"I know your errand, missie," he said, "and am glad to see you, and attend to it. I"ll step indoors."
"If you are busy I am in no hurry for a minute or two," said Cytherea.
"Then if so be you really wouldn"t mind, we"ll wring down this last filling to let it drain all night?"
"Not at all. I like to see you."
"We are only just grinding down the early pickthongs and griffins,"
continued the farmer, in a half-apologetic tone for detaining by his cider-making any well-dressed woman. "They rot as black as a chimney-crook if we keep "em till the regulars turn in." As he spoke he went back to the press, Cytherea keeping at his elbow. "I"m later than I should have been by rights," he continued, taking up a lever for propelling the screw, and beckoning to the men to come forward.
"The truth is, my son Edward had promised to come to-day, and I made preparations; but instead of him comes a letter: "London, September the eighteenth, Dear Father," says he, and went on to tell me he couldn"t.
It threw me out a bit."
"Of course," said Cytherea.
"He"s got a place "a b"lieve?" said the clerk, drawing near.
"No, poor mortal fellow, no. He tried for this one here, you know, but couldn"t manage to get it. I don"t know the rights o" the matter, but w.i.l.l.y-nilly they wouldn"t have him for steward. Now mates, form in line."
Springrove, the clerk, the grinders, and Gad, all ranged themselves behind the lever of the screw, and walked round like soldiers wheeling.
"The man that the old quean hev got is a man you can hardly get upon your tongue to gainsay, by the look o" en," rejoined Clerk Crickett.
"One o" them people that can contrive to be thought no worse o" for stealen a horse than another man for looken over hedge at en," said a grinder.
"Well, he"s all there as steward, and is quite the gentleman--no doubt about that."
"So would my Ted ha" been, for the matter o" that," the farmer said.
"That"s true: "a would, sir."
"I said, I"ll give Ted a good education if it do cost me my eyes, and I would have done it."
"Ay, that you would so," said the chorus of a.s.sistants solemnly.
"But he took to books and drawing naturally, and cost very little; and as a wind-up the womenfolk hatched up a match between him and his cousin."
"When"s the wedden to be, Mr. Springrove?"
"Uncertain--but soon, I suppose. Edward, you see, can do anything pretty nearly, and yet can"t get a straightforward living. I wish sometimes I had kept him here, and let professions go. But he was such a one for the pencil."
He dropped the lever in the hedge, and turned to his visitor.
"Now then, missie, if you"ll come indoors, please."
Gad Weedy looked with a placid criticism at Cytherea as she withdrew with the farmer.
"I could tell by the tongue o" her that she didn"t take her degrees in our county," he said in an undertone.
"The railways have left you lonely here," she observed, when they were indoors.
Save the withered old flies, which were quite tame from the solitude, not a being was in the house. n.o.body seemed to have entered it since the last pa.s.senger had been called out to mount the last stage-coach that had run by.
"Yes, the Inn and I seem almost a pair of fossils," the farmer replied, looking at the room and then at himself.
"O, Mr. Springrove," said Cytherea, suddenly recollecting herself; "I am much obliged to you for recommending me to Miss Aldclyffe." She began to warm towards the old man; there was in him a gentleness of disposition which reminded her of her own father.
"Recommending? Not at all, miss. Ted--that"s my son--Ted said a fellow-draughtsman of his had a sister who wanted to be doing something in the world, and I mentioned it to the housekeeper, that"s all. Ay, I miss my son very much."
She kept her back to the window that he might not see her rising colour.
"Yes," he continued, "sometimes I can"t help feeling uneasy about him.
You know, he seems not made for a town life exactly: he gets very queer over it sometimes, I think. Perhaps he"ll be better when he"s married to Adelaide."
A half-impatient feeling arose in her, like that which possesses a sick person when he hears a recently-struck hour struck again by a slow clock. She had lived further on.
"Everything depends upon whether he loves her," she said tremulously.
"He used to--he doesn"t show it so much now; but that"s because he"s older. You see, it was several years ago they first walked together as young man and young woman. She"s altered too from what she was when he first courted her."
"How, sir?"
"O, she"s more sensible by half. When he used to write to her she"d creep up the lane and look back over her shoulder, and slide out the letter, and read a word and stand in thought looking at the hills and seeing none. Then the cuckoo would cry--away the letter would slip, and she"d start wi" fright at the mere bird, and have a red skin before the quickest man among ye could say, "Blood rush up.""
He came forward with the money and dropped it into her hand. His thoughts were still with Edward, and he absently took her little fingers in his as he said, earnestly and ingenuously--
""Tis so seldom I get a gentlewoman to speak to that I can"t help speaking to you, Miss Graye, on my fears for Edward; I sometimes am afraid that he"ll never get on--that he"ll die poor and despised under the worst mental conditions, a keen sense of having been pa.s.sed in the race by men whose brains are nothing to his own, all through his seeing too far into things--being discontented with make-shifts--thinking o"
perfection in things, and then sickened that there"s no such thing as perfection. I shan"t be sorry to see him marry, since it may settle him down and do him good.... Ay, we"ll hope for the best."
He let go her hand and accompanied her to the door saying, "If you should care to walk this way and talk to an old man once now and then, it will be a great delight to him, Miss Graye. Good-evening to ye.... Ah look! a thunderstorm is brewing--be quick home. Or shall I step up with you?"
"No, thank you, Mr. Springrove. Good evening," she said in a low voice, and hurried away. One thought still possessed her; Edward had trifled with her love.
4. FIVE TO SIX P.M.
She followed the road into a bower of trees, overhanging it so densely that the pa.s.s appeared like a rabbit"s burrow, and presently reached a side entrance to the park. The clouds rose more rapidly than the farmer had antic.i.p.ated: the sheep moved in a trail, and complained incoherently. Livid grey shades, like those of the modern French painters, made a mystery of the remote and dark parts of the vista, and seemed to insist upon a suspension of breath. Before she was half-way across the park the thunder rumbled distinctly.
The direction in which she had to go would take her close by the old manor-house. The air was perfectly still, and between each low rumble of the thunder behind she could hear the roar of the waterfall before her, and the creak of the engine among the bushes hard by it. Hurrying on, with a growing dread of the gloom and of the approaching storm, she drew near the Old House, now rising before her against the dark foliage and sky in tones of strange whiteness.
On the flight of steps, which descended from a terrace in front to the level of the park, stood a man. He appeared, partly from the relief the position gave to his figure, and partly from fact, to be of towering height. He was dark in outline, and was looking at the sky, with his hands behind him.
It was necessary for Cytherea to pa.s.s directly across the line of his front. She felt so reluctant to do this, that she was about to turn under the trees out of the path and enter it again at a point beyond the Old House; but he had seen her, and she came on mechanically, unconsciously averting her face a little, and dropping her glance to the ground.
Her eyes unswervingly lingered along the path until they fell upon another path branching in a right line from the path she was pursuing.
It came from the steps of the Old House. "I am exactly opposite him now," she thought, "and his eyes are going through me."
A clear masculine voice said, at the same instant--
"Are you afraid?"