"The fire is the only delicious thing in the house," she says, fretfully. "_Do_ come here and enjoy it with me."
"Anything the matter with you?" asks Portia, gently, seating herself on a low lounging chair at her side.
"Oh! nothing, nothing. But Dulce is very strange of late, is she not?
Ever since Roger"s going, don"t you think? And all that affair was quite absurd, according to my lights. Stephen won"t suit her half as well.
Fancy any woman throwing over the man she likes, for a mere chimera.
Wrecking her entire happiness for the sake of a chocolate cream!"
"It sounds absurd," says Portia; "but I cannot believe such a paltry thing as that has separated them. There must have been something else."
"Well, perhaps so. Sir Christopher, one can see, is very distressed about it. He is unfortunate about them all, is he not? poor old man.
Fabian"s affair was so wretched, so unlooked for, too," says Julia, in the comfortably gossiping tone one knows so well, drawing her chair a little nearer to the fire. "I can"t think what could have tempted him to do it."
Portia turns abruptly toward her.
"Do you, too, question his innocence?" she says, her breath coming quickly.
"Well--er--you see one doesn"t like to talk about it," says Mrs.
Beaufort with a faint yawn. "It seems pleasanter to look upon him as a suffering angel, but there are some who don"t believe in him you know.
Do come closer to the fire, Portia, and let us have a good chat."
"Go on," says Portia, "you were talking of Fabian, you were saying--"
"Yes, just so. Was I uncharitable? It doesn"t make him a bit the worse in my eyes, you know, not a bit. It is all done and over years ago, and why remember nasty things. Really, do you know, Portia--it may be horrid of me--but really I think the whole story only makes him a degree more interesting."
Portia shivers, and ignores this suggestion.
"Do other people doubt him, too?" she asks in a strangely cold tone.
Though she may disbelieve in him herself, yet it is agony to her that others should do the same.
"My dear, yes, of course; a great many; in fact, pretty nearly everybody but just those you see here--Sir Mark excepted, I think, and then d.i.c.ky Browne. But d.i.c.ky hasn"t enough brains to believe or disbelieve in anybody."
"Ah!" says Portia. She leans back in her chair, and holds up a fan between her and the fire and Julia. She can hardly a.n.a.lyze her own thoughts; but, even at this moment, when all her finest feelings are ajar, she tells herself that surely--surely she cordially detests Julia Beaufort. She tells herself, too, that she loves Mark Gore.
"You see, in your doubt of him, you are not a solitary exception," says Julia, with elephantine playfulness. "Others think with you. It is the plainest case in the world, I think. I don"t blame you."
"How do you know I _do_ doubt him?" asks Portia, suddenly, turning her large eyes upon her, that are glittering in the firelight. At this Julia recoils a little and looks somewhat uncomfortable.
"Your voice, your manner, led me to believe so," she says, slowly, and with hesitation. "If you don"t, of course it is so much to your credit."
"You mean--" asks Portia.
"Well, his whole bearing would preclude the thought of dishonor of any kind," says Julia, boldly, and with the utmost effrontery, considering all she had said a moment since. "Suspicion could hardly rest with such a man as Fabian. Of course, the whole thing is a wretched mistake, that will be cleared up sooner or later, let us hope sooner, as surely he has suffered enough already, poor dear fellow!"
She pauses; Portia puzzled, and secretly indignant, says nothing. Seeing she will not speak, Julia goes on again even more impressively than before.
"I never entertained a shadow of a doubt with regard to him," she says, n.o.bly, "never! Who could? I was always one of his very warmest supporters."
This is too much! Portia murmuring something civil, but distinct, rises abruptly, and, going to the door, opens it, and is soon beyond call, and beyond hearing of the voice that has grown hateful to her.
Just at this moment, Julia"s absurd shufflings, and equivocations, and barefaced changes from one a.s.severation to another fill her with wrath.
She is distressed, and at war with her own heart; and so, crossing the hall, makes for the one room that is especially dear to all women when in trouble, namely, her own bedroom.
But pa.s.sing by Dulce"s door, and finding it open, she pauses before it, and finally, after some hesitation, she crosses the threshold only to find it empty.
The fire is burning brightly; a little crushed glove lies upon the hearth-rug, showing how its owner but lately had knelt before the fire, or stood near it to gaze into its depths, and call up fancied faces from its coals.
A little low chair attracts her attention; sinking into it, she lets her chin fall into the palm of her hands, and presently is lost in painful and half-angry reflection.
"Pretty nearly everybody." The words ring in her ears; does the whole county, then, look upon Fabian with averted eyes? And perhaps--who knows--the very people beneath the roof may distrust him, too; she had not known until this evening Julia"s private opinion; the others may agree with her, but naturally shrink from saying so. Roger, perhaps, believed him guilty; and d.i.c.ky Browne, it may be, in his secret soul, regards him with contempt, and Sir Mark--
No, _not_ Sir Mark! She could not mistake him. However foolish it may be, certainly his belief in Fabian is genuine. And somehow of late, she has grown rather fond of Sir Mark; and here she sighs, and laying her hand upon her heart, presses it convulsively against it as though to still the pain that has sprung into life there, because of the agitation that has been hers for the past half hour.
Dulce, coming up-stairs, presently, finds her still sitting over the fire, in an att.i.tude that betokens the very deepest dejection.
"You here, _tres chere_, and alone," she says, gaily, stooping over her in caressing fashion. "Naughty girl. You should have told me you were going to honor me with your presence, and I would have made my room gay to receive you."
"I don"t want you to make a stranger of me. I like your room as it is,"
says Portia, with a smile.
"Well, don"t sit crouching over the fire; it will spoil your complexion; come over to the window and see what the storm has done, and how lovely nature can look even when robed in Winter"s garb."
Portia, rising, follows her to the window, but as she reaches it she sinks again wearily into a lounging chair, with all the air of one whose limbs refuse obstinately to support her.
As both girls gaze out upon the chilly landscape, white here and there with the snow that fell last night, Fabian, coming from between the dark green branches of an ancient lauristinus, with two red setters at his heels, and a gun upon his shoulder, pa.s.ses beneath the window, going in the direction of the home wood.
Leaning forward, Dulce taps lightly on the pane, and Fabian, heating the quick sound, stops short, and lifts his eyes to the window. As he sees his pretty sister, he nods to her, and a bright smile creeps round his lips, rendering his always handsome face actually beautiful for the moment.
Only for a moment; his gaze wandering, instinctively, falls on Portia, standing pale and calm beside her cousin. Their eyes meet, and, as if by magic, the smile dies, his lips grow straight and cold again, and, without another glance, he whistles to his dogs, and, turning the corner, is rapidly out of sight.
"Dear Fabian--poor darling," says Dulce, tenderly, who has noticed only the kindly smile vouchsafed to her. "How sad he always looks. Even his smile is more mournful than the tears of others. What a terrible pressure Fate has laid upon him. He----; how pale you are, Portia! What is it, dearest? I am sure you are not well to-day."
"I am quite well. I am only cold; go on," speaking with some difficulty; "you were saying something about--Fabian."
"I _think_ so much of him that it is a relief to talk sometimes; but I won"t make you doleful. Come over to the fire if you are cold."
"No, I like being here; and--do go on, I like listening to you."
"Well, I wasn"t going to say anything very particular, you know. It has all been said so often. _So_ often, and to no use. What a little thing, Portia, gives rise to the most terrible consequences; the mere fact that two people wrote alike, and formed their capitals in the same fashion, has been the utter ruin of a man"s life. It sounds dreadful--cruel!
sometimes--_often_--I lie awake thinking of it all, and wondering can nothing be done, and no hope ever comes to me. That is the saddest part of it, it will go on like this forever, he will go to his grave,"
mournfully, "and his very memory will be a.s.sociated with disgrace."
She pauses and sighs heavily, and folds her fingers tightly together.
Not Stephen, nor Roger, but this dishonored brother, is the love of her life--as yet.
"Of course you heard a good deal about it in town," she says, sadly. "He had many friends there at one time. Fair-weather friends! They, as a rule, are cruellest when evil comes; and they never remember. You heard him often discussed?"
This is a downright question to which Portia is constrained to give an answer.