Again the conversation paused. From the distance once more came the merry clamour of the farther drawing-room. A din of young folk, chaffing and teasing each other--a girl"s defiant voice above it--outbursts of laughter. Norham, who had in him a touch of dramatic imagination, enjoyed the contrast between the gay crowd in the distance and this quiet room where he sat face to face with a visionary--surely altogether remote from the marrying, money-making, sensuous world. Yet after all the League was a big, practical, organized fact.
"What you have expressed--very finely, if I may say so--is of course the mystical creed," he replied at last, with suave politeness. "But why call it Christianity?"
As he spoke, he was conscious of a certain pride in himself. He felt complacently that he understood Meynell and appreciated him; and that hardly any of his colleagues would, or could have done so.
"Why call it Christianity?" he repeated.
"Because Christianity _is_ this creed!--"embodied in a tale." And mankind must have tales and symbols."
"And the life of Christ is your symbol?"
"More!--it is our Sacrament--the supreme Sacrament--to which all other symbols of the same kind lead--in which they are summed up."
"And that is _why you_ make so much of the Eucharist?"
"It is--to us--just as full of mystical meaning, just as much the meeting-place of G.o.d and man, as to the Catholic--Roman or Anglican."
"Strange that there should be so many of you!" said Norham, after a moment, with an incredulous smile.
"Yes--that has been the discovery of the last six months. But we might all have guessed it. The fuel has been long laid--now comes the kindling, and the blaze!"
There was a pause. Then Norham said abruptly--
"Now what is it you want of Parliament?"
The two men plunged into a discussion, in which the politician became presently aware that the parish priest, the visionary, possessed a surprising amount of practical and statesman-like ability.
Meanwhile--a room or two away--in the great bare drawing-room, with its faded tapestries, and its warm mixture of lamplight and firelight, the evening guests had been arriving. Rose stood at the door of the drawing-room, receiving, her husband beside her, Catharine a little way behind.
"Oh!" cried Rose suddenly, under her breath, only heard by Hugh--a little sound of perturbation.
Outside, in the hall, hardly lit at intervals by oil-lamps, a group could be seen advancing; in front Alice Puttenham and Mary, and behind, the Fox-Wilton party, Hester"s golden head and challenging gait drawing all _eyes_ as she pa.s.sed along.
But it was on Alice Puttenham that Rose"s gaze was fixed. She came dreamily forward; and Rose saw her marked out, by the lovely oval of the face, its whiteness, its melancholy, from all the moving shapes around her. She wore a dress of black gauze over white; a little scarf of old lace lay on her shoulders; her still abundant hair was rolled back from her high brow and sad eyes. She looked very small and childish--as frail as thistledown.
And behind her, Hester"s stormy beauty! Rose gave a little gulp. Then she found herself pressing a cold hand, and was conscious of sudden relief.
Miss Puttenham"s shy composure was unchanged. She could not have looked so--she could not surely have confronted such a gathering of neighbours and strangers, if--
No, no! The Slander--Rose, in her turn, saw it under an image, as though a dark night-bird hovered over Upcote--had not yet descended on this gentle head. With eager kindness, Hugh came forward--and Catharine. They found her a place by the fire, where presently the glow seemed to make its way to her pale cheeks, and she sat silent and amused, watching the triumph of Hester.
For Hester was no sooner in the room than, resenting perhaps the decidedly cool reception that Mrs. Flaxman had given her, she at once set to work to extinguish all the other young women there. And she had very soon succeeded. The Oxford youths, Lord Wanless, the sons of two or three neighbouring squires, they were all presently gathered about her, as thick as bees on honeycomb, recognizing in her instantly one of those beings endowed from their cradle with a double portion of s.e.x-magic, who leave such a wild track behind them in the world.
By her chair stood poor Stephen Barron, absorbed in her every look and tone. Occasionally she threw him a word--Rose thought for pure mischief; and his whole face would light up.
In the centre of the circle round Hester stood one of the Oxford lads, a magnificent fellow, radiating health and gayety, who was trying to wear her down in one of the word-games of the day. They fought hard and breathlessly, everybody listening partly for the amus.e.m.e.nt of the game, partly for the pleasure of watching the good looks of the young creatures playing it. At last the man turned on his heel with a cry of victory.
"Beaten!--beaten!--by a hair. But you"re wonderful, Miss Fox-Wilton. I never found anybody near so good as you at it before, except a man I met once at Newmarket--Philip Meryon--do you know him? Never saw a fellow so good at games. But an awfully queer fish!"
It seemed to the morbid sensitiveness of Rose that there was an instantaneous and a thrilling silence. Hester tossed her head; her colour, after the first start, ebbed away; she grew pale.
"Yes, I do know him. Why is he a queer fish? You only say that because he beat you!"
The young man gave a half-laugh, and looked at his friends. Then he changed the subject. But Hester got up impatiently from her seat, and would not play any more. Rose caught the sudden intentness with which Alice Puttenham"s eyes pursued her.
Stephen Barron came to the help of his hostess, and started more games.
Rose was grateful to him--and quite intolerably sorry for him.
"But why was I obliged to shake hands with the other brother?" she thought rebelliously, as she watched the disagreeable face of Maurice Barron, who had been standing in the circle not far from Hester. He had a look of bad company which displeased her; and she resented what seemed to her an inclination to stare at the pretty women--especially at Hester, and Miss Puttenham. Heavens!--if that odious father had betrayed anything to such a son! Surely, surely it was inconceivable!
The party was beginning to thin when Meynell, impatient to be quit of his Cabinet Minister that he might find Mary Elsmere before it was too late, hurried from the green drawing-room, in the wake of Mr. Norham, and stumbled against a young man, who in the very imperfect illumination had not perceived the second figure behind the Home Secretary.
"Hullo!" said Meynell brusquely, stepping back. "How do you do? Is Stephen here?"
Maurice Barron answered in the affirmative--and added, as though from the need to say something, no matter what:
"I hear there are some coins to be seen in there?"
"There are."
Meynell pa.s.sed on, his countenance showing a sternness, a contempt even, that was rare with him. He and Norham pa.s.sed through the next drawing-room, and met various acquaintances at the farther door. Maurice Barron stood watching them. The persons invading the room had come intending to see the coins. But meeting the Home Secretary they turned back with him, and Meynell followed them, eager to disengage himself from them. At the door some impulse made him turn and look back. He saw Maurice Barron disappearing into the green drawing-room.
The night was soft and warm. Catharine and Mary had come prepared to walk home, Catharine eagerly resuming, now that her health allowed it, the Spartan habits of their normal life. Flaxman was drawn by the beauty of the moonlight and the park to offer to escort them to the lower lodge.
Hester declared that she too would walk, and carelessly accepted Stephen"s escort. Meynell stepped out from the house with them, and in the natural sequence of things he found himself with Mary.
Flaxman and Catharine, who led the way, hardly spoke to each other. They walked, pensive and depressed. Each knew what the other was thinking of, and each felt that nothing was to be gained for the moment by any fresh talk about it. Just behind them they could hear Hester laughing and sparring with Stephen; and when Catharine looked back she could see Meynell and Mary far away, in the distance of the avenue they were following.
The great lime-trees on either side threw long shadows on gra.s.s covered with the fresh fallen leaf, which gleamed, a pale orange, through the dusk. The sky was dappled with white cloud, and the lime-boughs overhead broke it into patterns of delight. The sharp scent of the fallen leaves was in the air; and the night for all its mildness prophesied winter.
Meynell seemed to himself to be moving on enchanted ground, beneath enchanted trees. The tension of his long talk with Norham, the cares of his leadership--the voices of a natural ambition, dropped away. Mary in a blue cloak, a white scarf wound about her head, summed up for him the pure beauty of nature and the night. For the first time he did not attempt to check the thrill in his veins; he began to hope. It was impossible to ignore the change in Mrs. Elsmere"s att.i.tude toward him. He had no idea what had caused it; but he felt it. And he realized also that through unseen and inexplicable gradations Mary had come mysteriously near to him. He dared not have spoken a word of love to her; but such feeling as theirs, however restrained, penetrates speech and gesture, and irresistibly makes all things new.
They spoke of the most trivial matters, and hardly noticed what they said. He all the time was thinking: "Beyond this tumult there will be rest some day--then I may speak. We could live hardly and simply--neither of us wants luxury. But _now_ it would be unjust--it would bring too great a burden on her--and her poor mother. I must wait! But we shall see each other--we shall understand each other!"
Meanwhile she, on her side, would perhaps have given the world to share the struggle from which he debarred her.
Nevertheless, for both, it was an hour of happiness and hope.
CHAPTER XIII
"So I see your name this morning, Stephen, on their list."