Bowles?"
"Whom else should I think or speak of?"
Will rose nervously from his chair, all his features writhing.
"Sir, sir, this is a bitter blow,--very bitter, very."
Jessie rushed to Will, flung her arms round him and sobbed. Kenelm turned quietly to old Mrs. Somers, who had suspended the work on which since supper she had been employed, knitting socks for the baby,--
"My dear Mrs. Somers, what is the good of being a grandmother and knitting socks for baby grandchildren, if you cannot a.s.sure those silly children of yours that they are too happy in each other to harbour any resentment against a man who would have parted them, and now repents?"
Somewhat to Kenelm"s admiration, I dare not say surprise, old Mrs.
Somers, thus appealed to, rose from her seat, and, with a dignity of thought or of feeling no one could have antic.i.p.ated from the quiet peasant woman, approached the wedded pair, lifted Jessie"s face with one hand, laid the other on Will"s head, and said, "If you don"t long to see Mr. Bowles again and say "The Lord bless you, sir!" you don"t deserve the Lord"s blessing upon you." Therewith she went back to her seat, and resumed her knitting.
"Thank Heaven, we have paid back the best part of the loan," said Will, in very agitated tones, "and I think, with a little pinching, Jessie, and with selling off some of the stock, we might pay the rest; and then,"--and then he turned to Kenelm,--"and then, sir, we will" (here a gulp) "thank Mr. Bowles."
"This don"t satisfy me at all, Will," answered Kenelm; "and since I helped to bring you two together, I claim the right to say I would never have done so could I have guessed you could have trusted your wife so little as to allow a remembrance of Mr. Bowles to be a thought of pain.
You did not feel humiliated when you imagined that it was to me you owed some moneys which you have been honestly paying off. Well, then, I will lend you whatever trifle remains to discharge your whole debts to Mr.
Bowles, so that you may sooner be able to say to him, "Thank you."
But between you and me, Will, I think you will be a finer fellow and a manlier fellow if you decline to borrow that trifle of me; if you feel you would rather say "Thank you" to Mr. Bowles, without the silly notion that when you have paid him his money you owe him nothing for his kindness."
Will looked away irresolutely. Kenelm went on: "I have received a letter from Mr. Bowles to-day. He has come into a fortune, and thinks of going abroad for a time; but before he goes, he says he should like to shake hands with Will, and be a.s.sured by Jessie that all his old rudeness is forgiven. He had no notion that I should blab about the loan: he wished that to remain always a secret. But between friends there need be no secrets. What say you, Will? As head of this household, shall Mr. Bowles be welcomed here as a friend or not?"
"Kindly welcome," said old Mrs. Somers, looking up from the socks.
"Sir," said Will, with sudden energy, "look here; you have never been in love, I dare say. If you had, you would not be so hard on me. Mr. Bowles was in love with my wife there. Mr. Bowles is a very fine man, and I am a cripple."
"Oh, Will! Will!" cried Jessie.
"But I trust my wife with my whole heart and soul; and, now that the first pang is over, Mr. Bowles shall be, as mother says, kindly welcome,--heartily welcome."
"Shake hands. Now you speak like a man, Will. I hope to bring Bowles here to supper before many days are over."
And that night Kenelm wrote to Mr. Bowles:
MY DEAR TOM,--Come and spend a few days with me at Cromwell Lodge, Moleswich. Mr. and Mrs. Somers wish much to see and to thank you. I could not remain forever degraded in order to gratify your whim. They would have it that I bought their shop, etc., and I was forced in self-defence to say who it was. More on this and on travels when you come.
Your true friend,
K. C.
CHAPTER XVI.
MRS. CAMERON was seated alone in her pretty drawing-room, with a book lying open, but unheeded, on her lap. She was looking away from its pages, seemingly into the garden without, but rather into empty s.p.a.ce.
To a very acute and practised observer, there was in her countenance an expression which baffled the common eye.
To the common eye it was simply vacant; the expression of a quiet, humdrum woman, who might have been thinking of some quiet humdrum household detail,--found that too much for her, and was now not thinking at all.
But to the true observer, there were in that face indications of a troubled past, still haunted with ghosts never to be laid at rest,--indications, too, of a character in herself that had undergone some revolutionary change; it had not always been the character of a woman quiet and humdrum. The delicate outlines of the lip and nostril evinced sensibility, and the deep and downward curve of it bespoke habitual sadness. The softness of the look into s.p.a.ce did not tell of a vacant mind, but rather of a mind subdued and over-burdened by the weight of a secret sorrow. There was also about her whole presence, in the very quiet which made her prevalent external characteristic, the evidence of manners formed in a high-bred society,--the society in which quiet is connected with dignity and grace. The poor understood this better than her rich acquaintances at Moleswich, when they said, "Mrs.
Cameron was every inch a lady." To judge by her features she must once have been pretty, not a showy prettiness, but decidedly pretty. Now, as the features were small, all prettiness had faded away in cold gray colourings, and a sort of tamed and slumbering timidity of aspect. She was not only not demonstrative, but must have imposed on herself as a duty the suppression of demonstration. Who could look at the formation of those lips, and not see that they belonged to the nervous, quick, demonstrative temperament? And yet, observing her again more closely, that suppression of the const.i.tutional tendency to candid betrayal of emotion would the more enlist our curiosity or interest; because, if physiognomy and phrenology have any truth in them, there was little strength in her character. In the womanly yieldingness of the short curved upper lip, the pleading timidity of the regard, the disproportionate but elegant slenderness of the head between the ear and the neck, there were the tokens of one who cannot resist the will, perhaps the whim, of another whom she either loves or trusts.
The book open on her lap is a serious book on the doctrine of grace, written by a popular clergyman of what is termed "the Low Church." She seldom read any but serious books, except where such care as she gave to Lily"s education compelled her to read "Outlines of History and Geography," or the elementary French books used in seminaries for young ladies. Yet if any one had decoyed Mrs. Cameron into familiar conversation, he would have discovered that she must early have received the education given to young ladies of station. She could speak and write French and Italian as a native. She had read, and still remembered, such cla.s.sic authors in either language as are conceded to the use of pupils by the well-regulated taste of orthodox governesses.
She had a knowledge of botany, such as botany was taught twenty years ago. I am not sure that, if her memory had been fairly aroused, she might not have come out strong in divinity and political economy, as expounded by the popular manuals of Mrs. Marcet. In short, you could see in her a thoroughbred English lady, who had been taught in a generation before Lily"s, and immeasurably superior in culture to the ordinary run of English young ladies taught nowadays. So, in what after all are very minor accomplishments,--now made major accomplishments,--such as music, it was impossible that a connoisseur should hear her play on the piano without remarking, "That woman has had the best masters of her time."
She could only play pieces that belonged to her generation. She had learned nothing since. In short, the whole intellectual culture had come to a dead stop long years ago, perhaps before Lily was born.
Now, while she is gazing into s.p.a.ce Mrs. Braefield is announced. Mrs.
Cameron does not start from revery. She never starts. But she makes a weary movement of annoyance, resettles herself, and lays the serious book on the sofa table. Elsie enters, young, radiant, dressed in all the perfection of the fashion, that is, as ungracefully as in the eyes of an artist any gentlewoman can be; but rich merchants who are proud of their wives so insist, and their wives, in that respect, submissively obey them.
The ladies interchange customary salutations, enter into the customary preliminaries of talk, and after a pause Elsie begins in earnest.
"But sha"n"t I see Lily? Where is she?"
"I fear she has gone into the town. A poor little boy, who did our errands, has met with an accident,--fallen from a cherry-tree."
"Which he was robbing?"
"Probably."
"And Lily has gone to lecture him?"
"I don"t know as to that; but he is much hurt, and Lily has gone to see what is the matter with him."
Mrs. Braefield, in her frank outspoken way,--"I don"t take much to girls of Lily"s age in general, though I am pa.s.sionately fond of children. You know how I do take to Lily; perhaps because she is so like a child. But she must be an anxious charge to you."
Mrs. Cameron replied by an anxious "No; she is still a child, a very good one; why should I be anxious?"
Mrs. Braefield, impulsively,--"Why, your child must now be eighteen."
Mrs. Cameron,--"Eighteen--is it possible! How time flies! though in a life so monotonous as mine, time does not seem to fly, it slips on like the lapse of water. Let me think,--eighteen? No, she is but seventeen,--seventeen last May."
Mrs. Braefield,--"Seventeen! A very anxious age for a girl; an age in which dolls cease and lovers begin."
Mrs. Cameron, not so languidly, but still quietly,--"Lily never cared much for dolls,--never much for lifeless pets; and as to lovers, she does not dream of them."
Mrs. Braefield, briskly,--"There is no age after six in which girls do not dream of lovers. And here another question arises. When a girl so lovely as Lily is eighteen next birthday, may not a lover dream of her?"
Mrs. Cameron, with that wintry cold tranquillity of manner, which implies that in putting such questions an interrogator is taking a liberty,--"As no lover has appeared, I cannot trouble myself about his dreams."
Said Elsie inly to herself, "This is the stupidest woman I ever met!"
and aloud to Mrs. Cameron,--"Do you not think that your neighbour, Mr.
Chillingly, is a very fine young man?"
"I suppose he would be generally considered so. He is very tall."
"A handsome face?"