"I"m glad I ordered a duck for dinner, in addition to the boiled veal and bacon, Johnny," whispered Mrs. Todhetley again. "The fish won"t be much: it is only the cold cod done up in parsley sauce."
Tod, at home long before, was at the door ready for us when we arrived.
I saw her staring at him in the dusk.
"Who was the gentleman that handed me out?" she asked me as we went in.
"Mr. Todhetley"s son."
"I--think--I have heard Helen Whitney talk of him," she said in reflection. "He will be very rich, will he not?"
"Pretty well. He will have what his father has before him, Miss Chalk."
Mrs. Todhetley suggested tea, but she said she would prefer a gla.s.s of wine; and went up to her chamber after taking it. Hannah and the housemaid were hastily putting one in order for her. Sleepy with the frosty air, I was nodding over the fire in the drawing-room when the rustle of silk awoke me.
It was Miss Chalk. She came in gleaming like a fairy, her dress shining in the fire-light; for they had not been in to light the candles. It had a green-and-gold tinge, and was cut very low. Did she think we had a party?--or that dressing for dinner was the fashion in our plain country house--as it might have been at a duke"s? Her shoulders and arms were white as snow; she wore a silver necklace, the like of which I had never seen, silver bracelets, and a thick cord of silver twisting in and out of her complicated hair.
"I"m sure it is very kind of your people to take me in," she said, standing still on the hearthrug in her beauty. "They have lighted a fire in my room; it is so comfortable. I do like a country house. At Lady Augustus Difford"s----"
Her head went round at the opening of the door. It was Tod. She stepped timidly towards him, like a schoolgirl: dressed as now, she looked no older than one. Tod might have made up his mind not to like her; but he had to surrender. Holding out her hand to him, he could only yield to the vision, and his heart shone in his eyes as he bent them upon her.
"I beg your pardon for having pa.s.sed you without notice; I did not even thank you for lifting me down; but I was frozen with the drive," she said, in low tones. "Will you forgive me, Mr. Todhetley?"
Forgive her! As Tod stood there with her hand in his, he looked inclined to eat her. Forgiveness was not enough. He led her to the fire, speaking soft words of gallantry.
"Helen Whitney has often talked to me about you, Mr. Todhetley. I little thought I should ever make your acquaintance; still less, be staying in your father"s house."
"And I as little dreamt of the good fortune that was in store for me,"
answered Tod.
He was a tall, fine young fellow then, rising twenty, looking older than his age; she (as she looked to-night) a delicate, beautiful fairy, of any teens fancy might please to picture. As Tod stood over her, his manner took a gentle air, his eyes a shy light--quite unusual with him.
She did not look up, except by a modest glance now and again, dropping her eyes when they met his own. He had the chance to take his fill of gazing, and used it.
Tod was caught. From the very first night that his eyes fell on Sophie Chalk, his heart went out to her. Anna Whitney! What child"s play had the joking about her been to this! Anna might have been his sister, for all the regard he had for her of a certain sort; and he knew it now.
A looker-on sees more than a player, and I did not like one thing--she drew him on to love her. If ever a girl spread a net to entangle a man"s feet, that girl was Sophie Chalk. She went about it artistically, too; in the sweetest, most natural way imaginable; and Tod did not see or suspect an atom of it. No fellow in a similar case ever does. If their heart"s not engaged, their vanity is; and it utterly blinds them. I said a word or two to him, and was nearly knocked over for my pains.
At the end of the fortnight--and she was with us nearly that length of time--Tod"s heart had made its choice for weal or for woe.
She took care that it should be so; she did, though he cut my head off now for saying it. You shall judge. She began on that first night when she came down in her glistening silk, with the silver on her neck and hair. In the drawing-room, after dinner, she sat by him on the sofa, talking in a low voice, her face turned to him, lifting her eyes and dropping them again. My belief is, she must have been to a school where they taught eye-play. Tod thought it was sweet, natural, shy modesty. I thought it was all artistic. Mrs. Todhetley was called from the room on domestic matters; the Squire, gone to sleep in his dinner-chair, had not come in. After tea, when all were present, she went to the piano, which no one ever opened but me, and played and sang, keeping Tod by her side to turn the music, and to talk to her at available moments. In point of execution, her singing was perfect, but the voice was rather harsh--not a note of real melody in it.
After breakfast the next morning, when we were away together, she came to us in her jaunty hat, all feathers, and her purple dress with its white fur. She lured him off to show her the d.y.k.e and goodness knows what else, leaving Lena, who had come out with her, to be taken home by me. In the afternoon Tod drove her out in the pony-chaise; they had settled the drive between them down by the d.y.k.e, and I know she had plotted for it, just as surely as though I had been behind the hedge listening. I don"t say Tod was loth; it was quite the other way from the first. They took a two-hours" drive, returning home at dusk; and then she laughed and talked with him and me round the fire until it was time to get ready for dinner. That second evening she came down in a gauzy sort of dress, with a thin white body. Mrs. Todhetley thought she would be cold, but she said she was used to it.
And so it went on; never were they apart for an hour--no, nor scarcely for a minute in the day.
At first Mr. and Mrs. Todhetley saw nothing. Rather were they glad Tod should be so attentive to a stranger; for special politeness had not previously been one of Tod"s virtues; but they could only notice as the thing went on. Mrs. Todhetley grew to have an uneasy look in her eyes, and one day the Squire spoke out. Sophie Chalk had tied a pink woollen scarf over her head to go out with Tod to see the rabbits fed: he ran back for something, and the Squire caught his arm.
"Don"t carry that on too far, Joe. You don"t know who the girl is."
"What nonsense, sir!" returned Tod, with a ready laugh; but he turned the colour of a peony.
We did not know much about her, except that she seemed to be on the high ropes, talking a good deal of great people, and of Lord and Lady Augustus Difford, with whom she had been staying for two months before Christmas. Her home in London, she said, was at her sister"s, who had married a wealthy merchant, and lived fashionably in Torriana Square.
Mrs. Todhetley did not like to appear inquisitive, and would not ask questions. Miss Chalk was with us as the Whitneys" friend, and that was sufficient.
Bill Whitney"s hurt turned out to be something complicated about the ribs. There was no danger after the first week, and they returned home during the second, bringing Bill with them. Helen Whitney wrote the same day for Sophie Chalk, and she said that her mamma would be happy also to see Tod and me for a short time.
We went over in the large phaeton, Tod driving, Miss Chalk beside him; I and Dwarf Giles behind. She had thanked Mrs. Todhetley in the prettiest manner; she told the Squire, as he handed her into the carriage, that she should never forget his kindness, and hoped some time to find an opportunity of repaying it.
Such kissing between Helen and Sophie Chalk! I thought they"d never leave off. Anna stood by Tod, while he looked on: a hungry light in his eyes, as if envying Helen the kisses she took. He had no eyes now for Anna. Lady Whitney asked if we would go upstairs to William: he was impatient to see us both.
"Halloa, old Johnny!"
He was lying on his back on a broad flat sofa, looking just as well as ever in the face. They had given him up the best bedroom and dressing-room because he was ill: nice rooms, both--with the door opening between.
"How did it happen, Bill?"
"Goodness knows! Some fellow rode his horse pretty near over mine--don"t believe he had ever been astride anything but a donkey before. Where"s Tod?"
"Somewhere.--I thought he was close behind me."
"I"m so glad you two have come. It"s awfully dull, lying here all day."
"Are you obliged to lie?"
"Carden says so."
"Do you have Carden?"
"As if our folk would be satisfied without him in a surgical case, and one of danger! He was telegraphed for on the spot, and came over in less than an hour. It happened near the Ombersley station. He comes here every other day, and Featherston between whiles as his loc.u.m tenens."
Tod burst in with a laugh. He had been talking to the girls in the gallery outside. Leaving him and Bill Whitney to have out their own chaffer, I went through the door to the other room--the fire there was the largest. "How do you do, sir?"
Some one in a neat brown gown and close white cap, sewing at a table behind the door, had got up to say this with a curtsey. Where had I seen her?--a woman of three or four and thirty, with a meek, delicate face, and a subdued expression. She saw the puzzle.
"I am Harry Lease"s widow, sir. He was pointsman at South Crabb?"
Why, yes, to be sure! And she was not much altered either. But it was a good while now since he died, and she and the children had moved away at the time. I shook hands: the sight of her brought poor Harry Lease to my mind--and many other things.
"Are you living here?"
"I have been nursing young Mr. Whitney, sir. Mr. Carden sent me over from Worcester to the place where he was lying; and my lady thought I might as well come on here with them for a bit, though he don"t want more done for him now than a servant could do. What a deal you have grown, sir!"
"Have I? You should see Joseph Todhetley. You knew me, though, Mrs.
Lease?"
"I remembered your voice, sir. Besides, I heard Miss Anna say that you were coming here."
Asking after Polly, she gave me the family history since Lease"s death.