"Promise me that never in all your life will you elope with anybody but me. Let me know that no one else will be taken away by you like this.
Let this be my own--my very own elopement."
And Old Paul most solemnly promised.
They drove home under a kindly moon and stars; and by that time Moira was nearly asleep. Jogging along through the country lanes, Old Paul as he held the reins and kept an arm about the child, dreamed dreams.
Dreamed, perhaps, that this might have been the woman who had died; that in such a fashion he might have travelled through an impossible world of moonshine and of starshine with her, and been impossibly happy. Almost he came to think that by the love of the child he had won back to the love of the mother; that the disaster that had touched his life was a thing to be forgotten--something long since atoned for, alike in death and by the gift of this baby. The love his young manhood had known for the mother seemed to be swallowed up in this purer, finer love for the child; he came back, at the end of his perfect day, secure in that love at least.
By the time the sleepy Ancient One stopped at the gate in the wall Moira was awake again; she suffered herself to be lifted from the chaise, and so to face the commonplace world again. She stood, swaying a little with sleep, in the warm dusk; she became dimly conscious that someone was surveying her through a bright eyegla.s.s. That was the crowning moment of her triumph, and she did not need to say anything in explanation.
"I was taking a stroll," sounded the high voice of Honora Jackman.
"Where have you been hiding all day, you two?"
Old Paul felt the warm fingers of the child tighten about his hand; he knew what answer he must give. "Well, as a matter of fact," he replied blandly, "Moira and I have been away all day--on a little excursion."
The fingers tightened still more, and he plunged desperately into the full truth. "We--we eloped together early this morning; and it has been a wonderful day."
That was enough; impelled by the stern hand of Moira he was swept past Honora Jackman, and was drawn towards the house, leading the Ancient One. It was the hour of Moira"s triumph, and she would not have abated one jot of it. The shrill little laugh the woman gave was the final beautiful note of it.
Only Anthony Ditchburn seemed to have suffered. He came querulously to Paul that night--looking in with a scared face, and with glances over his shoulder, as though in fear of pursuit.
"Why did you go away, Nannock?" he demanded. "She"s a horrible woman; she came early, and said something about woods; seemed to have a sort of suspicion that I was hiding you. Came again several times during the day, and asked about you; was positively rude at times. And I in the midst of an important chapter! You needn"t laugh," he added piteously; "it has quite unnerved me. She"s dangerous."
But Old Paul leaned back in his chair, and laughed until he cried.
CHAPTER V
JIMMY"S AFFECTIONS
It does not need to be recorded here that after that first fierce outburst the image of Honora Jackman faded from the mind of Jimmy, and became but as a vague dream of the past. True, for a time he hugged to himself the impossible thought of her; remembered with a pang the day of her departure. For even the Baffalls were to see the last of her, and Jimmy was to be privileged to be inconsolable for some twenty-four hours.
She did not depart without something of a sensation. She felt she owed it to her reputation, and to her superior knowledge of the world, that she should let this man know that she understood his feelings--understood, in particular, that he was afraid of her. Bitterly though she resented the fashion in which he had set her aside, there was consolation in the thought that he had had to set, as she believed, the frail child between herself and him; she would remind him of that at least before she went. Mrs. Baffall being easily managed on such a matter, it came about that Mrs. Baffall put in an appearance at Daisley Place, and sought an interview with Old Paul.
"She"s going away," said Mrs. Baffall; it did not seem necessary to mention any name.
"You"ll miss her," replied Old Paul politely.
Mrs. Baffall glanced about her as though fearing listeners; then she smoothed her gloved hands down over her silk dress, bending herself a little to do so, and spoke in a confidential whisper:
"We shall--and we shan"t, Mr. Nannock, in a manner of speaking," she said. "Between you and me and what I may call the gate-post, Baffall and me won"t be sorry. She"s nice, and she"s got style, but it"s a bit too much of a style for us. Bare shoulders at dinner make me feel chilly--and her voice seems to go through and through the house."
"I think I understand," said Paul, nodding. "But you want me to do something?"
"I thought if you could stand the shoulders for one evening--you being more used to "em like, Mr. Nannock--it"d be a charity. She said this morning"--Mrs. Baffall made an extraordinary grimace, as though controlling a desire to laugh--"said this very morning that she was dying to see you and the children together--in your own place. Seems quite set on it."
Paul walked across to the window and looked out; turned there, and looked at the old woman. There was an unspoken question in his eyes, and she answered it promptly.
"Lord bless the man--she won"t eat you!" she exclaimed, in a more natural fashion than that in which she usually spoke. "And if it"ll do her any good, by all means let her. I"m sure you"ll excuse me speaking in such a fashion to you, sir; but I think she"s got about a hundred and fifty a year to live on--and not many friends, as you count friends in this world. And she ain"t a bad sort, take her all round--and she"s a woman."
Paul came away from the window and stood close to the old woman, who had risen to meet him; in that moment they clasped hands and looked into each other"s eyes. "Come, all of you--and you shall fix the date," said Paul.
She withdrew her hand and laughed a little confusedly; settled the strings of her bonnet with some faint touch of coquetry. "Make it to-morrow, Mr. Nannock," she said.
In order not to reveal the innocent plot Paul sent a formal invitation that day by the hand of Jimmy. Jimmy had a wild hope that he might see his divinity, for, of course, at that time her image had not faded by any means--that was only to come later. But the lady did not put in an appearance; instead, Mrs. Baffall entertained him in the showy drawing-room, inquiring politely as to the health of everybody, and giving him minute particulars concerning various uninteresting matters with which he could not possibly be concerned. But Jimmy learnt, to his fluttering delight, that _she_ was coming to dinner on the morrow; it might be that he would get a glimpse of her.
He was to get more than a glimpse. Old Paul gravely informed him, on his return to the house, that he was to dine with the company on the morrow; and Jimmy, blushing furiously, blurted out his thanks and fled from the room. For reasons of state Paul decided that the girls had better not appear; perhaps he feared Moira a little. In his own mind he set this experienced woman of the world against the child, and carefully made allowances for feelings with which another would not have credited her.
In fact, all things considered, Paul felt he would be glad when the dinner party should be over, and Honora Jackman well away upon her travels again.
Honora came softly, and with something of timidity. To judge from her manner, and from the fashion in which her hand lingered in his for a moment at her coming, this might have been really an affair of hearts between them; some impossible romance, in which self-sacrifice had been demanded and sadly given. Mrs. Baffall quite felt that the unfortunate woman was departing into a grey world, charged with sad and secret memories. So well, indeed, did Honora carry out that part of the business that Paul himself had an uncomfortable feeling that he had treated her rather badly, and that she was behaving with a generosity that called for the highest commendation. In manner he was quite apologetic.
She had evidently determined that she would stamp this night into the memory of Paul Nannock; would go away, in fact, leaving the sweetest savour behind her. The boisterousness was gone; there was almost a new timidity about her. When she came into that sitting-room that was littered with books and toys, and came up frankly to him with a hand outstretched, she was careful to keep her disengaged white arm round the neck of the radiant Jimmy; insisted afterwards on having Jimmy beside her at table. And there talked in a quiet voice, and with a little low ripple of laughter, about what she was to do and what prosaic things were to happen to her.
"It"s just been simply lovely down here with you all," she said. "I"ll own I came to scoff; I"ve remained to do the other thing. If you knew anything about me, you dear simple folk, you"d know that for a time I"ve lost sight and touch of the hard world in which I live. Funny--isn"t it?
Yet it"s true; even Jimmy here has taught me a lot. I shall remember your woods and your fields, and I shall think of you often and often.
Gracious!--I"m growing sentimental."
She was to be a revelation to them that night. Presently she sat down at the piano in the dusk of the room (Paul remembered it afterwards, and could smell again, when he remembered, the soft warm summer night outside the open windows) and sang to them. She began with a haunting Irish song--an old thing, with a hint of mournfulness and longing and fatality in it--pa.s.sed rapidly into a happy-go-lucky burlesque affair that set them chuckling, and caused Mrs. Baffall to roll about in her chair and to cram her handkerchief into her mouth. The voice was not particularly good, but it had a pleasant quality of sincerity and naturalness, and she made the most of it. And then suddenly she came out with the complete object of her visit revealed.
"Mr. Nannock," she said, with a faint flush mounting in her cheek, "you won"t let me go away without seeing the--the children?"
"I"ll be--delighted," he said, looking at her helplessly, and inwardly praying with extreme fervour that Moira might be asleep. "Perhaps, Mrs.
Baffall----"
But Mrs. Baffall shook her head. "I"m very comfortable, thank you," she replied, "and I can see the children any time. Miss Jackman won"t get another chance."
So Paul, feeling somewhat ridiculous, went out of the room, and lighted a candle in the hall, and prepared to set out on his expedition. Honora Jackman, evidently amused, stood with her skirts gathered in one hand ready to mount the stairs, watching him; noted with a secret delight the perplexed frown on the face bending above the candle. He came at last to the foot of the stairs, and smiled at her over the candle, and indicated the way.
"Is it very far up?" she asked.
"Only the first floor," he replied, and she tripped on in front of him, while he followed demurely with the candle.
The girls had two tiny beds in a big wilderness of a room--a room that had been specially fitted, under Paul"s direction, for their comfort.
There was a huge cupboard that held toys and dolls; there were deep chairs and couches; there was a big fireplace, covered still with a high curved fire-guard--reminiscent of the days when they had been very young indeed. Old Paul, holding the candle, opened the door, and motioned to Honora Jackman to go in. Honora stepped in delicately, and Paul followed with the light.
The first bed held Alice. She lay there with her fair curls fallen about her face, and with a smile upon the half-parted lips. Honora smiled as she bent over her. "She looks like a small angel," she whispered.
In the next bed, as they tip-toed over to it, was Moira; and Moira, be it noted, was not asleep. She had lain fretting and fuming at the thought of the woman downstairs; she had heard the footsteps on the stairs, and had known, indignantly enough, that the woman was coming up.
Instantly she had closed her eyes and feigned sleep. It was, of course, a very wrong thing to do, and there is no possible excuse that can be urged; but the child felt that here, at this moment, she was to see even deeper into the heart of Old Paul, and to understand what that real intimate heart meant for her.
Old Paul bent over her, and softly put back a long strand of dark hair from her face. Honora Jackman had taken the candle, and was shading the light carefully, so that it happened that Moira"s flush of sudden pleasure at his touch was unseen. Honora was looking not at the child, but at him, and her eyes were laughing.
"Why are you so afraid of me, Mr. Nannock?" she whispered, squeezing the warm top of the candle between a finger and thumb, and looking thoughtfully at the light.
"I--I don"t think I am," he breathed in reply.
"Oh, yes, you are," she retorted. "So much afraid of me that you had once to set this baby between me and--shall we say--possible danger?"
She gave a little quick laugh in her throat, and flashed a glance at him.