If she hoped to retain a semblance of composure, she must shift her ground.
"I returned to my father"s house, which was, as you know, more remote from the borders of Maryland--"
"You kept up a correspondence, perhaps?" Winston interposed, overlooking her agitation as irrelevant to the matter under investigation.
"No! For many months I wrote no letters at all, and Mr. Chilton was never a punctual correspondent. The best of friends are apt to be dilatory in such respects, as they advance in life."
"I gather, then, from what you have ADMITTED"--there was no actual stress upon the word, but it stood obnoxiously apart from the remainder of the sentence, to Mrs. Sutton"s auriculars--"from what you have admitted, that for twenty years you have lost sight of this gentleman and his relatives, and that you might never have remembered the circ.u.mstance of their existence, had he not introduced himself to you at the Springs this summer."
"You are mistaken, there!" corrected the widow, eagerly. "Rosa Tazewell introduced him to Mabel at the first "hop" she--Mabel--attended there.
He is very una.s.suming. He would never have forced himself upon my notice. I was struck by his appearance and resemblance to his father, and inquired of Mabel who he was. The recognition followed as a matter of course."
"He was an acquaintance of Miss Tazewell--did you say?"
"Yes--she knew him very well when she was visiting in Philadelphia last winter."
"And proffered the introduction to Mabel?" the faintest imaginable glimmer of sarcastic amus.e.m.e.nt in his eyes, but none in his accent.
"He requested it, I believe."
"That is more probable. Excuse my frankness, aunt, when I say that it would have been more in consonance with the laws controlling the conduct of really thoroughbred people, had your paragon--I use the term in no offensive sense--applied to me, instead of to you, for permission to pay his addresses to my ward. I am willing to ascribe this blunder, however, to ignorance of the code of polite society, and not to intentional disrespect, since you represent the gentleman as amiable and well-meaning. I am, furthermore, willing to examine his certificates of character and means, with a view to determining what are his recommendations to my sister"s preference, over and above ball-room graces and the fact that he is Mr. Sutton"s namesake, and whether it will be safe and advisable to grant my consent to their marriage.
Whatever is for Mabel"s real welfare shall be done, while I cannot but wish that her choice had fallen upon some one nearer home The prosecution of inquiries as to the reputation of one whose residence is so distant, is a difficult and delicate task."
"If you will only talk to him for ten minutes he will remove your scruples,--satisfy you that all is as it should be," a.s.serted Mrs.
Sutton, more confidently to him than herself.
"I trust it will be as you say--but credulity is not my besetting sin.
I am ready to see the gentleman at any hour you and he may see fit to appoint."
"I will send MR. CHILTON to you at once, then." Mrs. Sutton collected the scattering remnants of hope and resolution, that she might deal a parting shot.
"Winston is an AWFUL trial to my temper, although he never loses his own," she was wont to soliloquize, in the lack of a confidante to whom she could expatiate upon his eccentricities and general untowardness.
His marked avoidance of Frederic"s name in this conference savored to her of insulting meaning. She had rather he had coupled it with opprobious epithets whenever he referred to him, than spoken of him as "this" or "that gentleman." If he took this high and chilly tone, with Mabel"s wooer, there was no telling what might be the result of the affair.
"Don"t mind him if he is stiff and uncompromising for a while," she enjoined upon Frederic, in apprising him of the seignior"s readiness to grant him audience, "It is only his way, and he is Mabel"s brother."
"I will bear the latter hint in mind," rejoined the young man, with the gay, affectionate smile he often bestowed upon her. "I don"t believe he can awe me into resignation of my purpose, or provoke me into dislike of the rest of the family."
Mabel was in her aunt"s room, plying her with queries, hard to be evaded, touching the tenor and consequences of her recent negotiations, when a servant brought a message from her brother. She was wanted in the study. The girl turned very white, as she prepared to obey, without an idea of delay or of refusal.
"O Auntie! what if he should order me to give Frederic up!" she e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, pausing at the door, in an agony of trepidation. "I never disobeyed him in my life."
"He will not do that, dear, never fear! He can find no pretext for such summary proceedings. And should he oppose your wishes, be firm of purpose, and do not forsake your affianced husband," advised the old lady, solemnly. "There is a duty which takes precedence, in the sight of Heaven and man, of that you owe your brother. Remember this, and take courage."
Mabel"s roses returned in profusion, when, upon entering the arbiter"s dread presence, she saw Frederic Chilton, standing on the opposite side of the table from that at which sat her brother at his ease, his white fingers still idly interlaced, his pale patrician face emotionless as that of the bust of Apollo upon the top of the bookcase behind him. It was Frederic who led her to a chair, when she stopped, trembling midway in the apartment, and his touch upon her arm inspirited her to raise her regards to Winston"s countenance at the sound of his voice.
"I have sent for you, Mabel, that I may repeat in you hearing the reply I have returned to Mr. Chilton"s application for my sanction to your engagement--I should say, perhaps, to your reciprocal attachment. The betrothal of a minor without the consent, positive or implied, of her parent or guardian is, as I have just explained to Mr. Chilton, but an empty name in this State. I have promised, then, not to oppose your marriage, provided the inquiries I shall inst.i.tute concerning Mr.
Chilton"s previous life, his character, and his ability to maintain you in comfort, are answered satisfactorily. He will understand and excuse my pertinacity upon this point when he reflects upon the value of the stake involved in this transaction."
In all their intercourse, Frederic had no more gracious notice from Mabel"s brother than this semi-apology, delivered with stately condescension, and a courtly bow in his direction.
It sounded very grand to Mabel, whose fears of opposition or severity from her Mentor had shaken courage and nerves into pitiable distress.
Frederic could desire nothing more affable than Winston"s smile; no more abundant encouragement than was afforded by his voluntary pledge. Had not the thought savored of disloyalty to her lover, she would have confessed herself disappointed that his reply did not effervesce with grat.i.tude, that his deportment was distant, his tone constrained.
"I appreciate the last-named consideration, Mr. Aylett, I believe, thoroughly, as you do. I have already told you that I invite, not shirk, the investigation you propose. I now repeat my offer of whatever facility is at my command for carrying this on. No honorable man could do less. Unless I mistake, you wish now to see your sister alone."
He bent his head slightly, and without other and especial salutation to his betrothed, withdrew.
Odd, white dints came and went in Winston"s nostrils--the one and unerring facial sign of displeasure he ever exhibited, if we except a certain hardening of eye and contour that chiselled his lineaments into a yet closer resemblance to marble.
"He is very sensitive and proud, I know," faltered Mabel, hastily marking these, and understanding what they portended.
"You need not like him the less on that account, always provided that the supports of his pride are legitimate and substantial," answered her brother, carelessly transferring to his tablets several names from a sheet of paper upon the table--the addresses of persons to whom Frederic had referred him for confirmation of his statements regarding his social and professional standing.
"I hope, for your sake, Mabel," he pursueds pocketing the memoranda, "that this affair may be speedily and agreeably adjusted; while I cannot deny that I deprecate the unseemly haste with which Mrs. Sutton and her ally have urged it on, in my absence. Had they intended to court suspicion, they could not have done it more effectually. You could not have had a more injudicious chaperone to the Springs."
"Indeed, brother, she was not to blame," began the generous girl, forgetting her embarra.s.sment in zealous defence of the aunt she loved.
"It was not she who presented me to Mr. Chilton, and she has never attempted to bias my decision in any manner."
"I have heard the history in detail." Had his breeding been less fine, he would have yawned in her face. "I know that you are indebted for Mr.
Chilton"s acquaintanceship to Miss Tazewell"s generosity. But in strict justice, Mrs. Sutton should be held responsible for whatever unhappiness may arise from the intimacy. You were left by myself in her charge."
"I do not believe it will end unhappily," Mabel was moved to reply, with spirit that became her better than the shyness she had heretofore displayed, or the submissive demeanor usual with her in tete-a-tetes with her guardian.
He smiled in calm superiority.
"I have expressed my hope to that effect. Of expectations it will be time enough to speak when I am better informed upon divers points. I am not one to take much for granted, am less sanguine than my romantic aunt, or even than my more practical sister. a.s.suming, however, that all is as you would have it, your wish would be, I suppose, for an early marriage?"
"There has been little said about that," responded Mabel, reddening--then rallying to add smilingly--"such an arrangement would have involved the taking for granted a good many things--your consent among them."
Winston pa.s.sed over the addenda.
"But that little, especially when uttered by Mr. Chilton, trenched upon the inexpediency of long engagements--did it not?"
Mabel was mute, her eyes downcast.
"I agree with him there, at any rate. You are nineteen years of age; he twenty-five. Your property is uninc.u.mbered, and can be transferred to your keeping at very short notice. Mr. Chilton represents that his income from his patrimonial estate, eked out by professional gains, is sufficient to warrant him in marrying forthwith. I shall see that no time is lost in making the inquiries upon which depends the progress of the negotiation. Business calls me North in a week or ten days. I shall stop a day in Philadelphia, and settle your affair."
The frightfully business-like manner of disposing of her happiness appalled the listener into silence. The loss of Frederic; the destruction of her love-dream; the weary years of lonely wretchedness that would follow the bereavement, were to him only unimportant incidentals to her "affair;" weighed in the scale of his impartial judgment no more than would unconsidered dust. For the first time in the life to which he had been the guiding-star, she ventured to wonder if the unswerving rect.i.tude that had elevated him above the level of other men, in her esteem and affection, were so glorious a thing after all; if a tempering, not of human frailty, but of charity for the shortcomings, sympathy for the needs, of ordinary mortals, would not subdue the effulgence of his talents and virtues into mild l.u.s.tre, more tolerable to the optics of fallible beholders.
Unsuspicious, with all his astuteness, of her sacrilegious doubts, Winston proceeded:
"In the event of your marriage, you would desire, no doubt, that Mrs.
Sutton should take up her abode with you? You would find her useful in many ways, and she would get on amicably with her husband"s G.o.dson."
"I do not think she expects to go with me," answered Mabel, staggered by his coolly confident air. "I certainly have never entertained the idea. I imagined that she would remain with you, while you needed her services."
"That will not be long. I shall be married on the 10th of October."