Evan Harrington

Chapter 34

But as Harrington desired plain, prose, Mr. Raikes tamed his imagination to deliver it. He pointed distinctly at the old gentleman who gave the supper as the writer of the letter. Evan, in return, confided to him his history and present position, and Mr. Raikes, without cooling to his fortunate friend, became a trifle patronizing.

"You said your father--I think I remember at old Cudford"s--was a cavalry officer, a bold dragoon?"

"I did," replied Evan. "I told a lie."

"We knew it; but we feared your prowess, Harrington."

Then they talked over the singular letter uninterruptedly, and Evan, weak among his perplexities of position and sentiment: wanting money for the girl up-stairs, for this distasteful comrade"s bill at the Green Dragon, and for his own immediate requirements, and with the bee buzzing of Rose in his ears: "She despises you," consented in a desperation ultimately to sign his name to it, and despatch Jack forthwith to Messrs. Grist.

"You"ll find it"s an imposition," he said, beginning less to think it so, now that his name was put to the hated monstrous thing; which also now fell to p.r.i.c.king at curiosity. For he was in the early steps of his career, and if his lady, holding to pride, despised him--as, he was tortured into the hypocrisy of confessing, she justly might, why, then, unless he was the sport of a farceur, here seemed a gilding of the path of duty: he could be serviceable to friends. His claim on fair young Rose"s love had grown in the short while so prodigiously asinine that it was a minor matter to const.i.tute himself an old eccentric"s puppet.

"No more an imposition than it"s 50 of Virgil," quoth the rejected usher.

"It smells of a plot," said Evan.

"It "s the best joke that will be made in my time," said Mr. Raikes, rubbing his hands.

"And now listen to your luck," said Evan; "I wish mine were like it!"

and Jack heard of Lady Jocelyn"s offer. He heard also that the young lady he was to instruct was an heiress, and immediately inspected his garments, and showed the sacred necessity there was for him to refit in London, under the hands of scientific tailors. Evan wrote him an introduction to Mr. Goren, counted out the contents of his purse (which Jack had reduced in his study of the pastoral game of skittles, he confessed), and calculated in a n.i.g.g.ardly way, how far it would go to supply the fellow"s wants; sighing, as he did it, to think of Jack installed at Beckley Court, while Jack, comparing his luck with Evan"s, had discovered it to be dismally inferior.

"Oh, confound those bellows you keep blowing!" he exclaimed. "I wish to be decently polite, Harrington, but you annoy me. Excuse me, pray, but the most unexampled case of a lucky beggar that ever was known--and to hear him panting and ready to whimper!--it"s outrageous. You"ve only to put up your name, and there you are--an independent gentleman! By Jove!

this isn"t such a dull world. John Raikes! thou livest in times. I feel warm in the sun of your prosperity, Harrington. Now listen to me.

Propound thou no inquiries anywhere about the old fellow who gave the supper. Humour his whim--he won"t have it. All Fallow field is paid to keep him secret; I know it for a fact. I plied my rustic friends every night. "Eat you yer victuals, and drink yer beer, and none o" yer pryin"s and peerin"s among we!" That"s my rebuff from Farmer Broadmead.

And that old boy knows more than he will tell. I saw his cunning old eye on-c.o.c.k. Be silent, Harrington. Let discretion be the seal of thy luck."

"You can reckon on my silence," said Evan. "I believe in no such folly.

Men don"t do these things."

"Ha!" went Mr. Raikes contemptuously.

Of the two he was the foolisher fellow; but quacks have cured incomprehensible maladies, and foolish fellows have an instinct for eccentric actions.

Telling Jack to finish the wine, Evan rose to go.

"Did you order the horse to be fed?"

"Did I order the feeding of the horse?" said Jack, rising and yawning.

"No, I forgot him. Who can think of horses now?"

"Poor brute!" muttered Evan, and went out to see to him.

The ostler had required no instructions to give the horse a feed of corn. Evan mounted, and rode out of the yard to where Jack was standing, bare-headed, in his old posture against the pillar, of which the shade had rounded, and the evening sun shone full on him over a black cloud.

He now looked calmly gay.

"I "m laughing at the agricultural Broadmead!" he said: ""None o" yer pryin"s and peerin"s!" He thought my powers of amusing prodigious. "Dang "un, he do maak a chap laugh!" Well, Harrington, that sort of homage isn"t much, I admit."

Raikes pursued: "There"s something in a pastoral life, after all."

"Pastoral!" muttered Evan. "I was speaking of you at Beckley, and hope when you"re there you won"t make me regret my introduction of you. Keep your mind on old Cudford"s mutton-bone."

"I perfectly understood you," said Jack. "I "m Presumed to be in luck.

Ingrat.i.tude is not my fault--I"m afraid ambition is!"

"Console yourself with it or what you can get till we meet--here or in London. But the Dragon shall be the address for both of us," Evan said, and nodded, trotting off.

CHAPTER XVIII. IN WHICH EVAN CALLS HIMSELF GENTLEMAN

The young cavalier perused that letter again in memory. Genuine, or a joke of the enemy, it spoke wakening facts to him. He leapt from the spell Rose had encircled him with. Strange that he should have rushed into his dream with eyes open! But he was fully awake now. He would speak his last farewell to her, and so end the earthly happiness he paid for in deep humiliation, and depart into that gray cold mist where his duty lay. It is thus that young men occasionally design to burst from the circle of the pa.s.sions, and think that they have done it, when indeed they are but making the circle more swiftly. Here was Evan mouthing his farewell to Rose, using phrases so profoundly humble, that a listener would have taken them for bitter irony. He said adieu to her,--p.r.o.nouncing it with a pathos to melt scornful princesses. He tried to be honest, and was as much so as his disease permitted.

The black cloud had swallowed the sun; and turning off to the short cut across the downs, Evan soon rode between the wind and the storm.

He could see the heavy burden breasting the beacon-point, round which curled leaden arms, and a low internal growl saluted him advancing. The horse laid back his ears. A last gust from the opposing quarter shook the furzes and the clumps of long pale gra.s.s, and straight fell columns of rattling white rain, and in a minute he was closed in by a hissing ring. Men thus pelted abandon without protest the hope of retaining a dry particle of clothing on their persons. Completely drenched, the track lost, everything in dense gloom beyond the white enclosure that moved with him, Evan flung the reins to the horse, and curiously watched him footing on; for physical discomfort balanced his mental perturbation, and he who had just been chafing was now quite calm.

Was that a shepherd crouched under the thorn? The place betokened a shepherd, but it really looked like a bundle of the opposite s.e.x; and it proved to be a woman gathered up with her gown over her head.

Apparently, Mr. Evan Harrington was destined for these encounters. The thunder rolled as he stopped by her side and called out to her. She heard him, for she made a movement, but without sufficiently disengaging her head of its covering to show him a part of her face.

Bellowing against the thunder, Evan bade her throw back her garment, and stand and give him up her arms, that he might lift her on the horse behind him.

There came a m.u.f.fled answer, on a big sob, as it seemed. And as if heaven paused to hear, the storm was mute.

Could he have heard correctly? The words he fancied he had heard sobbed were:

"Best bonnet."

The elements hereupon crashed deep and long from end to end, like a table of t.i.tans pa.s.sing a jest.

Rain-drops, hard as hail, were spattering a pool on her head. Evan stooped his shoulder, seized the soaked garment, and pulled it back, revealing the features of Polly Wheedle, and the splendid bonnet in ruins--all limp and stained.

Polly blinked at him penitentially.

"Oh, Mr. Harrington; oh, ain"t I punished!" she whimpered.

In truth, the maid resembled a well-watered poppy.

Evan told her to stand up close to the horse, and Polly stood up close, looking like a creature that expected a whipping. She was suffering, poor thing, from that abject sense of the lack of a circ.u.mference, which takes the pride out of women more than anything. Note, that in all material fashions, as in all moral observances, women demand a circ.u.mference, and enlarge it more and more as civilization advances.

Respect the mighty instinct, however mysterious it seem.

"Oh, Mr. Harrington, don"t laugh at me," said Polly.

Evan a.s.sured her that he was seriously examining her bonnet.

"It "s the bonnet of a draggletail," said Polly, giving up her arms, and biting her under-lip for the lift.

With some display of strength, Evan got the lean creature up behind him, and Polly settled there, and squeezed him tightly with her arms, excusing the liberty she took.

They mounted the beacon, and rode along the ridge whence the West became visible, and a washed edge of red over Beckley Church spire and the woods of Beckley Court.

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