CHAPTER 25
Hollingford in a Bustle
All Hollingford felt as if there was a
great deal to be done before Easter this year. There was Easter
proper, which always required new clothing of some kind, for fear
of certain consequences from little birds, who were supposed to
resent the impiety of those who do not wear some new article of
dress on Easter-day.bz And
most ladies considered it wiser that the little birds should see
the new article for themselves, and not have to take it upon trust,
as they would have to do if it were merely a pocket-handkerchief,
or a petticoat, or any article of under-clothing. So piety demanded
a new bonnet, or a new gown; and was barely satisfied with an
Easter pair of gloves. Miss Rose was generally very busy just
before Easter in Hollingford. Then this year there was the charity
ball. Ashcombe, Hollingford, and Coreham were three neighbouring
towns, of about the same number of population, lying at the three
equidistant corners of a triangle. In imitation of greater cities
with their festivals, these three towns had agreed to have an
annual ball for the benefit of the county hospital to be held in
turn at each place; and Hollingford was to be the place this
year.
It was a fine time for hospitality, and every house
of any pretension was as full as it could hold, and flys were
engaged long months before.
If Mrs. Gibson could have asked Osborne, or, in
default, Roger Hamley, to go to the ball with them and to sleep at
their house,—or if, indeed, she could have picked up any stray
scion of a ‘county family’ to whom such an offer would have been a
convenience, she would have restored her own dressing-room to its
former use as the spare-room, with pleasure. But she did not think
it was worth her while to put herself out for any humdrum and
ill-dressed women who had been her former acquaintances at
Ashcombe. For Mr. Preston it might have been worth while to give up
her room, considering him in the light of a handsome and prosperous
young man, and a good dancer besides. But there were more lights in
which he was to be viewed. Mr. Gibson, who really wanted to return
the hospitality shown to him by Mr. Preston at the time of his
marriage, had yet an instinctive distaste to the man, which no wish
of freeing himself from obligation, nor even the more worthy
feeling of hospitality, could overcome. Mrs. Gibson had some old
grudges of her own against him, but she was not one to retain angry
feelings, or be very active in her retaliation; she was afraid of
Mr. Preston, and admired him at the same time. It was awkward
too—so she said—to go into a ball-room without any gentleman at
all, and Mr. Gibson was so uncertain! On the
whole—partly for this last given reason, and partly because
conciliation was the best policy, Mrs. Gibson was slightly in
favour of inviting Mr. Preston to be their guest. But as soon as
Cynthia heard the question discussed—or rather, as soon as she
heard it discussed in Mr. Gibson’s absence, she said that if Mr.
Preston came to be their visitor on the occasion, she for one would
not go to the ball at all. She did not speak with vehemence or in
anger; but with such quiet resolution that Molly looked up in
surprise. She saw that Cynthia was keeping her eyes fixed on her
work, and that she had no intention of meeting any one’s gaze, or
giving any further explanation. Mrs. Gibson, too, looked perplexed,
and once or twice seemed on the point of asking some question; but
she was not angry as Molly had fully expected. She watched Cynthia
furtively and in silence for a minute or two, and then said that,
after all, she could not conveniently give up her dressing-room;
and, altogether, they had better say no more about it. So no
stranger was invited to stay at Mr. Gibson’s at the time of the
ball; but Mrs. Gibson openly spoke of her regret at the unavoidable
in-hospitality, and hoped that they might be able to build an
addition to their house before the next triennial Hollingford
ball.
Another cause of unusual bustle at Hollingford this
Easter was the expected return of the family to the Towers, after
their unusually long absence. Mr. Sheepshanks might be seen
trotting up and down on his stout old cob, speaking to attentive
masons, plasterers, and glaziers about putting everything—on the
outside at least—about the cottages belonging to ‘my lord,’ in
perfect repair. Lord Cumnor owned the greater part of the town; and
those who lived under other landlords, or in houses of their own,
were stirred up by the dread of contrast to do up their dwellings.
So the ladders of whitewashers and painters were sadly in the way
of the ladies tripping daintily along to make their purchases, and
holding their gowns up in a bunch behind, after a fashion quite
gone out in these days. The housekeeper and steward from the Towers
might also be seen coming in to give orders at the various shops;
and stopping here and there at those kept by favourites to avail
themselves of the eagerly-tendered refreshments.
Lady Harriet came to call on her old governess the
day after the arrival of the family at the Towers. Molly and
Cynthia were out walking when she came—doing some errands for Mrs.
Gibson, who had a secret idea that Lady Harriet would call at the
particular time she did, and had a not uncommon wish to talk to her
ladyship without the corrective presence of any member of her own
family.
Mrs. Gibson did not give Molly the message of
remembrance that Lady Harriet had left for her; but she imparted
various pieces of news relating to the Towers with great animation
and interest. The Duchess of Menteith and her daughter Lady Alice,
were coming to the Towers; would be there the day of the ball;
would come to the ball; and the Menteith diamonds were famous. That
was piece of news the first. The second was that ever so many
gentlemen were coming to the Towers—some English, some French. This
piece of news would have come first in order of importance had
there been much probability of their being dancing men, and, as
such, possible partners at the coming ball. But Lady Harriet had
spoken of them as Lord Hollingford’s friends, useless, scientific
men in all probability. Then, finally, Mrs. Gibson was to go to the
Towers next day to lunch; Lady Cumnor had written a little note by
Lady Harriet to beg her to come; if Mrs. Gibson could manage to
find her way to the Towers, one of the carriages in use should
bring her back to her own home in the course of the
afternoon.
‘The dear countess!’ said Mrs. Gibson, with soft
affection. It was a soliloquy, uttered after a minute’s pause, at
the end of all this information.
And all the rest of that day her conversation had
an aristocratic perfume hanging about it. One of the few books she
had brought with her into Mr. Gibson’s house was bound in
pink,ca and
in it she studied, ‘Menteith, Duke of, Adolphus George,’ &c.,
&c., till she was fully up in all the duchess’s connexions, and
probable interests. Mr. Gibson made his mouth up into a droll
whistle when he came home at night, and found himself in a Towers’
atmosphere. Molly saw the shade of annoyance through the drollery;
she was beginning to see it oftener than she liked, not that she
reasoned upon it, or that she consciously traced the annoyance to
its source; but she could not help feeling uneasy in herself when
she knew that her father was in the least put out.
Of course a fly was ordered for Mrs. Gibson. In the
early afternoon she came home. If she had been disappointed in her
interview with the countess she never told her woe, nor revealed
the fact that when she first arrived at the Towers she had to wait
for an hour in Lady Cumnor’s morning-room, uncheered by any
companionship save that of her old friend, Mrs. Bradley, till
suddenly, Lady Harriet coming in, she exclaimed,‘Why, Clare! you
dear woman! are you here all alone? Does mamma know?’ And, after a
little more affectionate conversation, she rushed to find her
ladyship, who was perfectly aware of the fact, but too deep in
giving the duchess the benefit of her wisdom and experience in
trousseaux to be at all mindful of the length of time Mrs. Gibson
had been passing in patient solitude. At lunch Mrs. Gibson was
secretly hurt by my lord’s supposing it to be her dinner, and
calling out his urgent hospitality from the very bottom of the
table, giving as a reason for it, that she must remember it was her
dinner. In vain she piped out in her soft, high voice, ‘Oh, my
lord! I never eat meat in the middle of the day; I can hardly eat
anything at lunch.’ Her voice was lost, and the duchess might go
away with the idea that the Hollingford doctor’s wife dined early;
that is to say, if her grace ever condescended to have any idea on
the subject at all; which presupposes that she was cognizant of the
fact of there being a doctor at Hollingford, and that he had a
wife, and that his wife was the pretty, faded, elegant-looking
woman, sending away her plate of untasted food—food which she
longed to eat, for she was really desperately hungry after her
drive and her solitude.
And then after lunch there did come a tete-d-tete
with Lady Cumnor, which was conducted after this wise:—
‘Well, Clare! I am really glad to see you. I once
thought I should never get back to the Towers, but here I am! There
was such a clever man at Bath—a Doctor Snape—he cured me at
last—quite set me up. I really think if ever I am ill again I shall
send for him: it is such a thing to find a really clever medical
man. Oh, by the way, I always forget you’ve married Mr. Gibson—of
course he is very clever, and all that. (The carriage to the door
in ten minutes, Brown, and desire Bradley to bring my things down.)
What was I asking you. Oh! how do you get on with the stepdaughter?
She seemed to me to be a young lady with a pretty stubborn will of
her own. I put a letter for the post down somewhere, and I cannot
think where; do help me look for it, there’s a good woman. Just run
to my room, and see if Brown can find it, for it is of great
consequence.’
Off went Mrs. Gibson, rather unwillingly; for there
were several things she wanted to speak about, and she had not
heard half of what she had expected to learn of the family gossip.
But all chance was gone; for, when she came back from her fruitless
errand, Lady Cumnor and the duchess were in full talk, the former
with the missing letter in her hand, which she was using something
like a baton to enforce her words.
‘Every iota from Paris! Every i-o-ta!’
Lady Cumnor was too much of a Lady not to apologize
for useless trouble, but they were nearly the last words she spoke
to Mrs. Gibson, for she had to go out and drive with the duchess;
and the brougham to take ‘Clare’ (as she persisted in calling Mrs.
Gibson) back to Hollingford followed the carriage to the door. Lady
Harriet came away from her entourage of young men and young ladies,
all prepared for some walking expedition, to wish Mrs. Gibson
good-bye.
‘We shall see you at the ball,’ she said. ‘You’ll
be there with your two girls, of course, and I must have a little
talk with you there; with all these visitors in the house, it has
been impossible to see anything of you to-day, you know.’
Such were the facts, but rose-colour was the medium
through which they were seen by Mrs. Gibson’s household listeners
on her return.
‘There are many visitors staying at the Towers—oh,
yes! a great many: the duchess and Lady Alice, and Mr. and Mrs.
Grey, and Lord Albert Monson and his sister, and my old friend
Captain James of the Blues—many more, in fact. But of course I
preferred going to Lady Cumnor’s own room, where I could see her
and Lady Harriet quietly, and where we were not disturbed by the
bustle downstairs. Of course we were obliged to go down to lunch,
and then I saw my old friends, and renewed pleasant acquaintances.
But I really could hardly get any connected conversation with any
one. Lord Cumnor seemed so delighted to see me there again: though
there were six or seven between us, he was always interrupting with
some civil or kind speech especially addressed to me. And after
lunch Lady Cumnor asked me all sorts of questions about my new life
with as much interest as if I had been her daughter. To be sure,
when the duchess came in we had to leave off, and talk about the
trousseaux she is preparing for Lady Alice. Lady Harriet made such
a point of our meeting at the ball; she is such a good,
affectionate creature, is Lady Harriet!’
This last was said in a tone of meditative
appreciation.
The afternoon of the day on which the ball was to
take place, a servant rode over from Hamley with two lovely
nosegays, ‘with the Mr. Hamleys’ compliments to Miss Gibson and
Miss Kirkpatrick.’ Cynthia was the first to receive them. She came
dancing into the drawing-room, flourishing the flowers about in
either hand, and danced up to Molly, who was trying to settle to
her reading, by way of helping on the time till the evening
came.
‘Look, Molly, look! Here are bouquets for us! Long
life to the givers!’
‘Who are they from?’ asked Molly, taking hold of
one, and examining it with tender delight at its beauty.
‘Who from? Why, the two paragons of Hamleys, to be
sure! Isn’t it a pretty attention?’
‘How kind of them!’ said Molly.
‘I’m sure it is Osborne who thought of it. He has
been so much abroad, where it is such a common compliment to send
bouquets to young ladies.’
‘I don’t see why you should think it is Osborne’s
thought!’ said Molly, reddening a little. ‘Mr. Roger Hamley used to
gather nosegays constantly for his mother, and sometimes for
me.’
‘Well, never mind whose thought it was, or who
gathered them; we’ve got the flowers, and that’s enough. Molly, I’m
sure these red flowers will just match your coral necklace and
bracelets,’ said Cynthia, pulling out some camellias, then a rare
kind of flower.
‘Oh, please, don’t!’ exclaimed Molly. ‘Don’t you
see how carefully the colours are arranged—they have taken such
pains; please, don’t.’
‘Nonsense!’ said Cynthia, continuing to pull them
out; ‘see, here are quite enough. I’ll make you a little coronet of
them—sewn on black velvet, which will never be seen—just as they do
in France!’
‘Oh, I am so sorry! It is quite spoilt,’ said
Molly.
‘Never mind! I’ll take this spoilt bouquet; I can
make it up again just as prettily as ever; and you shall have this,
which has never been touched.’ Cynthia went on arranging the
crimson buds and flowers to her taste. Molly said nothing, but kept
watching Cynthia’s nimble fingers tying up the wreath.
‘There,’ said Cynthia, at last, ‘when that is sewn
on black velvet, to keep the flowers from dying, you’ll see how
pretty it will look. And there are enough red flowers in this
untouched nosegay to carry out the idea!’
‘Thank you’ (very slowly). ‘But shan’t you mind
having only the wrecks of the other?’
‘Not I; red flowers would not go with my pink
dress.’
‘But—daresay they arranged each nosegay so
carefully!’
‘Perhaps they did. But I never would allow
sentiment to interfere with my choice of colours; and pink does tie
one down. Now you, in white muslin, just tipped with crimson like a
daisy, may wear anything.’
Cynthia took the utmost pains in dressing Molly,
leaving the clever housemaid to her mother’s exclusive service.
Mrs. Gibson was more anxious about her attire than was either of
the girls; it had given her occasion for deep thought and not a few
sighs. Her deliberation had ended in her wearing her pearl-grey
satin wedding-gown, with a profusion of lace, and white and
coloured lilacs. Cynthia was the one who took the affair most
lightly. Molly looked upon the ceremony of dressing for a first
ball as rather a serious ceremony ; certainly as an anxious
proceeding. Cynthia was almost as anxious as herself; only Molly
wanted her appearance to be correct and unnoticed; and Cynthia was
desirous of setting off Molly’s rather peculiar charms—her
cream-coloured skin, her profusion of curly black hair, her
beautiful long-shaped eyes, with their shy, loving expression.
Cynthia took up so much time in dressing Molly to her mind, that
she herself had to perform her toilette in a hurry. Molly, ready
dressed, sat on a low chair in Cynthia’s room, watching the pretty
creature’s rapid movements, as she stood in her petticoat before
the glass doing up her hair, with quick certainty of effect. At
length, Molly heaved a long sigh, and said—
‘I should like to be pretty!’
‘Why, Molly,’ said Cynthia, turning round with an
exclamation on the tip of her tongue; but when she caught the
innocent, wistful look on Molly’s face, she instinctively checked
what she was going to say, and, half-smiling to her own reflection
in the glass, she said—‘The French girls would tell you, to believe
that you were pretty would make you so.’
Molly paused before replying—
‘I suppose they would mean that if you knew you
were pretty, you would never think about your looks; you would be
so certain of being liked, and that it is caring——
‘Listen! that’s eight o’clock striking. Don’t
trouble yourself with trying to interpret a French girl’s meaning,
but help me on with my frock, there’s a dear one.’
The two girls were dressed, and standing over the
fire waiting for the carriage in Cynthia’s room, when Maria
(Betty’s successor) came hurrying into the room. Maria had been
officiating as maid to Mrs. Gibson, but she had had intervals of
leisure, in which she had rushed upstairs, and, under the pretence
of offering her services, had seen the young ladies’ dresses, and
the sight of so many nice clothes had sent her into a state of
excitement which made her think nothing of rushing upstairs for the
twentieth time, with a nosegay still more beautiful than the two
previous ones.
‘Here, Miss Kirkpatrick! No, it’s not for you,
Miss!’ as Molly, being nearer to the door, offered to take it and
pass it to Cynthia. ‘It’s for Miss Kirkpatrick; and there’s a note
for her besides!’
Cynthia said nothing, but took the note and the
flowers. She held the note so that Molly could read it at the same
time as she did.
‘I send you some flowers; and you must allow me to
claim the first dance after nine o’clock, before which time I fear
I cannot arrive.
‘C. P’
‘Who is it?’ asked Molly.
Cynthia looked extremely irritated, indignant,
perplexed—what was it turned her cheek so pale, and made her eyes
so full of fire?
‘It is Mr. Preston,’ said she, in answer to Molly.
‘I shall not dance with him; and here go his flowers
______’
Into the very middle of the embers, which she
immediately stirred down upon the beautiful shining petals as if
she wished to annihilate them as soon as possible. Her voice had
never been raised; it was as sweet as usual; nor, though her
movements were prompt enough, were they hasty or violent.
‘Oh!’ said Molly, ‘those beautiful flowers! We
might have put them in water.’
‘No,’ said Cynthia; ‘it’s best to destroy them. We
don’t want them; and I can’t bear to be reminded of that
man.’
‘It was an impertinent, familiar note,’ said Molly.
‘What right had he to express himself in that way—no beginning, no
end, and only initials! Did you know him well when you were at
Ashcombe, Cynthia?’
‘Oh, don’t let us think any more about him,’
replied Cynthia. ‘It is quite enough to spoil any pleasure at the
ball to think that he will be there. But I hope I shall get engaged
before he comes, so that I can’t dance with him—and don’t you
either!’
‘There! they are calling for us,’ exclaimed Molly,
and with quick step, yet careful of their draperies, they made
their way downstairs to the place where Mr. and Mrs. Gibson awaited
them. Yes; Mr. Gibson was going—even if he had to leave them
afterwards to attend to any professional call. And Molly suddenly
began to admire her father as a handsome man, when she saw him now,
in full evening attire. Mrs. Gibson, too—how pretty she was! In
short, it was true that no better-looking a party than these four
people entered the Hollingford ball-room that evening.