Part II. Arnstead
Chapter XV. Another Evening Lecture.
This Eneas is come to Paradise
Out of the swolowe of Hell.
CHAUCER.--Legend of Dido.
The next day, Hugh was determined to find or make an opportunity of
speaking to Euphra; and fortune seemed to favour him.--Or was it
Euphra herself, in one or other of her inexplicable moods? At all
events, she had that morning allowed the ladies and her uncle to go
without her; and Hugh met her as he went to his study.
"May I speak to you for one moment?" said he, hurriedly, and with
trembling lips.
Yes, certainly," she replied with a smile, and a glance in his face
as of wonder as to what could trouble him so much. Then turning,
and leading the way, she said:
He followed her. She turned and shut the door, which he had left
open behind him. He almost knelt to her; but something held him
back from that.
"Euphra," he said, "what have I done to offend you?"
"Offend me! Nothing."--This was uttered in a perfect tone of
surprise.
"How is it that you avoid me as you do, and will not allow me one
moment's speech with you? You are driving me to distraction."
"Why, you foolish man!" she answered, half playfully, pressing the
palms of her little hands together, and looking up in his face, "how
can I? Don't you see how those two dear old ladies swallow me up in
their faddles? Oh, dear? Oh, dear! I wish they would go. Then it
would be all right again--wouldn't it?"
"Hush-sh!" she interrupted, putting her finger on his lips, and
looking hurriedly round her with an air of fright, of which he could
hardly judge whether it was real or assumed--"hush!"
Comforted wondrously by the hushing finger, Hugh would yet
understand more.
"I am no baby, dear Euphra," he said, taking hold of the hand to
which the finger belonged, and laying it on his mouth; "do not make
one of me. There is some mystery in all this--at least something I
do not understand."
"I will tell you all about it one day. But, seriously, you must be
careful how you behave to me; for if my uncle should, but for one
moment, entertain a suspicion--good-bye to you--perhaps good-bye to
Arnstead. All my influence with him comes from his thinking that I
like him better than anybody else. So you must not make the poor
old man jealous. By the bye," she went on--rapidly, as if she would
turn the current of the conversation aside--"what a favourite you
have grown with him! You should have heard him talk of you to the
old ladies. I might well be jealous of you. There never was a
tutor like his."
Hugh's heart smote him that the praise of even this common man,
proud of his own vanity, should be undeserved by him. He was
troubled, too, at the flippancy with which Euphra spoke; yet not the
less did he feel that he loved her passionately.
"I daresay," he replied, "he praised me as he would anything else
that happened to be his. Isn't that old bay horse of his the best
hack in the county?"
"No-o," she answered, shaking her head, and looking quite solemn.
"Well, will you come to my study? Will that please you better?"
"Yes, I will," she answered, with a definitive tone. "Good-bye,
now."
She opened the door, and having looked out to see that no one was
passing, told him to go. As he went, he felt as if the oaken floor
were elastic beneath his tread.
It was sometime after the household had retired, however, before
Euphra made her appearance at the door of his study. She seemed
rather shy of entering, and hesitated, as if she felt she was doing
something she ought not to do. But as soon as she had entered, and
the door was shut, she appeared to recover herself quite; and they
sat down at the table with their books. They could not get on very
well with their reading, however. Hugh often forgot what he was
about, in looking at her; and she seemed nowise inclined to avert
his gazes, or check the growth of his admiration.
Rather abruptly, but apparently starting from some suggestion in the
book, she said to him:
"By the bye, has Mr. Arnold ever said anything to you about the
family jewels?"
"Yes, a great many. Mr. Arnold is very proud of them, as well as of
the portraits; so he treats them in the same way--keeps them locked
up. Indeed he seldom allows them to see daylight, except it be as a
mark of especial favour to some one."
"I should like much to see them. I have always been curious about
stones. They are wonderful, mysterious things to me."
Euphra gave him a very peculiar, searching glance, as he spoke.
"Shall I," he continued, "give him a hint that I should like to see
them?"
"By no means," answered Euphra, emphatically, "except he should
refer to them himself. He is very jealous of his possessions--his
family possessions, I mean. Poor old man! he has not much else to
plume himself upon; has he?"
"You odd creature! I am not unkind to him. I like him. But we are
not getting on with our reading. What could have led me to talk
about family-jewels? Oh! I see. What a strange thing the
association of ideas is! There is not a very obvious connexion
here; is there?"
"No. One cannot account for such things. The links in the chain of
ideas are sometimes slender enough. Yet the slenderest is
sufficient to enable the electric flash of thought to pass along the
line."
"I only saw they were verses. I did not read a word."
"I forgive you, then. You must show me yours first, till I see
whether I could venture to let you see mine. If yours were very bad
indeed, then I might risk showing mine."
And much more of this sort, with which I will not weary my readers.
It ended in Hugh's taking from the old escritoire a bundle of
papers, and handing them to Euphra. But the reader need not fear
that I am going to print any of these verses. I have more respect
for my honest prose page than to break it up so. Indeed, the whole
of this interview might have been omitted, but for two
circumstances. One of them was, that in getting these papers, Hugh
had to open a concealed portion of the escritoire, which his
mathematical knowledge had enabled him to discover. It had
evidently not been opened for many years before he found it. He had
made use of it to hold the only treasures he had--poor enough
treasures, certainly! Not a loving note, not a lock of hair even
had he--nothing but the few cobwebs spun from his own brain. It is
true, we are rich or poor according to what we are, not what we
have. But what a man has produced, is not what he is. He may even
impoverish his true self by production.
When Euphra saw him open this place, she uttered a suppressed cry of
astonishment.
"Ah!" said Hugh, "you did not know of this hidie-hole, did you?"
"Indeed, I did not. I had used the desk myself, for this was a
favourite room of mine before you came, but I never found that.
Dear me! Let me look."
She put her hand on his shoulder and leaned over him, as he pointed
out the way of opening it.
"Did you find nothing in it?" she said, with a slight tremour in her
voice.
"But now you must give me my guerdon," said Hugh timidly.
The fact was, the poor youth had bargained, in a playful manner, and
yet with an earnest, covetous heart, for one, the first kiss, in
return for the poems she begged to see.
The second circumstance which makes the interview worth recording
is, that, at this moment, three distinct knocks were heard on the
window. They sprang asunder, and saw each other's face pale as
death. In Euphra's, the expression of fright was mingled with one
of annoyance. Hugh, though his heart trembled like a bird, leaped
to the window. Nothing was to be seen but the trees that "stretched
their dark arms" within a few feet of the oriel. Turning again
towards Euphra, he found, to his mortification, that she had
vanished--and had left the packet of poems behind her.
He replaced them in their old quarters in the escritoire; and his
vague dismay at the unaccountable noises, was drowned in the bitter
waters of miserable humiliation. He slept at last, from the
exhaustion of disappointment.
When he awoke, however, he tried to persuade himself that he had
made far too much of the trifling circumstance of her leaving the
verses behind. For was she not terrified?--Why, then, did she leave
him and go alone to her own room?--She must have felt that she ought
not to be in his, at that hour, and therefore dared not stay.--Why
dared not? Did she think the house was haunted by a ghost of
propriety? What rational theory could he invent to account for the
strange and repeated sounds?--He puzzled himself over it to the
verge of absolute intellectual prostration.
He was generally the first in the breakfast-room; that is, after
Euphra, who was always the first. She went up to him as he entered,
and said, almost in a whisper:
"That is very unkind; when you know I was frightened out of my wits.
Do give me them."
"They are not worth giving you. Besides, I have not got them. I
don't carry them in my pocket. They are in the escritoire. I
couldn't leave them lying about. Never mind them."
"I have a right to them," she said, looking up at him slyly and
shyly.
"Well, I gave you them, and you did not think them worth keeping. I
kept my part of the bargain."
At that moment Mrs. Elton entered, and looked a little surprised.
Euphra instantly said:
"I think it is rather too bad of you, Mr. Sutherland, to keep the
poor boy so hard to his work, when you know he is not strong. Mrs.
Elton, I have been begging a holiday for poor Harry, to let him go
with us to Wotton House; but he has such a hard task-master! He
will not hear of it."
The flush, which she could not get rid of all at once, was thus made
to do duty as one of displeasure. Mrs. Elton was thoroughly
deceived, and united her entreaties to those of Miss Cameron. Hugh
was compelled to join in the deception, and pretend to yield a slow
consent. Thus a holiday was extemporised for Harry, subject to the
approbation of his father. This was readily granted; and Mr.
Arnold, turning to Hugh, said:
"You will have nothing to do, Mr. Sutherland: had you not better
join us?"
"With pleasure," replied he; "but the carriage will be full."
The day was delightful; one of those grey summer-days, that are far
better for an excursion than bright ones. In the best of spirits,
mounted on a good horse, riding alongside of the carriage in which
was the lady who was all womankind to him, and who, without taking
much notice of him, yet contrived to throw him a glance now and
then, Hugh would have been overflowingly happy, but for an unquiet,
distressed feeling, which all the time made him aware of the
presence of a sick conscience somewhere within. Mr. Arnold was
exceedingly pleasant, for he was much taken with the sweetness and
modesty of Lady Emily, who, having no strong opinions upon anything,
received those of Mr. Arnold with attentive submission. He saw, or
fancied he saw in her, a great resemblance to his deceased wife, to
whom he had been as sincerely attached as his nature would allow.
In fact, Lady Emily advanced so rapidly in his good graces, that
either Euphra was, or thought fit to appear, rather jealous of her.
She paid her every attention, however, and seemed to gratify Mr.
Arnold by her care of the invalid. She even joined in the
entreaties which, on their way home, he made with evident
earnestness, for an extension of their visit to a month. Lady Emily
was already so much better for the change, that Mrs. Elton made no
objection to the proposal. Euphra gave Hugh one look of misery,
and, turning again, insisted with increased warmth on their
immediate consent. It was gained without much difficulty before
they reached home.
Harry, too, was captivated by the gentle kindness of Lady Emily, and
hardly took his eyes off her all the way; while, on the other hand,
his delicate little attentions had already gained the heart of good
Mrs. Elton, who from the first had remarked and pitied the sad looks
of the boy.