Dr. Dagger examined Mrs. White and pronounced that there had been
mortal disease of long standing, and that she had nearly, if not
quite, reached the last stage. While people had thought her selfish,
weak, and exacting, she must really have concealed severe suffering,
foolishly perhaps, but with great fortitude.
And from hearing this sentence, Kalliope had turned to find at last
tidings of her brother in a letter written from Avoncester, the
nearest garrison town. He told his sister that, heart-broken already
at the result of what he knew to be his own presumption, and
horrified at the fatal consequences of his unhappy neglect, he felt
incapable of facing any of those whom he had once called his friends,
and the letter of dismissal had removed all scruples. Had it not
been for his faith and fear, he would have put an end to his life,
but she need have no alarms on that score. He had rushed away,
scarce knowing what he was doing, till he had found himself on the
road to Avoncester and then had walked on thither and enlisted in the
regiment quartered there, where he hoped to do his duty, having no
other hope left in life!
Part of this letter Kalliope read to Miss Mohun, who had come down to
hear the doctor's verdict. It was no time to smile at the heart
being broken by the return of a valentine, or all hope in life being
over before twenty. Kalliope, who knew what the life of a private
was, felt wretched over it, and her poor mother was in despair; but
Miss Mohun tried to persuade her that it was by no means an
unfortunate thing, since Alexis would be thus detained safely and
within reach till Sir Jasper arrived to take up the matter, and Mr.
White had been able to understand it.
'Yes; but he cannot come to my poor mother. And Richard will be so
angry---think it such a degradation.'
'Oh no, poor fellow, he could not. He wants all we can send him, or
we would have put the little boys to a better school.'
'I would not write before it is absolutely necessary,' said Miss
Mohun. 'A young man hanging about with nothing to do, even under
these circumstances, might make things harder.'
'Yes, I know,' said Kalliope, with a trembling lip. 'And if it was
urgent, even Alexis might come. Indeed, I ought to be thankful that
he is safe, after all my dreadful fears, and not far off.'
Miss Mohun refrained from grieving the poor girl by blaming Alexis
for the impetuous selfish folly that had so greatly added to the
general distress of his family, and rendered it so much more
difficult to plead his cause. In fact, she felt bound to stand up as
his champion against all his enemies, though he was less easy of
defence than his sister; and Mr. Flight, the first person she met
afterwards, was excessively angry and disappointed, speaking of such
a step as utter ruin.
'The lad was capable of so much better things,' said he. 'I had
hoped so much of him, and had so many plans for him, that it is a
grievous pity; but he had no patience, and now he has thrown himself
away. I told him it was his first duty to maintain his mother, and
if he had stuck to that, I would have done more for him as soon as he
was old enough, and I could see what was to be done for the rest of
them; but he grew unsettled and impatient, and this is the end of
it!'
'Not the end, I hope,' said Miss Mohun. 'It is not exactly slavery
without redemption.'
'Who does? Besides, remember what his father was.'
'His father must have been of the high-spirited, dare-devil sort.
This lad was made for a scholar---for the priesthood, in fact, and the
army will be more uncongenial than these marble works! Foolish
fellow, he will soon have had enough of it, with his refinement,
among such associates.'
Jane wondered that the young clergyman did not regret that he had
sufficiently tried the youth's patience to give the sense of neglect
and oblivion. There had been many factors in the catastrophe, and
this had certainly been one, since the loan of a few books, and an
hour a week of direction of study, would have kept Alexis contented,
and have obviated all the perilous intercourse with Gillian; but she
scarcely did the Rev. Augustine Flight injustice in thinking that in
the aesthetic and the emotional side of religion he somewhat lost
sight of the daily drudgery that works on character chiefly as a
preventive. 'He was at the bottom of it, little as he knows it,' she
said to herself as she walked up the hill. 'How much harm is done by
good beginnings of a skein left to tangle.'
Lady Flight provided a trained nurse to help Kalliope, and sent hosts
of delicacies; and plenty of abuse was bestowed on Mr. James White
for his neglect. Meanwhile Mrs. White, though manifestly in a
hopeless state, seemed likely to linger on for some weeks longer.
In the meantime, Miss Mohun at last found an available house, and was
gratified by the young people's murmur that 'Il Lido' was too far off
from Beechcroft. But then their mother would be glad to be so near
St. Andrew's, for she belonged to the generation that loved and
valued daily services.
Lord Rotherwood, perhaps owing to his exertions, felt the accident
more than he had done at first, and had to be kept very quiet, which
he averred to be best accomplished by having the children in to play
with him; and as he always insisted on sending for Valetta to make up
the party, the edict of separation fell to the ground, when Lady
Rotherwood, having written his letters for him, went out for a drive,
taking sometimes Miss Elbury, but more often Adeline Mohun, who
flattered herself that her representations had done much to subdue
prejudice and smooth matters.
'Which always were smooth,' said Jane; 'smooth and polished as a
mahogany table, and as easy to get into.'
However, she was quite content that Ada should be the preferred one,
and perhaps no one less acute than herself would have felt that the
treatment as intimates and as part of the family was part of the duty
of a model wife. Both sisters were in request to enliven the
captive, and Jane forebore to worry him with her own anxieties about
the present disgrace of the Whites. Nothing could be done for
Kalliope in her mother's present state, Alexis must drink of his own
brewst, and Sir Jasper and Lady Merrifield were past Brindisi! As to
Mr. White, he seemed to be immersed in business, and made no sign of
relenting; Jane had made one or two attempts to see him, but had not
succeeded. Only one of her G.F.S. maidens, who was an enthusiastic
admirer of Kalliope, and in perfect despair at her absence, mentioned
that Mr. White had looked over all their work and had been immensely
struck with Miss White's designs, and especially with the table
inlaid with autumn leaves, which had been set aside as expensive,
unprofitable, and not according to the public taste, and not shown to
him on his first visit to the works with Mr. Stebbing. There were
rumours in the air that he was not contented with the state of
things, and might remain for some time to set them on a different
footing.
Miss Adeline had been driving with Lady Rotherwood, and on coming in
with her for the afternoon cup of tea, found Mr. White conversing
with Lord Rotherwood, evidently just finishing the subject---a
reading-room or institute of some sort for the men at the works.
'All these things are since my time,' said Mr. White. 'We were left
pretty much to ourselves in those days.'
'And what do you think? Should you have been much the better for
them?' asked the Marquis.
'There were some who would, as plenty will now; but we were a rough
set---we had not so much to start with as the lads, willy nilly, have
now. But I should have been glad of books, and diversion free from
lawlessness might have prevented poor Dick's scrapes. By the bye,
that daughter of his can do good work.'
'Poor thing,' said Miss Adeline, 'she is a very good girl, and in
great trouble. I was much pleased with her, and I think, she has
behaved remarkably well under very trying circumstances.'
'I observed that the young women in the mosaic department seemed to
be much attached to her,' said Mr. White.
'My sister thinks she has been an excellent influence there.'
'No; her mother is too ill to be left---dying, I should think, from
what I hear.'
'From the shock of that foolish lad's evasion?' asked Lord
Rotherwood.
'She was very ill before, I believe, though that brought it to a
crisis. No one would believe how much that poor girl has had
depending on her. I wish she had been at the works---I am sure you
would have been struck with her.'
'Have you any reason to think they are in any distress, Miss Mohun?'
'Not actually at present; but I do not know what they are to do in
future, with the loss of the salaries those two have had,' said
Adeline, exceedingly anxious to say neither too much nor too little.
'As sure as I can be of anything. I have always heard that the rents
of their two or three small houses went to support Richard, and that
they entirely live on the earnings of the brother and sister, except
that you are so good as to educate the younger girl. It has come out
casually---they never ask for anything.'
Mr. White looked very thoughtful. Adeline considered whether
importunity would do most harm or good; but thought her words might
work. When she rose to take leave, Mr. White did the same,
'evidently,' thought she, 'for the sake of escorting her home,' and
she might perhaps say another word in confidence for the poor young
people. She had much reliance, and not unjustly, on her powers of
persuasion, and she would make the most of those few steps to her own
door.
'Indeed, Mr. White,' she began, 'excuse me, but I cannot help being
very much interested in those young people we were speaking of.'
'That is your goodness, Miss Mohun. I have no doubt they are
attractive---there's no end to the attractiveness of those Southern
folk they belong to---on one side of the house at least, but
unfortunately you never know where to have them---there's no truth in
them; and though I don't want to speak of anything I may have done
for them, I can't get over their professing never to have had
anything from me.'
'May I ask whether you sent it through that eldest brother?'
'Then, Mr. White, I cannot help believing that the family here never
heard of it. Do you know anything of that young man?'
'No; I will write to his firm and inquire. Thank you for the hint,
Miss Mohun.'
They were at Beechcroft Cottage gate, and he seemed about to see her
even to the door. At that instant a little girlish figure advanced
and was about to draw back on perceiving that Miss Adeline was not
alone, when she exclaimed, 'Maura, is it you, out so late! How is
your mother?'
'Here is one of the very young folks we were mentioning,' said Ada,
seeing her opportunity and glad that there was light enough to show
the lady-like little figure. 'This is Maura, Mr. White, whom you are
kindly educating.'
Mr. White took the hand, which was given with a pretty respectful
gesture, and said something kind about her mother's illness, while
Adeline took the girl into the house and asked if she had come on any
message.
'Yes, if you please,' said Maura, blushing; 'Miss Mohun was so kind
as to offer to lend us an air-cushion, and poor mamma is so restless
and uncomfortable that Kally thought it might ease her a little.'
'By all means, my dear. Come in, and I will have it brought,' said
Adeline, whose property the cushion was, and who was well pleased
that Mr. White came in likewise, and thus had a full view of Maura's
great wistful, long-lashed eyes, and delicate refined features, under
a little old brown velvet cap, and the slight figure in a gray
ulster. He did not speak while Maura answered Miss Adeline's
inquiries, but when the cushion had been brought down, and she had
taken it under her arm, he exclaimed---
'Oh yes,' said Maura cheerfully; 'it is not really dark out of doors
yet.'
'I suppose it could not be helped,' said Miss Adeline.
'No; Theodore is at the school. They keep him late to get things
ready for the inspection, and Petros had to go to the doctor's to
fetch something; but he will meet me if he is not kept waiting.'
'It is not fit for a child like that to go alone so late,' said Mr.
White, who perhaps had imbibed Italian notions of the respectability
of an escort. 'I will walk down with her.'
Maura looked as if darkness were highly preferable to such a
cavalier; but Miss Adeline was charmed to see them walk off together,
and when her sister presently came in with Gillian and Fergus, she
could not but plume herself a little on her achievement.
'Then it was those two!' exclaimed Jane. 'I thought so from the
other side of the street, but it was too dark to be certain; and
besides, there was no believing it.'
'Talking. Oh, what fun!' Adeline could not help observing in such
glee that she looked more like 'our youngest girl' than the handsome
middle-aged aunt.
'But,' suggested Fergus, somewhat astonished, 'Stebbing says he is no
end of a horrid brute of a screw.'
'Well, to tip over as a coach wheel is the last thing I should have
expected of Mr. White,' said Aunt Jane, misunderstanding on purpose.
'A crown piece then,' growled Fergus; 'and of course he thought it
would be a sovereign, and so he can't pay me my two ten--shillings, I
mean, that I lent him, and so I can't get the lovely ammonite I saw
at Nott's.'
'How could you be so silly as to lend him any money?'
'I didn't want to; but he said he would treat us all round if I
wouldn't be mean, and after all I only got half a goody, with all the
liqueur out of it.'
'It served you right,' said Gillian. 'I doubt whether you would see
the two shillings again, even if he had the sovereign.'
'He faithfully promised I should,' said Fergus, whose allegiance was
only half broken. 'And old White is a beast, and no mistake. He was
perfectly savage to Stebbing's major, and he said he wouldn't be
under him, at no price.'
'Perhaps Mr. White might say the same,' put in Aunt Ada.
'He is a downright old screw and a bear, I tell you,' persisted
Fergus. 'He jawed Frank Stebbing like a pickpocket for just having a
cigar in the quarry.'
'Close to the blasting powder, eh?' said Miss Mohun.
'And he is boring and worrying them all out of their lives over the
books,' added Fergus. 'Poking his nose into everything, so that
Stebbing says his governor vows he can't stand it, and shall cut the
concern it the old brute does not take himself off to Italy before
long.'
'What a good thing!' thought both sisters, looking into each other's
eyes and auguring well for the future.
All were anxious to hear the result of Maura's walk, and Gillian set
out in the morning on a voyage of discovery with a glass of jelly for
Mrs. White; but all she could learn was that the great man had been
very kind to Maura, though he had not come in, at which Gillian was
indignant.
'Men are often shy of going near sickness and sorrow,' said her aunt
Ada. 'You did not hear what they talked about?'
'No; Maura was at school, and Kally is a bad person to pump.'
'I should like to pump Mr. White,' was Aunt Jane's comment.
'If I could meet him again,' said Aunt Ada, 'I feel sure he would
tell me.'
Her sister laughed a little, so well did she know that little half-
conscious, half-gratified tone of assumption of power over the other
sex; but Miss Adeline proved to be right. Nay, Mr. White actually
called in the raw cold afternoon, which kept her in when every one
else was out. He came for the sake of telling her that he was much
pleased with the little girl---a pretty creature, and simple and true,
he really believed. Quite artlessly, in answer to his inquiries, she
had betrayed that her eldest brother never helped them. 'Oh no!
Mamma was always getting all the money she could to send to him,
because he must keep up appearances at his office at Leeds, and live
like a gentleman, and it did not signify about Kalliope and Alexis
doing common work.'
'That's one matter cleared up,' rejoiced Jane. 'It won't be brought
up against them now.'
'And then it seems he asked the child about her sister's lovers.'
'Never mind. I want to hear; only I should have thought you would
have been the first to cry out.'
'Little Maura seems to have risen to the occasion, and made a full
explanation as far as she knew---and that was more than the child
ought to have known, by the bye---of how Mr. Frank was always after
Kally, and how she could not bear him, and gave up the Sunday walk to
avoid him, and how he had tried to get her to marry him, and go to
Italy with him; but she would not hear of it.'
'Just the thing the little chatterbox would be proud of, but it is no
harm that "Mon oncle des iles Philippines" should know.'
'"I see his little game" was what Mr. White said,' repeated Adeline.
'"The young dog expected to come over me with this pretty young wife-
--my relation, too; but he would have found himself out in his
reckoning."'
'However, the ice is broken. What's that? Is the house coming
down?'
No; but Gillian and Valetta came rushing in, almost tumbling over one
another, and each waving a sheet of a letter. Papa and mamma would
land in three days' time if all went well; but the pity was that they
must go to London before coming to Rockquay, since Sir Jasper must
present himself to the military and medical authorities, and likewise
see his mother, who was in a very failing state.
The children looked and felt as if the meeting were deferred for
years; but Miss Mohun, remembering the condition of 'Il Lido,' alike
as to the presence of workmen and absence of servants, felt relieved
at the respite, proceeded to send a telegram to Macrae, and became
busier than ever before in her life.
The Rotherwoods were just going to London. The Marquis was wanted
for a division, and though both he and Dr. Dagger declared his
collar-bone quite repaired, his wife could not be satisfied without
hearing for herself a verdict to the same effect from the higher
authorities, being pretty sure that whatever their report might be,
his abstract would be 'All right. Never mind.'
Fly had gained so much in flesh and strength, and was so much more
like her real self, that she was to remain at the hotel with Miss
Elbury, the rooms being kept for her parents till Easter. Mysie was,
however, to go with them to satisfy her mother, 'with a first
mouthful of children,' said Lord Rotherwood. 'Gillian had better
come too; and we will write to the Merrifields to come to us, unless
they are bound to the old lady.'
This, however, was unlikely, as she was very infirm, and her small
house was pretty well filled by her attendants. Lady Rotherwood
seconded the invitation like a good wife, and Gillian was grateful.
Such a forestalling was well worth even the being the Marchioness's
guest, and being treated with careful politeness and supervision as a
girl of the period, always ready to break out. However, she would
have Mysie, and she tried to believe Aunt Jane, who told her that she
had conjured up a spectre of the awful dame. There was a melancholy
parting on the side of poor little Lady Phyllis. 'What shall I do
without you, Mysie dear?'
'Yes; but then you will be in a different house, all down in the
town---it will be only visiting---not like sisters.'
'Sisters are quite a different thing,' said Mysie stoutly; 'but we
can be the next thing to it in our hearts.'
'It is not equal,' said Fly. 'You don't make a sister of me, and I
do of you.'
'Because you know no better! Poor Fly, I do wish I could give you a
sister of your own.'
'Do you know, Mysie, I think---I'm quite sure, that daddy is going to
ask your father and mother to give you to us, out and out.'
'Oh! I'm sure they won't do that,' cried Mysie in consternation.
'Mamma never would!'
'And wouldn't you? Don't you like me as well as Gill and Val?'
'Ilike you better. Stop, don't, Fly; you are what people call
more of a companion to me---my friend; but friends aren't the same as
sisters, are they? They may be more, or they may be less, but it is
not the same kind. And then it is not only you, there are papa and
mamma and all my brothers.'
'But you do love daddy, and you have not seen yours for four years,
and Aunt Florence and all the cousins at Beechcroft say they were
quite afraid of him.'
'Because he is so--- Oh! I don't know how to say it, but he is just
like Epaminondas, or King Arthur, or Robert Bruce, or---'
'Well, that's enough' said Fly; 'I am sure my daddy would laugh if
you said he was like all those.'
'To be sure he would!' said Mysie. 'And do you think I would give
mine for him, though yours is so kind and good and such fun?'
'And I'm sure I'd rather have him than yours,' said Fly.
'Well, that's right. It would be wicked not to like one's own father
and mother best.'
'But if they thought it would be good for you to have all my
governesses and advantages, and they took pity on my loneliness.
What then?'
'Then? Oh! I'd try to bear it,' said unworldly and uncomplimentary
Mysie. 'And you need not be lonely now. There's Val!'
The two governesses had made friends, and the embargo on intercourse
with Valetta had been allowed to drop; but Fly only shook her head,
and allowed that Val was better than nothing.'
Mysie had a certain confidence that mamma would not give her away if
all the lords and ladies in the world wanted her; and Gillian
confirmed her in that belief, so that no misgiving interfered with
her joy at finding herself in the train, where Lord Rotherwood
declared that the two pair of eyes shone enough to light a candle by.
'I feel,' said Mysie, jumping up and down in her seat, 'like the man
who said he had a bird in his bosom.'
'Or a bee in his bonnet, eh?' said Lord Rotherwood, while Mysie
obeyed a sign from my lady to moderate the restlessness of her
ecstasies.
'It really was a bird in his bosom,' said Gillian gravely, 'only he
said so when he was dying in battle, and he meant his faith to his
king.'
'And little Mysie has kept her faith to her mother,' said their
cousin, putting out his hand to turn the happy face towards him.
'So the bird may well sing to her.'
'In spite of parting with Phyllis?' asked Lady Rotherwood.
'I can't help it, indeed,' said Mysie, divided between her
politeness and her dread of being given away; 'it has been very nice,
but one's own, own papa and mamma must be more than any one.'
'So they ought,' said Lord Rotherwood, and there it ended, chatter in
the train not being considered desirable.
Gillian longed to show Mysie and Geraldine Grinstead to each other,
and the first rub with her hostess occurred when the next morning she
proposed to take a cab and go to Brompton.
'Is not your first visit due to your grandmother?' said Lady
Rotherwood. 'You might walk there, and I will send some one to show
you the way.'
'We must not go there till after luncheon,' said Gillian. 'She is
not ready to see any one, and Bessie Merrifield cannot be spared; but
I know Mrs. Grinstead will like to see us, and I do so want Mysie to
see the studio.'
'My dear' (it was not a favourable my dear), 'I had rather you did
not visit any one I do not know while you are under my charge.'
'She is Phyllis's husband's sister,' pleaded Gillian.
Lady Rotherwood made a little bend of acquiescence, but said no more,
and departed, while Gillian inly raged. A few months ago she would
have acted on her own responsibility (if Mysie would not have been
too much shocked), but she had learnt the wisdom of submission in
fact, if not in word, for she growled about great ladies and
exclusiveness, so that Mysie looked mystified.
It was certainly rather dull in the only half-revivified London
house, and Belgrave Square in Lent did not present a lively scene
from the windows. The Liddesdales had a house there, but they were
not to come up till the season began; and Gillian was turning with a
sigh to ask if there might not be some books in Fly's schoolroom,
when Mysie caught the sound of a bell, and ventured on an expedition
to find her ladyship and ask leave to go to church.
There, to their unexpected delight, they beheld not only Bessie, but
a clerical-looking back, which, after some watching, they so
identified that they looked at one another with responsive eyes, and
Gillian doubted whether this were recompense for submission, or
reproof for discontent.
Very joyful was the meeting on the steps of St. Paul's,
Knightsbridge, and an exchange of 'Oh! how did you come here? Where
are you?'
Harry had come up the day before, and was to go and meet the
travellers at Southampton with his uncle, Admiral Merrifield, who had
brought his eldest daughter Susan to relieve her sister or assist
her. Great was the joy and eager the talk, as first Bessie was
escorted by the whole party back to grandmamma's house, and then
Harry accompanied his sisters to Belgrave Square, where he was kept
to luncheon, and Lady Rotherwood was as glad to resign his sisters to
his charge as he could be to receive them.
He had numerous commissions to execute for his vicar, and Gillian had
to assist the masculine brains in the department of Church
needlework, actually venturing to undertake some herself, trusting to
the tuition of Aunt Ada, a proficient in the same; while Mysie
reverently begged at least to hem the borders.
Then they revelled in the little paradises of books and pictures in
Northumberland Avenue and Westminster Sanctuary, and went to Evensong
at the Abbey, Mysie's first sight thereof, and nearly the like to
Gillian, since she only remembered before a longing not to waste time
in a dull place instead of being in the delightful streets.
'It is a thing never to forget,' she said under her breath, as they
lingered in the nave.
'I never guessed anything could make one feel so,' added Mysie, with
a little sigh of rapture.
'That strange unexpected sense of delight always seems to me to
explain, "Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered
into the heart of man to conceive,"' said Harry.
'Beneath thy contemplation
Sink heart and voice opprest!'
'Oh, Harry, can't we stay and see Henry VII.'s Chapel, and Poets'
Corner, and Edward I.'s monument?' pleaded the sister.
'I am afraid we must not, Gill. I have to see after some vases, and
to get a lot of things at the Stores, and it will soon be dark. If I
don't go to Southampton to-morrow, I will take you then. Now then,
feet or cab?'
'Then mind you don't jerk me back at the crossings.'
There are few pleasures greater of their kind than that of the
youthful country cousin under the safe escort of a brother or father
in London streets. The sisters looked in at windows, wondered and
enjoyed, till they had to own their feet worn out, and submit to a
four-wheeler.
'An hour of London is more than a month of Rockquay, or a year of
Silverfold,' cried Gillian.
'Dear old Silverfold,' said Mysie; 'when shall we go back?'
'By the bye,' said Harry, 'how about the great things that were to be
done for mother?'
'Primrose is all right,' said Mysie. 'The dear little thing has
written a nice copybook, and hemmed a whole set of handkerchiefs for
papa. She is so happy with them.'
And then Sunday was spent upon memorable churches and services under
the charge of Harry, who was making the most of his holiday. The
trio went to Evensong at St. Wulstan's, and a grand idea occurred to
Gillian---could not Theodore White become one of those young
choristers, who had their home in the Clergy House.