"And I owed her more than kindness, for I loved her;--yes, I loved her, and I do love her. Though I am a feeble old man, tottering to my grave, yet I love her--love her as that boy loves the fair girl for whom he longs. He will overcome it, and forget it, and some other one as fair will take her place. But for me it is all over."
What could she say to him? In truth, it was all over,--such love at least as that of which his old heart was dreaming in its dotage.
There is no Medea"s caldron from which our limbs can come out young and fresh; and it were well that the heart should grow old as does the body.
"It is not all over while we are with you," she said, caressing him.
But she knew that what she said was a subterfuge.
"Yes, yes; I have you, dearest," he answered. But he also knew that that pretence at comfort was false and hollow.
"And she starts on Thursday," he said; "on next Thursday."
"Yes, on Thursday. It will be much better for her to be away from London. While she is there she never ventures even into the street."
"Edith, I shall see her before she goes."
"Will that be wise, sir?"
"Perhaps not. It may be foolish,--very foolish; but still I shall see her. I think you forget, Edith, that I have never yet bidden her farewell. I have not spoken to her since that day when she behaved so generously."
"I do not think that she expects it, father."
"No; she expects nothing for herself. Had it been in her nature to expect such a visit, I should not have been anxious to make it. I will go to-morrow. She is always at home you say?"
"Yes, she is always at home."
"And, Lucius--"
"You will not find him there in the daytime."
"I shall go to-morrow, dear. You need not tell Peregrine."
Mrs. Orme still thought that he was wrong, but she had nothing further to say. She could not hinder his going, and therefore, with his permission she wrote a line to Lady Mason, telling her of his purpose. And then, with all the care in her power, and with infinite softness of manner, she warned him against the danger which she so much feared. What might be the result, if, overcome by tenderness, he should again ask Lady Mason to become his wife? Mrs. Orme firmly believed that Lady Mason would again refuse; but, nevertheless, there would be danger.
"No," said he, "I will not do that. When I have said so you may accept my word." Then she hastened to apologise to him, but he a.s.sured her with a kiss that he was in nowise angry with her.
He held by his purpose, and on the following day he went up to London. There was nothing said on the matter at breakfast, nor did she make any further endeavour to dissuade him. He was infirm, but still she knew that the actual fatigue would not be of a nature to injure him. Indeed her fear respecting him was rather in regard to his staying at home than to his going abroad. It would have been well for him could he have been induced to think himself fit for more active movement.
Lady Mason was alone when he reached the dingy little room near Finsbury Circus, and received him standing. She was the first to speak, and this she did before she had even touched his hand. She stood to meet him, with her eyes turned to the ground, and her hands tightly folded together before her. "Sir Peregrine," she said, "I did not expect from you this mark of your--kindness."
"Of my esteem and affection, Lady Mason," he said. "We have known each other too well to allow of our parting without a word. I am an old man, and it will probably be for ever."
Then she gave him her hand, and gradually lifted her eyes to his face. "Yes," she said; "it will be for ever. There will be no coming back for me."
"Nay, nay; we will not say that. That"s as may be hereafter. But it will not be at once. It had better not be quite at once. Edith tells me that you go on Thursday."
"Yes, sir; we go on Thursday."
She had still allowed her hand to remain in his, but now she withdrew it, and asked him to sit down. "Lucius is not here," she said. "He never remains at home after breakfast. He has much to settle as to our journey; and then he has his lawyers to see."
Sir Peregrine had not at all wished to see Lucius Mason, but he did not say so. "You will give him my regards," he said, "and tell him that I trust that he may prosper."
"Thank you. I will do so. It is very kind of you to think of him."
"I have always thought highly of him as an excellent young man."
"And he is excellent. Where is there any one who could suffer without a word as he suffers? No complaint ever comes from him; and yet--I have ruined him."
"No, no. He has his youth, his intellect, and his education. If such a one as he cannot earn his bread in the world--ay, and more than his bread--who can do so? Nothing ruins a young man but ignorance, idleness, and depravity."
"Nothing;--unless those of whom he should be proud disgrace him before the eyes of the world. Sir Peregrine, I sometimes wonder at my own calmness. I wonder that I can live. But, believe me, that never for a moment do I forget what I have done. I would have poured out for him my blood like water, if it would have served him; but instead of that I have given him cause to curse me till the day of his death.
Though I still live, and eat, and sleep, I think of that always. The remembrance is never away from me. They bid those who repent put on sackcloth, and cover themselves with ashes. That is my sackcloth, and it is very sore. Those thoughts are ashes to me, and they are very bitter between my teeth."
He did not know with what words to comfort her. It all was as she said, and he could not bid her even try to free herself from that sackcloth and from those ashes. It must be so. Were it not so with her, she would not have been in any degree worthy of that love which he felt for her. "G.o.d tempers the wind to the shorn lamb," he said.
"Yes," she said, "for the shorn lamb--" And then she was silent again. But could that bitter, biting wind be tempered for the she-wolf who, in the dead of night, had broken into the fold, and with prowling steps and cunning clutch had stolen the fodder from the sheep? That was the question as it presented itself to her; but she sat silent, and refrained from putting it into words. She sat silent, but he read her heart. "For the shorn lamb--" she had said, and he had known her thoughts, as they followed, quick, one upon another, through her mind. "Mary," he said, seating himself now close beside her on the sofa, "if his heart be as true to you as mine, he will never remember these things against you."
"It is my memory, not his, that is my punishment," she said.
Why could he not take her home with him, and comfort her, and heal that festering wound, and stop that ever-running gush of her heart"s blood? But he could not. He had pledged his word and p.a.w.ned his honour. All the comfort that could be his to bestow must be given in those few minutes that remained to him in that room. And it must be given, too, without falsehood. He could not bring himself to tell her that the sackcloth need not be sore to her poor lacerated body, nor the ashes bitter between her teeth. He could not tell her that the cup of which it was hers to drink might yet be pleasant to the taste, and cool to the lips! What could he tell her? Of the only source of true comfort others, he knew, had spoken,--others who had not spoken in vain. He could not now take up that matter, and press it on her with available strength. For him there was but one thing to say. He had forgiven her; he still loved her; he would have cherished her in his bosom had it been possible. He was a weak, old, foolish man; and there was nothing of which he could speak but of his own heart.
"Mary," he said, again taking her hand, "I wish--I wish that I could comfort you."
"And yet on you also have I brought trouble, and misery--and--all but disgrace!"
"No, my love, no; neither misery nor disgrace,--except this misery, that I shall be no longer near to you. Yes, I will tell you all now.
Were I alone in the world, I would still beg you to go back with me."
"It cannot be; it could not possibly be so."
"No; for I am not alone. She who loves you so well, has told me so.
It must not be. But that is the source of my misery. I have learned to love you too well, and do not know how to part with you. If this had not been so, I would have done all that an old man might to comfort you."
"But it has been so," she said. "I cannot wash out the past. Knowing what I did of myself, Sir Peregrine, I should never have put my foot over your threshold."
"I wish I might hear its step again upon my floors. I wish I might hear that light step once again."
"Never, Sir Peregrine. No one again ever shall rejoice to hear either my step or my voice, or to see my form, or to grasp my hand. The world is over for me, and may G.o.d soon grant me relief from my sorrow. But to you--in return for your goodness--"
"For my love."
"In return for your love, what am I to say? I could have loved you with all my heart had it been so permitted. Nay, I did do so. Had that dream been carried out, I should not have sworn falsely when I gave you my hand. I bade her tell you so from me, when I parted with her."
"She did tell me."
"I have known but little love. He--Sir Joseph--was my master rather than my husband. He was a good master, and I served him truly--except in that one thing. But I never loved him. But I am wrong to talk of this, and I will not talk of it longer. May G.o.d bless you, Sir Peregrine! It will be well for both of us now that you should leave me."
"May G.o.d bless you, Mary, and preserve you, and give back to you the comforts of a quiet spirit, and a heart at rest! Till you hear that I am under the ground you will know that there is one living who loves you well." Then he took her in his arms, twice kissed her on the forehead, and left the room without further speech on either side.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Farewell!]