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Chapter XVI. The Particular Incident

The Shuttle





Betty Vanderpoel's walk back to Stornham did not, long though it
was, give her time to follow to its end the thread of her thoughts.
Mentally she walked again with her uncommunicative guide, through
woodpaths and gardens, and stood gazing at the great blind-faced
house. She had not given the man more than an occasional glance
until he had told her his name. She had been too much absorbed, too
much moved, by what she had been seeing. She wondered, if she had
been more aware of him, whether his face would have revealed a great
deal. She believed it would not. He had made himself outwardly
stolid. But the thing must have been bitter. To him the whole story
of the splendid past was familiar even if through his own life he had
looked on only at gradual decay. There must be stories enough of men
and women who had lived in the place, of what they had done, of how
they had loved, of what they had counted for in their country's wars
and peacemakings, great functions and law-building. To be able to
look back through centuries and know of one's blood that sometimes it
had been shed in the doing of great deeds, must be a thing to
remember. To realise that the courage and honour had been lost in
ignoble modern vices, which no sense of dignity and reverence for
race and name had restrained-- must be bitter--bitter! And in the
role of a servant to lead a stranger about among the ruins of what
had been--that must have been bitter, too. For a moment Betty felt
the bitterness of it herself and her red mouth took upon itself a
grim line. The worst of it for him was that he was not of that
strain of his race who had been the "bad lot." The "bad lot" had
been the weak lot, the vicious, the self-degrading. Scandals which
had shut men out from their class and kind were usually of an ugly
type. This man had a strong jaw, a powerful, healthy body, and
clean, though perhaps hard, eyes. The First Man of them, who hewed
his way to the front, who stood fierce in the face of things, who won
the first lands and laid the first stones, might have been like him
in build and look.

"It's a disgusting thing," she said to herself, "to think of the
corrupt weaklings the strong ones dwindled down to. I hate them. So
does he."

There had been many such of late years, she knew. She had seen
them in Paris, in Rome, even in New York. Things with thin or
over-thick bodies and receding chins and foreheads; things haunting
places of amusement and finding inordinate entertainment in strange
jokes and horseplay. She herself had hot blood and a fierce strength
of rebellion, and she was wondering how, if the father and elder
brother had been the "bad lot," he had managed to stand still,
looking on, and keeping his hands off them.

The last gold of the sun was mellowing the grey stone of the
terrace and enriching the green of the weeds thrusting themselves
into life between the uneven flags when she reached Stornham, and
passing through the house found Lady Anstruthers sitting there. In
sustenance of her effort to keep up appearances, she had put on a
weird little muslin dress and had elaborated the dressing of her thin
hair. It was no longer dragged back straight from her face, and she
looked a trifle less abject, even a shade prettier. Bettina sat upon
the edge of the balustrade and touched the hair with light fingers,
ruffling it a little becomingly.

"If you had worn it like this yesterday," she said, "I should
have known you."

"Should you, Betty? I never look into a mirror if I can help
it, but when I do I never know myself. The thing that stares back at
me with its pale eyes is not Rosy. But, of course, everyone grows
old."

"Not now! People are just discovering how to grow young
instead."

Lady Anstruthers looked into the clear courage of her laughing
eyes.

"Somehow," she said, "you say strange things in such a way that
one feels as if they must be true, however--however unlike anything
else they are."

"They are not as new as they seem," said Betty. "Ancient
philosophers said things like them centuries ago, but people did not
believe them. We are just beginning to drag them out of the dust and
furbish them up and pretend they are ours, just as people rub up and
adorn themselves with jewels dug out of excavations."

"In America people think so many new things," said poor little
Lady Anstruthers with yearning humbleness.

"The whole civilised world is thinking what you call new
things," said Betty. "The old ones won't do. They have been tried,
and though they have helped us to the place we have reached, they
cannot help us any farther. We must begin again."

"It is such a long time since I began," said Rosy, "such a long
time."

"Then there must be another beginning for you, too. The hour
has struck."

Lady Anstruthers rose with as involuntary a movement as if a
strong hand had drawn her to her feet. She stood facing Betty, a
pathetic little figure in her washed-out muslin frock and with her
washed-out face and eyes and being, though on her faded cheeks a
flush was rising.

"Oh, Betty!" she said, "I don't know what there is about you,
but there is something which makes one feel as if you believed
everything and could do everything, and as if one believes you.
Whatever you were to say, you would make it seem true. If you said
the wildest thing in the world I should believe you."

Betty got up, too, and there was an extraordinary steadiness in
her eyes.

"You may," she answered. "I shall never say one thing to you
which is not a truth, not one single thing."

"I believe that," said Rosy Anstruthers, with a quivering mouth.
"I do believe it so."

"I walked to Mount Dunstan," Betty said later.

"Really?" said Rosy. "There and back?"

"Yes, and all round the park and the gardens."

Rosy looked rather uncertain.

"Weren't you a little afraid of meeting someone?"

"I did meet someone. At first I took him for a game- keeper.
But he turned out to be Lord Mount Dunstan."

Lady Anstruthers gasped.

"What did he do?" she exclaimed. "Did he look angry at seeing a
stranger? They say he is so ill-tempered and rude."

"I should feel ill-tempered if I were in his place," said Betty.
"He has enough to rouse his evil passions and make him savage. What
a fate for a man with any sense and decency of feeling! What fools
and criminals the last generation of his house must have produced! I
wonder how such things evolve themselves. But he is
different--different. One can see it. If he had a chance--just half
a chance--he would build it all up again. And I don't mean merely
the place, but all that one means when one says `his house.' "

"He would need a great deal of money," sighed Lady
Anstruthers.

Betty nodded slowly as she looked out, reflecting, into the
park.

"Yes, it would require money," was her admission.

"And he has none," Lady Anstruthers added. "None whatever."

"He will get some," said Betty, still reflecting. "He will make
it, or dig it up, or someone will leave it to him. There is a great
deal of money in the world, and when a strong creature ought to have
some of it he gets it."

"Oh, Betty!" said Rosy. "Oh, Betty! "

"Watch that man," said Betty; "you will see. It will come."

Lady Anstruthers' mind, working at no time on complex lines,
presented her with a simple modern solution.

"Perhaps he will marry an American," she said, and saying it,
sighed again.

"He will not do it on purpose." Bettina answered slowly and
with such an air of absence of mind that Rosy laughed a little.

"Will he do it accidentally, or against his will?" she said.

Betty herself smiled.

"Perhaps he will," she said. "There are Englishmen who rather
dislike Americans. I think he is one of them."

It apparently became necessary for Lady Anstruthers, a moment
later, to lean upon the stone balustrade and pick off a young leaf or
so, for no reason whatever, unless that in doing so she averted her
look from her sister as she made her next remark.

"Are you--when are you going to write to father and mother?"

"I have written," with unembarrassed evenness of tone. "Mother
will be counting the days."

"Mother!" Rosy breathed, with a soft little gasp. "Mother!" and
turned her face farther away. "What did you tell her?"

Betty moved over to her and stood close at her side. The power
of her personality enveloped the tremulous creature as if it had been
a sense of warmth.

"I told her how beautiful the place was, and how Ughtred adored
you--and how you loved us all, and longed to see New York again."

The relief in the poor little face was so immense that Betty's
heart shook before it. Lady Anstruthers looked up at her with
adoring eyes.

"I might have known," she said; "I might have known that--that
you would only say the right thing. You couldn't say the wrong
thing, Betty."

Betty bent over her and spoke almost yearningly.

"Whatever happens," she said, "we will take care that mother is
not hurt. She's too kind--she's too good--she's too tender."

"That is what I have remembered," said Lady Anstruthers
brokenly. "She used to hold me on her lap when I was quite grown up.
Oh! her soft, warm arms--her warm shoulder! I have so wanted
her."

"She has wanted you," Betty answered. "She thinks of you just
as she did when she held you on her lap."

"But if she saw me now--looking like this! If she saw me!
Sometimes I have even been glad to think she never would."

"She will." Betty's tone was cool and clear. "But before she
does I shall have made you look like yourself."

Lady Anstruthers' thin hand closed on her plucked leaves
convulsively, and then opening let them drop upon the stone of the
terrace.

"We shall never see each other. It wouldn't be possible," she
said. "And there is no magic in the world now, Betty. You can't
bring back----"

"Yes, you can," said Bettina. "And what used to be called magic
is only the controlled working of the law and order of things in
these days. We must talk it all over."

Lady Anstruthers became a little pale.

"What?" she asked, low and nervously, and Betty saw her glance
sideways at the windows of the room which opened on to the
terrace.

Betty took her hand and drew her down into a chair. She sat
near her and looked her straight in the face.

"Don't be frightened," she said. "I tell you there is no need
to be frightened. We are not living in the Middle Ages. There is a
policeman even in Stornham village, and we are within four hours of
London, where there are thousands."

Lady Anstruthers tried to laugh, but did not succeed very well,
and her forehead flushed.

"I don't quite know why I seem so nervous," she said. "It's
very silly of me."

She was still timid enough to cling to some rag of pretence, but
Betty knew that it would fall away. She did the wisest possible
thing, which was to make an apparently impersonal remark.

"I want you to go over the place with me and show me everything.
Walls and fences and greenhouses and outbuildings must not be
allowed to crumble away."

"What?" cried Rosy. "Have you seen all that already?" She
actually stared at her. "How practical and--and American!"

"To see that a wall has fallen when you find yourself obliged to
walk round a pile of grass-grown brickwork?" said Betty.

Lady Anstruthers still softly stared.

"What--what are you thinking of?" she asked.

"Thinking that it is all too beautiful----" Betty's look swept
the loveliness spread about her, "too beautiful and too valuable to
be allowed to lose its value and its beauty." She turned her eyes
back to Rosy and the deep dimple near her mouth showed itself
delightfully. "It is a throwing away of capital," she added.

"Oh!" cried Lady Anstruthers, "how clever you are! And you look
so different, Betty."

"Do I look stupid?" the dimple deepening. "I must try to alter
that."

"Don't try to alter your looks," said Rosy. "It is your looks
that make you so--so wonderful. But usually women-- girls----" Rosy
paused.

"Oh, I have been trained," laughed Betty. "I am the spoiled
daughter of a business man of genius. His business is an art and a
science. I have had advantages. He has let me hear him talk. I
even know some trifling things about stocks. Not enough to do me
vital injury--but something. What I know best of all,"--her laugh
ended and her eyes changed their look,--"is that it is a blunder to
think that beauty is not capital--that happiness is not--and that
both are not the greatest assets in the scheme. This," with a wave
of her hand, taking in all they saw, "is beauty, and it ought to be
happiness, and it must be taken care of. It is your home and
Ughtred's----"

"It is Nigel's," put in Rosy.

"It is entailed, isn't it?" turning quickly. "He cannot sell
it?"

"If he could we should not be sitting here," ruefully.

"Then he cannot object to its being rescued from ruin."

"He will object to--to money being spent on things he does not
care for." Lady Anstruthers' voice lowered itself, as it always did
when she spoke of her husband, and she indulged in the involuntary
hasty glance about her.

"I am going to my room to take off my hat," Betty said. "Will
you come with me?"

She went into the house, talking quietly of ordinary things, and
in this way they mounted the stairway together and passed along the
gallery which led to her room. When they entered it she closed the
door, locked it, and, taking off her hat, laid it aside. After doing
which she sat.

"No one can hear and no one can come in," she said. "And if
they could, you are afraid of things you need not be afraid of now.
Tell me what happened when you were so ill after Ughtred was
born."

"You guessed that it happened then," gasped Lady Anstruthers.

"It was a good time to make anything happen," replied Bettina.
"You were prostrated, you were a child, and felt yourself cast off
hopelessly from the people who loved you."

"Forever! Forever!" Lady Anstruthers' voice was a sharp little
moan. "That was what I felt--that nothing could ever help me. I
dared not write things. He told me he would not have it--that he
would stop any hysterical complaints--that his mother could testify
that he behaved perfectly to me. She was the only person in the room
with us when-- when----"

"When?" said Betty.

Lady Anstruthers shuddered. She leaned forward and caught
Betty's hand between her own shaking ones.

"He struck me! He struck me! He said it never happened-- but
it did--it did! Betty, it did! That was the one thing that came
back to me clearest. He said that I was in delirious hysterics, and
that I had struggled with his mother and himself, because they tried
to keep me quiet, and prevent the servants hearing. One awful day he
brought Lady Anstruthers into the room, and they stood over me, as I
lay in bed, and she fixed her eyes on me and said that she--being an
Englishwoman, and a person whose word would be believed, could tell
people the truth--my father and mother, if necessary, that my
spoiled, hysterical American tempers had created unhappiness for
me--merely because I was bored by life in the country and wanted
excitement. I tried to answer, but they would not let me, and when I
began to shake all over, they said that I was throwing myself into
hysterics again. And they told the doctor so, and he believed
it."

The possibilities of the situation were plainly to be seen.
Fate, in the form of temperament itself, had been against her. It
was clear enough to Betty as she patted and stroked the thin hands.
"I understand. Tell me the rest," she said.

Lady Anstruthers' head dropped.

"When I was loneliest, and dying of homesickness, and so weak
that I could not speak without sobbing, he came to me--it was one
morning after I had been lying awake all night--and he began to seem
kinder. He had not been near me for two days, and I had thought I
was going to be left to die alone--and mother would never know. He
said he had been reflecting and that he was afraid that we had
misunderstood each other--because we belonged to different countries,
and had been brought up in different ways----" she paused.

"And that if you understood his position and considered it, you
might both be quite happy," Betty gave in quiet termination.

Lady Anstruthers started.

"Oh, you know it all!" she exclaimed

"Only because I have heard it before. It is an old trick. And
because he seemed kind and relenting, you tried to understand--and
signed something."

"I wanted to understand. I wanted to believe. What did it
matter which of us had the money, if we liked each other and were
happy? He told me things about the estate, and about the enormous
cost of it, and his bad luck, and debts he could not help. And I
said that I would do anything if--if we could only be like mother and
father. And he kissed me and I signed the paper."

"And then?"

"He went to London the next day, and then to Paris. He said he
was obliged to go on business. He was away a month. And after a
week had passed, Lady Anstruthers began to be restless and angry, and
once she flew into a rage, and told me I was a fool, and that if I
had been an Englishwoman, I should have had some decent control over
my husband, because he would have respected me. In time I found out
what I had done. It did not take long."

"The paper you signed," said Betty, "gave him control over your
money?"

A forlorn nod was the answer.

"And since then he has done as he chose, and he has not chosen
to care for Stornham. And once he made you write to father, to ask
for more money?"

"I did it once. I never would do it again. He has tried to
make me. He always says it is to save Stornham for Ughtred."

"Nothing can take Stornham from Ughtred. It may come to him a
ruin, but it will come to him."

"He says there are legal points I cannot understand. And he
says he is spending money on it."

"Where?"

"He--doesn't go into that. If I were to ask questions, he would
make me know that I had better stop. He says I know nothing about
things. And he is right. He has never allowed me to know and--and I
am not like you, Betty."

"When you signed the paper, you did not realise that you were
doing something you could never undo and that you would be forced to
submit to the consequences?"

"I--I didn't realise anything but that it would kill me to live
as I had been living--feeling as if they hated me. And I was so glad
and thankful that he seemed kinder. It was as if I had been on the
rack, and he turned the screws back, and I was ready to do
anything--anything--if I might be taken off. Oh, Betty! you know,
don't you, that--that if he would only have been a little kind--just
a little--I would have obeyed him always, and given him
everything."

Betty sat and looked at her, with deeply pondering eyes. She
was confronting the fact that it seemed possible that one must build
a new soul for her as well as a new body. In these days of science
and growing sanity of thought, one did not stand helpless before the
problem of physical rebuilding, and--and perhaps, if one could pour
life into a creature, the soul of it would respond, and wake again,
and grow.

"You do not know where he is?" she said aloud. "You absolutely
do not know?"

"I never know exactly," Lady Anstruthers answered. "He was here
for a few days the week before you came. He said he was going
abroad. He might appear to-morrow, I might not hear of him for six
months. I can't help hoping now that it will be the six months."

"Why particularly now?" inquired Betty.

Lady Anstruthers flushed and looked shy and awkward.

"Because of--you. I don't know what he would say. I don't know
what he would do."

"To me?" said Betty.

"It would be sure to be something unreasonable and wicked," said
Lady Anstruthers. "It would, Betty."

"I wonder what it would be?" Betty said musingly.

"He has told lies for years to keep you all from me. If he came
now, he would know that he had been found out. He would say that I
had told you things. He would be furious because you have seen what
there is to see. He would know that you could not help but realise
that the money he made me ask for had not been spent on the estate.
He,-- Betty, he would try to force you to go away."

"I wonder what he would do?" Betty said again musingly. She
felt interested, not afraid.

"It would be something cunning," Rosy protested. "It would be
something no one could expect. He might be so rude that you could
not remain in the room with him, or he might be quite polite, and
pretend he was rather glad to see you. If he was only frightfully
rude we should be safer, because that would not be an unexpected
thing, but if he was polite, it would be because he was arranging
something hideous, which you could not defend yourself against."

"Can you tell me," said Betty quite slowly, because, as she
looked down at the carpet, she was thinking very hard, "the kind of
unexpected thing he has done to you?" Lifting her eyes, she saw that
a troubled flush was creeping over Lady Anstruthers' face.

"There--have been--so many queer things," she faltered. Then
Betty knew there was some special thing she was afraid to talk about,
and that if she desired to obtain illuminating information it would
be well to go into the matter.

"Try," she said, "to remember some particular incident."

Lady Anstruthers looked nervous.

"Rosy," in the level voice, "there has been a particular
incident--and I would rather hear of it from you than from him.

Rosy's lap held little shaking hands.

"He has held it over me for years," she said breathlessly. "He
said he would write about it to father and mother. He says he could
use it against me as evidence in--in the divorce court. He says that
divorce courts in America are for women, but in England they are for
men, and--he could defend himself against me."

The incongruity of the picture of the small, faded creature
arraigned in a divorce court on charges of misbehaviour would have
made Betty smile if she had been in smiling mood.

"What did he accuse you of?"

"That was the--the unexpected thing," miserably.

Betty took the unsteady hands firmly in her own.

"Don't be afraid to tell me," she said. "He knew you so well
that he understood what would terrify you the most. I know you so
well that I understand how he does it. Did he do this unexpected
thing just before you wrote to father for the money?" As she quite
suddenly presented the question, Rosy exclaimed aloud.

"How did you know?" she said. "You--you are like a lawyer. How
could you know?"

How simple she was! How obviously an easy prey! She had been
unconsciously giving evidence with every word.

"I have been thinking him over," Betty said. "He interests me.
I have begun to guess that he always wants something when he
professes that he has a grievance."

Then with drooping head, Rosy told the story.

"Yes, it happened before he made me write to father for so much
money. The vicar was ill and was obliged to go away for six months.
The clergyman who came to take his place was a young man. He was
kind and gentle, and wanted to help people. His mother was with him
and she was like him. They loved each other, and they were quite
poor. His name was Ffolliott. I liked to hear him preach. He said
things that comforted me. Nigel found out that he comforted me,
and--when he called here, he was more polite to him than he had ever
been to Mr. Brent. He seemed almost as if he liked him. He actually
asked him to dinner two or three times. After dinner, he would go
out of the room and leave us together. Oh, Betty!" clinging to her
hands, "I was so wretched then, that sometimes I thought I was going
out of my mind. I think I looked wild. I used to kneel down and try
to pray, and I could not."

"Yes, yes," said Betty.

"I used to feel that if I could only have one friend, just one,
I could bear it better. Once I said something like that to Nigel.
He only shrugged his shoulders and sneered when I said it. But
afterwards I knew he had remembered. One evening, when he had asked
Mr. Ffolliott to dinner, he led him to talk about religion. Oh,
Betty! It made my blood turn cold when he began. I knew he was
doing it for some wicked reason. I knew the look in his eyes and the
awful, agreeable smile on his mouth. When he said at last, `If you
could help my poor wife to find comfort in such things,' I began to
see. I could not explain to anyone how he did it, but with just a
sentence, dropped here and there, he seemed to tell the whole story
of a silly, selfish, American girl, thwarted in her vulgar little
ambitions, and posing as a martyr, because she could not have her own
way in everything. He said once, quite casually, `I'm afraid
American women are rather spoiled.' And then he said, in the same
tolerant way-- `A poor man is a disappointment to an American girl.
America does not believe in rank combined with lack of fortune.' I
dared not defend myself. I am not clever enough to think of the
right things to say. He meant Mr. Ffolliott to understand that I had
married him because I thought he was grand and rich, and that I was a
disappointed little spiteful shrew. I tried to act as if he was not
hurting me, but my hands trembled, and a lump kept rising in my
throat. When we returned to the drawing-room, and at last he left us
together, I was praying and praying that I might be able to keep from
breaking down.

She stopped and swallowed hard. Betty held her hands firmly
until she went on.

"For a few minutes, I sat still, and tried to think of some new
subject--something about the church or the village. But I could not
begin to speak because of the lump in my throat. And then, suddenly,
but quietly, Mr. Ffolliott got up. And though I dared not lift my
eyes, I knew he was standing before the fire, quite near me. And,
oh! what do you think he said, as low and gently as if his voice was
a woman's. I did not know that people ever said such things now, or
even thought them. But never, never shall I forget that strange
minute. He said just this:

" `God will help you. He will. He will.'

"As if it was true, Betty! As if there was a God--and-- He had
not forgotten me. I did not know what I was doing, but I put out my
hand and caught at his sleeve, and when I looked up into his face, I
saw in his kind, good eyes, that he knew--that somehow--God knows
how--he understood and that I need not utter a word to explain to him
that he had been listening to lies."

"Did you talk to him?" Betty asked quietly.

"He talked to me. We did not even speak of Nigel. He talked to
me as I had never heard anyone talk before. Somehow he filled the
room with something real, which was hope and comfort and like warmth,
which kept my soul from shivering. The tears poured from my eyes at
first, but the lump in my throat went away, and when Nigel came back
I actually did not feel frightened, though he looked at me and
sneered quietly."

"Did he say anything afterwards?"

"He laughed a little cold laugh and said, `I see you have been
seeking the consolation of religion. Neurotic women like confessors.
I do not object to your confessing, if you confess your own
backslidings and not mine.' "

"That was the beginning," said Betty speculatively. "The
unexpected thing was the end. Tell me the rest?"

"No one could have dreamed of it," Rosy broke forth. "For weeks
he was almost like other people. He stayed at Stornham and spent his
days in shooting. He professed that he was rather enjoying himself
in a dull way. He encouraged me to go to the vicarage, he invited
the Ffolliotts here. He said Mrs. Ffolliott was a gentlewoman and
good for me. He said it was proper that I should interest myself in
parish work. Once or twice he even brought some little message to me
from Mr. Ffolliott."

It was a pitiably simple story. Betty saw, through its
relation, the unconsciousness of the easily allured victim, the
adroit leading on from step to step, the ordinary, natural, seeming
method which arranged opportunities. The two had been thrown
together at the Court, at the vicarage, the church and in the
village, and the hawk had looked on and bided his time. For the
first time in her years of exile, Rosy had begun to feel that she
might be allowed a friend--though she lived in secret tremor lest the
normal liberty permitted her should suddenly be snatched away.

"We never talked of Nigel," she said, twisting her hands. "But
he made me begin to live again. He talked to me of Something that
watched and would not leave me--would never leave me. I was learning
to believe it. Sometimes when I walked through the wood to the
village, I used to stop among the trees and look up at the bits of
sky between the branches, and listen to the sound in the leaves--the
sound that never stops--and it seemed as if it was saying something
to me. And I would clasp my hands and whisper, `Yes, yes,' `I will,'
`I will.' I used to see Nigel looking at me at table with a queer
smile in his eyes and once he said to me--`You are growing young and
lovely, my dear. Your colour is improving. The counsels of our
friend are of a salutary nature.'

It would have made me nervous, but he said it almost good-
naturedly, and I was silly enough even to wonder if it could be
possible that he was pleased to see me looking less ill. It was
true, Betty, that I was growing stronger. But it did not last
long."

"I was afraid not," said Betty.

"An old woman in the lane near Bartyon Wood was ill. Mr.
Ffolliott had asked me to go to see her, and I used to go. She
suffered a great deal and clung to us both. He comforted her, as he
comforted me. Sometimes when he was called away he would send a note
to me, asking me to go to her. One day he wrote hastily, saying that
she was dying, and asked if I would go with him to her cottage at
once. I knew it would save time if I met him in the path which was a
short cut. So I wrote a few words and gave them to the messenger. I
said, `Do not come to the house. I will meet you in Bartyon Wood.'
"

Betty made a slight movement, and in her face there was a
dawning of mingled amazement and incredulity. The thought which had
come to her seemed--as Ughtred's locking of the door had seemed--too
wild for modern days.

Lady Anstruthers saw her expression and understood it. She made
a hopeless gesture with her small, bony hand.

"Yes," she said, "it is just like that. No one would believe
it. The worst cleverness of the things he does, is that when one
tells of them, they sound like lies. I have a bewildered feeling
that I should not believe them myself if I had not seen them. He met
the boy in the park and took the note from him. He came back to the
house and up to my room, where I was dressing quickly to go to Mr.
Ffolliott."

She stopped for quite a minute, rather as if to recover
breath.

"He closed the door behind him and came towards me with the note
in his hand. And I saw in a second the look that always terrifies
me, in his face. He had opened the note and he smoothed out the
paper quietly and said, `What is this. I could not help it--I turned
cold and began to shiver. I could not imagine what was coming."

" `Is it my note to Mr. Ffolliott?' I asked.

" `Yes, it is your note to Mr. Ffolliott,' and he read it aloud.
` "Do not come to the house. I will meet you in Bartyon Wood."
That is a nice note for a man's wife to have written, to be picked up
and read by a stranger, if your confessor is not cautious in the
matter of letters from women----'

"When he begins a thing in that way, you may always know that he
has planned everything--that you can do nothing--I always know. I
knew then, and I knew I was quite white when I answered him:

" `I wrote it in a great hurry, Mrs. Farne is worse. We are
going together to her. I said I would meet him--to save time.'

"He laughed, his awful little laugh, and touched the paper.

" `I have no doubt. And I have no doubt that if other persons
saw this, they would believe it. It is very likely.

" `But you believe it,' I said. `You know it is true. No one
would be so silly--so silly and wicked as to----' Then I broke down
and cried out. `What do you mean? What could anyone think it
meant?' I was so wild that I felt as if I was going crazy. He
clenched my wrist and shook me.

" `Don't think you can play the fool with me,' he said. `I have
been watching this thing from the first. The first time I leave you
alone with the fellow, I come back to find you have been giving him
an emotional scene. Do you suppose your simpering good spirits and
your imbecile pink cheeks told me nothing? They told me exactly
this. I have waited to come upon it, and here it is. "Do not come
to the house--I will meet you in the wood."

"That was the unexpected thing. It was no use to argue and try
to explain. I knew he did not believe what he was saying, but he
worked himself into a rage, he accused me of awful things, and called
me awful names in a loud voice, so that he could be heard, until I
was dumb and staggering. All the time, I knew there was a reason,
but I could not tell then what it was. He said at last, that he was
going to Mr. Ffolliott. He said, `I will meet him in the wood and I
will take your note with me.'

"Betty, it was so shameful that I fell down on my knees. `Oh,
don't--don't--do that,' I said. `I beg of you, Nigel. He is a
gentleman and a clergyman. I beg and beg of you. If you will not, I
will do anything--anything.' And at that minute I remembered how he
had tried to make me write to father for money. And I cried
out--catching at his coat, and holding him back. `I will write to
father as you asked me. I will do anything. I can't bear it.' "

"That was the whole meaning of the whole thing," said Betty with
eyes ablaze. "That was the beginning, the middle and the end. What
did he say?"

"He pretended to be made more angry. He said, `Don't insult me
by trying to bribe me with your vulgar money. Don't insult me.' But
he gradually grew sulky instead of raging, and though he put the note
in his pocket, he did not go to Mr. Ffolliott. And--I wrote to
father."

"I remember that," Betty answered. "Did you ever speak to Mr.
Ffolliott again?"

"He guessed--he knew--I saw it in his kind, brown eyes when he
passed me without speaking, in the village. I daresay the villagers
were told about the awful thing by some servant, who heard Nigel's
voice. Villagers always know what is happening. He went away a few
weeks later. The day before he went, I had walked through the wood,
and just outside it, I met him. He stopped for one minute--just
one--he lifted his hat and said, just as he had spoken them that
first night--just the same words, `God will help you. He will. He
will.' "

A strange, almost unearthly joy suddenly flashed across her
face.

"It must be true," she said. "It must be true. He has sent
you, Betty. It has been a long time--it has been so long that
sometimes I have forgotten his words. But you have come!"

"Yes, I have come," Betty answered. And she bent forward and
kissed her gently, as if she had been soothing a child.

There were other questions to ask. She was obliged to ask them.
"The unexpected thing" had been used as an instrument for years. It
was always efficacious. Over the yearningly homesick creature had
hung the threat that her father and mother, those she ached and
longed for, could be told the story in such a manner as would brand
her as a woman with a shameful secret. How could she explain
herself? There were the awful, written words. He was her husband.
He was remorseless, plausible. She dared not write freely. She had
no witnesses to call upon. She had discovered that he had planned
with composed steadiness that misleading impressions should be given
to servants and village people. When the Brents returned to the
vicarage, she had observed, with terror, that for some reason they
stiffened, and looked askance when the Ffolliotts were mentioned.

"I am afraid, Lady Anstruthers, that Mr. Ffolliott was a great
mistake," Mrs. Brent said once.

Lady Anstruthers had not dared to ask any questions. She had
felt the awkward colour rising in her face and had known that she
looked guilty. But if she had protested against the injustice of the
remark, Sir Nigel would have heard of her words before the day had
passed, and she shuddered to think of the result. He had by that
time reached the point of referring to Ffolliott with sneering
lightness, as "Your lover."

"Do you defend your lover to me," he had said on one occasion,
when she had entered a timid protest. And her white face and wild
helpless eyes had been such evidence as to the effect the word had
produced, that he had seen the expediency of making a point of using
it.

The blood beat in Betty Vanderpoel's veins.

"Rosy," she said, looking steadily in the faded face, "tell me
this. Did you never think of getting away from him, of going
somewhere, and trying to reach father, by cable, or letter, by some
means?"

Lady Anstruthers' weary and wrinkled little smile was a pitiably
illuminating thing.

"My dear" she said, "if you are strong and beautiful and rich
and well dressed, so that people care to look at you, and listen to
what you say, you can do things. But who, in England, will listen to
a shabby, dowdy, frightened woman, when she runs away from her
husband, if he follows her and tells people she is hysterical or mad
or bad? It is the shabby, dowdy woman who is in the wrong. At
first, I thought of nothing else but trying to get away. And once I
went to Stornham station. I walked all the way, on a hot day. And
just as I was getting into a third-class carriage, Nigel marched in
and caught my arm, and held me back. I fainted and when I came to
myself I was in the carriage, being driven back to the Court, and he
was sitting opposite to me. He said, `You fool! It would take a
cleverer woman than you to carry that out.' And I knew it was the
awful truth."

"It is not the awful truth now," said Betty, and she rose to her
feet and stood looking before her, but with a look which did not rest
on chairs and tables. She remained so, standing for a few moments of
dead silence.

"What a fool he was!" she said at last. "And what a villain!
But a villain is always a fool."

She bent, and taking Rosy's face between her hands, kissed it
with a kiss which seemed like a seal. "That will do," she said.
"Now I know. One must know what is in one's hands and what is not.
Then one need not waste time in talking of miserable things. One can
save one's strength for doing what can be done."

"I believe you would always think about doing things," said Lady
Anstruthers. "That is American, too."

"It is a quality Americans inherited from England," lightly;
"one of the results of it is that England covers a rather large share
of the map of the world. It is a practical quality. You and I might
spend hours in talking to each other of what Nigel has done and what
you have done, of what he has said, and of what you have said. We
might give some hours, I daresay, to what the Dowager did and said.
But wiser people than we are have found out that thinking of black
things past is living them again, and it is like poisoning one's
blood. It is deterioration of property."

She said the last words as if she had ended with a jest. But
she knew what she was doing.

"You were tricked into giving up what was yours, to a person who
could not be trusted. What has been done with it, scarcely matters.
It is not yours, but Sir Nigel's. But we are not helpless, because
we have in our hands the most powerful material agent in the
world.

"Come, Rosy, and let us walk over the house. We will begin with
that."







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Burnett page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter XVII. Townlinson and Sheppard.

The Shuttle

Chapter I. The Weaving of the Shuttle
Chapter II. A Lack of Perception
Chapter III. Young Lady Anstruthers
Chapter IV. A Mistake of the Postboy's
Chapter V. On Both Sides of the Atlantic
Chapter VI. An Unfair Endowment
Chapter VII. On Board the "Meridiana"
Chapter VIII. The Second-Class Passenger
Chapter IX. Lady Jane Grey
Chapter X. "Is Lady Anstruthers at Home?"
Chapter XI. "I Thought You Had All Forgotten "
Chapter XII. Ughtred
Chapter XIII. One of the New York Dresses
Chapter XIV. In the Gardens
Chapter XV. The First Man
Chapter XVI. The Particular Incident
Chapter XVII. Townlinson and Sheppard
Chapter XVIII. The Fifteenth Earl of Mount Dunstan
Chapter XIX. Spring in Bond Street
Chapter XX. Things Occur in Stornham Village
Chapter XXI. Kedgers
Chapter XXII. One of Mr. Vanderpoel's Letters
Chapter XXIII. Introducing G. Selden
Chapter XXIV. The Political Economy of Stornham
Chapter XXV. "We Began to Marry Them, My Good Fellow!"
Chapter XXVI. "What it Must be to You--Just You!"
Chapter XXVII. Life
Chapter XXVIII. Setting Them Thinking
Chapter XXIX. The Thread of G. Selden
Chapter XXX. A Return
Chapter XXXI. No, She Would Not
Chapter XXXII. A Great Ball
Chapter XXXIII. For Lady Jane
Chapter XXXIV. Red Godwyn
Chapter XXXV. The Tidal Wave
Chapter XXXVI. By the Roadside Everywhere
Chapter XXXVII. Closed Corridors
Chapter XXXVIII. At Shandy's
Chapter XXXIX. On the Marshes
Chapter LX. "Don't Go on with This"
Chapter XLI. She Would Do Something
Chapter XLII. In the Ballroom
Chapter XLIII. His Chance
Chapter XLIV. A Footstep
Chapter XLV. The Passing Bell
Chapter XLVI. Listening
Chapter XLVII. "I Have No Word or Look to Remember"
Chapter XLVIII. The Moment
Chapter XLIX. At Stornham and at Broadmorlands
Chapter L. The Primeval Thing

 


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