The Golden Calf

Chapter 9

"Now this is what I call really delightful," he said, as he poured out the sparkling Devonshire cider with as stately a turn of his wrist as if the liquor had been Cliquot or Roederer. "An open-air luncheon on such a day as this is positively inspiring, and to a man who has breakfasted at seven o"clock on a cup of tea and a morsel of dry toast--thanks, yes, I prefer the wing if no one else, will have it--such an unceremonious meal is doubly welcome. I"m so glad I found you. Lucky, wasn"t it, Ranie?"

He smiled at his daughter, as if deprecating that stolid expression of hers, which would have been eminently appropriate to the funeral of an indifferent acquaintance,--a total absence of all feeling, a grave nullity.

"I don"t see anything lucky in so simple a fact," answered Urania. "You were told we had come here, and you came here after us."

"You might have changed your minds at the last moment and gone somewhere else. Might you not, now, Miss Palliser?"

"Yes, if we had been very frivolous people; but as to-day"s exploration of the Abbey was planned last night, it would have indicated great weakness of mind if we had been tempted into any other direction,"

answered Ida, feeling somewhat sorry for Dr. Rylance.

The coldest heart might compa.s.sionate a man cursed in such a disagreeable daughter.

"I am very glad you were not weak-minded, and that I was so fortunate as to find you," said the doctor, addressing himself henceforward exclusively to Ida and her friend.

Bessie took care of his creature-comforts with a matronly hospitality which sat well upon her. She cut thin slices of tongue, she fished out savouriest bits of pigeon and egg, when he pa.s.sed, by a natural transition, from chicken to pie. She was quite distressed because he did not care for tarts or cake. But the doctor"s appet.i.te, unlike that of the young people on the other side of the cedar, had its limits. He had satisfied his hunger long before they had, and was ready to show Miss Palliser the gardens.

"They are fine old gardens," he said, approvingly. "Perhaps their chief beauty is that they have not a single modern improvement. They are as old-fashioned as the gardens of Sion Abbey, before the good queen Bess ousted the nuns to make room for the Percies."

They all rose and walked slowly away from the cedar, leaving the fragments of the feast to Blanche and her three brothers. Eva stayed behind, to make one of that exuberant group, and to see Reg "take off"

Urania and her father. His mimicry was cordially admired, though it was not always clear to his audience which was the doctor and which was his daughter. A stare, a strut, a toss, an affected drawl were the leading features of each characterization.

"I had no opportunity of congratulating you on your triumphs the other day, Miss Palliser," said Dr. Rylance, who had somehow managed that Ida and he should be side by side, and a little in advance of the other two.

"But, believe me, I most heartily sympathized with you in the delight of your success."

"Delight?" echoed Ida. "Do you think there was any real pleasure for me in receiving a gift from the hands of Miss Pew, who has done all she could do to make me feel the disadvantages of my position, from the day I first entered her house to the day I last left it? The prizes gave me no pleasure. They have no value in my mind, except as an evidence that I have made the most of my opportunities at Mauleverer, in spite of my contempt for my schoolmistress."

"You dislike her intensely, I see."

"She has made me dislike her. I never knew unkindness till I knew her. I never felt the sting of poverty till she made me feel all its sharpness.

I never knew that I was steeped in sinful pride until she humiliated me."

"Your days of honour and happiness will come, said the doctor, "days when you will think no more of Miss Pew than of an insect which once stung you."

"Thank you for the comforting forecast," answered Ida, lightly. "But it is easy to prophesy good fortune."

"Easy, and safe, in such a case as yours. I can sympathize with you better than you may suppose, Miss Palliser. I have had to fight my battle. I was not always Dr. Rylance, of Cavendish Square; and I did not enter a world in which there was a fine estate waiting for me, like the owner of this place."

"But you have conquered fortune, and by your own talents," said Ida.

"That must be a proud thought."

Dr. Rylance, who was not utterly without knowledge of himself, smiled at the compliment. He knew it was by tact and address, smooth speech and clean linen, that he had conquered fortune, rather than by shining abilities. Yet he valued himself not the less on that account. In his mind tact ranked higher than genius, since it was his own peculiar gift: just as blue ginger-jars were better than Sevres, because he, Dr.

Rylance, was a collector of ginger-jars. He approved of himself so completely that even his littlenesses were great in his own eyes.

"I have worked hard," he said, complacently, "and I have been patient.

But now, when my work is done, and my place in the world fixed, I begin to find life somewhat barren. A man ought to reap some reward--something fairer and sweeter than pounds, shillings, and pence, for a life of labour and care."

"No doubt," a.s.sented Ida, receiving this remark as abstract philosophy, rather than as having a personal meaning. "But I think I should consider pounds, shillings, and pence a very fair reward, if I only had enough of them."

"Yes, now, when you are smarting under the insolence of a purse-proud schoolmistress; but years hence, when you have won independence, you will feel disappointed if you have won nothing better."

"What could be better?"

"Sympathetic companionship--a love worthy to influence your life."

Ida looked up at the doctor with nave surprise. Good heavens, was this middle-aged gentleman going to drop into sentiment, as Silas Wegg dropped into poetry? She glanced back at the other two. Happily they were close at hand.

"What have you done with the children, Bessie?" asked Ida, as if she were suddenly distracted with anxiety about their fate.

"Left them to their own devices. I hope they will not quite kill themselves. We are all to meet in the stable yard at four, so that we may be with Aunt Betsy at five."

"Don"t you think papa and I had better walk gently home?" suggested Urania; "I am sure it would be cruel to inflict such an immense party upon Miss Wendover."

"Nonsense," exclaimed Bessie. "Why, if all old Pew"s school was to march in upon her, without a moment"s notice Aunt Betsy would not be put out of the way one little bit. If Queen Victoria were to drop in unexpectedly to luncheon, my aunt would be as cool as one of her own early cuc.u.mbers, and would insist on showing the Queen her stables, and possibly her pigs."

"How do you know that?" asked Ida.

"Because she never had a visitor yet whom she did not drag into her stables, from archbishops downwards; and I don"t suppose she"d draw the line at a queen," answered Bessie, with conviction.

"I am going to drink tea with Miss Wendover, whatever Urania may do,"

said Dr. Rylance, who felt that the time had come when he must a.s.sert himself. "I am out for a day"s pleasure, and I mean to drink the cup to the dregs."

Urania looked at her father with absolute consternation. He was transformed; he had become a new person; he was forgetting himself in a ridiculous manner; letting down his dignity to an alarming extent. Dr.

Rylance, the fashionable physician, the man whose nice touch adjusted the nerves of the aristocracy, to disport himself with unkempt, bare-handed young Wendovers! It was an upheaval of things which struck horror to Urania"s soul. Easy, after beholding such a moral convulsion, to believe that the Wight had once been part of the mainland; or even that Ireland had originally been joined to Spain.

They all roamed into the rose-garden, where there were alleys of standard rose-trees, planted upon gra.s.s that was soft and springy under the foot.

They went into the old vineries, where the big bunches of grapes were purpling in the gentle heat. Dr. Rylance went everywhere, and he contrived always to be near Ida Palliser.

He did not again lapse into sentiment, and he made himself fairly agreeable, in his somewhat stilted fashion. Ida accepted his attention with a charming unconsciousness; but she was perfectly conscious of Urania"s vexation, and that gave a zest to the whole thing.

"Well, Ida, what do you think of Kingthorpe Abbey?" asked Bessie, when they had seen everything, even to the stoats and weasles, and various vermin nailed flat against the stable wall, and were waiting for Robin to be harnessed.

"It is a n.o.ble old place. It is simply perfect. I wonder your cousin can live away from it."

"Oh, Brian"s chief delight is in roaming about the world. The Abbey is thrown away upon him. He ought to have been an explorer or a missionary.

However, he is expected home in a month, and you will be able to judge for yourself whether he deserves to be master of this old place. I only wish it belonged to the other Brian."

"The other Brian is your favourite."

"He is ever so much nicer than his cousin--at least, the children and I like him best. My father swears by the head of the house."

"I think I would rather accept the Colonel"s judgment than yours, Bess,"

said Ida. "You are so impulsive in your likings."

"Don"t say that I am wanting in judgment," urged Bessie, coaxingly, "for you know how dearly I love you. You will see the two Brians, I hope, before your holidays are over; and then you can make your own selection.

Brian Walford will be with us for my birthday picnic, I daresay, wherever he may be now. I believe he is mooning away his time in Herefordshire, with his mother"s people."

"Is his father dead?"

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