He attributed the full rose upon her cheeks to the forbidding subject.
To spare pain, he said: "No misunderstanding with the dear mother will last the day through. Can I help?"
"Oh, Captain Dartrey!"
"Drop the captain. Dartrey will do."
"How could I!"
"You"re not wanting in courage, Nesta."
"Hardly for that!"
"By-and-by, then."
"Though I could not say Mr. Fenellan."
"You see; Dartrey, it must be."
"If I could!"
"But the fellow is not a captain: and he is a friend, an old friend, very old friend: he"ll be tipped with grey in a year or two."
"I might be bolder then."
"Imagine it now. There is no disloyalty in your calling your friends by their names."
Her nature rang to the implication. "I am not bound." Dartrey hung fast, speculating on her visibly: "I heard you were?"
"No. I must be free."
"It is not an engagement?"
"Will you laugh?--I have never quite known. My father desired it: and my desire is to please him. I think I am vain enough to think I read through blinds and shutters. The engagement--what there was--has been, to my reading, broken more than once. I have not considered it, to settle my thoughts on it, until lately: and now I may suspect it to be broken. I have given cause--if it is known. There is no blame elsewhere.
I am not unhappy, Captain Dartrey."
"Captain by courtesy. Very well. Tell me how Nesta judges the engagement to be broken?"
She was mentally phrasing before she said: "Absence."
"He was here yesterday."
All that the visit embraced was in her expressive look, as of sight drawing inward, like our breath in a spell of wonderment. "Then I understand; it enlightens me.
My own mother!--my poor mother! he should have come to me. I was the guilty person, not she; and she is the sufferer. That, if in life were direct retribution! but the very meaning of having a heart, is to suffer through others or for them."
"You have soon seen that, dear girl," said Dartrey.
"So, my own mother, and loving me as she does, blames me!" Nesta sighed; she took a sharp breath. "You? do you blame me too?"
He pressed her hand, enamoured of her instantaneous divination and heavenly candour.
But he was admonished, that to speak high approval would not be honourable advantage taken of the rival condemning; and he said: "Blame?
Some think it is not always the right thing to do the right thing. I"ve made mistakes, with no bad design. A good mother"s view is not often wrong."
"You pressed my hand," she murmured.
That certainly had said more.
"Glad to again," he responded. It was uttered airily and was meant to be as lightly done.
Nesta did not draw back her hand. "I feel strong when you press it."
Her voice wavered, and as when we hear a flask sing thin at the filling, ceased upon evidence of a heart surcharged. How was he to relax the pressure!--he had to give her the strength she craved: and he vowed it should be but for half a minute, half a minute longer.
Her tears fell; she eyed him steadily; she had the look of sunlight in shower.
"Oldish men are the best friends for you, I suppose," he said; and her gaze turned elusive phrases to vapour.
He was compelled to see the fiery core of the raincloud lighting it for a revealment, that allowed as little as it retained of a shadow of obscurity.
The sight was keener than touch and the run of blood with blood to quicken slumbering seeds of pa.s.sion.
But here is the place of broken ground and tangle, which calls to honourable men, not bent on sport, to be wary to guard the gunlock. He stopped the word at his mouth. It was not in him to stop or moderate the force of his eyes. She met them with the slender unbendingness that was her own; a feminine of inspirited manhood. There was no soft expression, only the direct shot of light, on both sides; conveying as much as is borne from sun to earth, from earth to sun. And when such an exchange has come between the two, they are past plighting, they are the wedded one.
Nesta felt it, without asking whether she was loved. She was his. She had not a thought of the word of love or the being beloved. Showers of painful blissfulness went through her, as the tremours of a shocked frame, while she sat quietly, showing scarce a sign; and after he had let her hand go, she had the pressure on it. The quivering intense of the moment of his eyes and grasp was lord of her, lord of the day and of all days coming. That is how Love slays Death. Never did girl so give her soul.
She would have been the last to yield it unreservedly to a man untrusted for the character she worshipped. But she could have given it to Dartrey, despite his love of another, because it was her soul, without any of the cravings, except to bestow.
He perceived, that he had been carried on for the number of steps which are countless miles and do not permit the retreat across the desert behind; and he was in some amazement at himself, remindful of the different nature of our restraining power when we have a couple playing on it. Yet here was this girl, who called him up to the heights of young life again: and a brave girl; and she bled for the weak, had no shrinking from the women underfoot: for the reason, that she was a girl sovereignly pure, angelically tender. Was there a point of honour to hold him back?
Nataly entered the room. She kissed Nesta, and sat silent.
"Mother, will you speak of me to him, if I go out?" Nesta said.
"We have spoken," her mother replied, vexed by the unmaidenly allusion to that theme.
She would have asked, How did you guess I knew of it?--but that the Why should I speak of you to him? struck the louder note in her bosom: and then, What is there that this girl cannot guess!--filled the mother"s heart with apprehensive dread: and an inward cry, What things will she not set going, to have them discussed. And the appalling theme, sitting offensive though draped in their midst, was taken for a proof of the girl"s unblushingness. After standing as one woman against the world so long, Nataly was relieved to be on the side of a world now convictedly unjust to her in the confounding of her with the shameless. Her mind had taken the brand of that thought:--And Nesta had brought her to it:--And Dudley Sowerby, a generous representative of the world, had kindly, having the deputed power to do so, sustained her, only partially blaming Nesta, not casting them off; as the world, with which Nataly felt, under a sense of the protection calling up all her grat.i.tude to young Dudley, would have approved his doing.
She was pa.s.sing through a fit of the cowardice peculiar to the tediously strained, who are being more than commonly tried--persecuted, as they say when they are not supplicating their tyrannical Authority for aid. The world will continue to be indifferent to their view of it and behaviour toward it until it ceases to encourage the growth of hypocrites.
These are moments when the faces we are observing drop their charm, showing us our perversion internal, if we could but reflect, to see it.
Very many thousand times above Dudley Sowerby, Nataly ranked Dartrey Fenellan; and still she looked at him, where he sat beside Nesta, ungenially, critical of the very features, jealously in the interests of Dudley; and recollecting, too, that she had once prayed for one exactly resembling Dartrey Fenellan to be her Nesta"s husband. But, as she would have said, that was before the indiscretion of her girl had shown her to require for her husband a man whose character and station guaranteed protection instead of inciting to rebellion. And Dartrey, the loved and prized, was often in the rebel ranks; he was dissatisfied with matters as they are; was restless for action, angry with a country denying it to him; he made enemies, he would surely bring down inquiries about Nesta"s head, and cause the forgotten or quiescent to be stirred; he would scarcely be the needed hand for such a quiver of the lightnings as Nesta was.
Dartrey read Nataly"s brows. This unwonted uncomeliness of hers was an indication to one or other of our dusky pits, not a revealing.