know how kind you are, Mrs. Thorne.”
“Here we are at home, and perhaps you would
like to go in. I have some calls which I must make.” Then the
conversation was ended, and Lily was alone.
As if she had not thought of it all before!
As if there was anything new in this counsel which Mrs. Thorne had
given her! She had received the same advice from her mother, from
her sister, from her uncle, and from Lady Julia, till she was sick
of it. How had it come to pass that matters which with others are
so private, should with her have become the public property of so
large a circle? Any other girl would receive advice on such a
subject from her mother alone, and there the secret would rest. But
her secret had been published, as it were, by the town-crier in the
High Street! Everybody knew that she had been jilted by Adolphus
Crosbie, and that it was intended that she should be consoled by
John Eames. And people seemed to think that they had a right to
rebuke her if she expressed an unwillingness to carry out this
intention which the public had so kindly arranged for her.
Morbid sentiment! Why should she be accused
of morbid sentiment because she was unable to transfer her
affections to the man who had been fixed on as her future husband
by the large circle of acquaintances who had interested themselves
in her affairs? There was nothing morbid in either her desires or
her regrets. So she assured herself, with something very much like
anger at the accusation made against her. She had been contented,
and was contented, to live at home as her mother lived, asking for
no excitement beyond that given by the daily routine of her duties.
There could be nothing morbid in that. She would go back to
Allington as soon as might be, and have done with this London life,
which only made her wretched. This seeing of Crosbie had been
terrible to her. She did not tell herself that his image had been
shattered. Her idea was that all her misery had come from the
untowardness of the meeting. But there was the fact that she had
seen the man and heard his voice, and that the seeing him and
hearing him had made her miserable. She certainly desired that it
might never be her lot either to see him or to hear him
again.
And as for John Eames—in those bitter moments
of her reflection she almost wished the same in regard to him. If
he would only cease to be her lover, he might be very well; but he
was not very well to her as long as his pretensions were dinned
into her ear by everybody who knew her. And then she told herself
that John would have a better chance if he had been content to
plead for himself. In this, I think, she was hard upon her lover.
He had pleaded for himself as well as he knew how, and as often as
the occasion had been given to him. It had hardly been his fault
that his case had been taken in hand by other advocates. He had
given no commission to Mrs. Thorne to plead for him.
Poor Johnny. He had stood in much better
favour before the lady had presented her compliments to Miss L. D.
It was that odious letter, and the thoughts which it had forced
upon Lily’s mind, which were now most inimical to his interests.
Whether Lily loved him or not, she did not love him well enough to
be jealous of him. Had any such letter reached her respecting
Crosbie in the happy days of her young love, she would simply have
laughed at it. It would have been nothing to her. But now she was
sore and unhappy, and any trifle was powerful enough to irritate
her. “Is Miss L. D. engaged to marry Mr. J. E.?” “No,” said Lily,
out loud. “Lily Dale is not engaged to marry John Eames, and never
will be so engaged.” She was almost tempted to sit down and write
the required answer to Miss M. D. Though the letter had been
destroyed, she well remembered the number of the post-office in the
Edgware Road. Poor John Eames.
That evening she told Emily Dunstable that
she thought she would like to return to Allington before the day
that had been appointed for her. “But why,” said Emily, “should you
be worse than your word?”
“I daresay it will seem silly, but the fact
is I am homesick. I’m not accustomed to be away from mama for so
long.”
“I hope it is not what occurred to-day at the
picture-gallery.”
“I won’t deny that it is that in part.”
“That was a strange accident, you know, that
might never occur again.”
“It has occurred twice already, Emily.”
“I don’t call the affair in the park
anything. Anybody may see anybody else in the Park, of course. He
was not brought so near you that he could annoy you there. You
ought certainly to wait till Mr. Eames has come back from
Italy.”
Then Lily decided that she must and would go
back to Allington on the next Monday, and she actually did write a
letter to her mother that night to say that such was her intention.
But on the morrow her heart was less sore, and the letter was not
sent.