Sinewy, spare, and wiry, with keen gray eyes under straight brows, narrow temples, a sunburnt face, and alert, upright bearing and quick step, William Ferrars was every inch a soldier; but nothing so much struck Mr. and Mrs. Kendal as the likeness to their little Maurice, though it consisted more in air and gesture than in feature. His speech was brief and to the point, softened into delicately-polished courtesy towards womankind, in the condescension of strength to weakness--the quality he evidently thought their chief characteristic.
Albinia was amused as she watched him with grown-up eyes, and compared present with past impressions. She could now imagine that she had been an inconvenient charge to a young soldier brother, and that he had been glad to make her over to the aunts, only petting and indulging her as a child; looking down on her fancies, and smiling at her sauciness when she was an enthusiastic maiden--treatment which she had so much resented, that she had direfully offended Maurice by p.r.o.nouncing William a mere martinet, when she was hurt at his neither reading the Curse of Kehama, nor entering into her plans for Fairmead school.
Having herself become a worker, she could better appreciate a man who had seen and acted instead of reading, recollected herself as an emanation of conceit, and felt shy and anxious, even more for her husband than for herself. How would the scholar and the soldier fare together? and could she and Maurice keep them from wearying of each other? She had little trust in her own fascinations, though she saw the General"s eye approvingly fixed on her, and believing herself to be a more pleasing object in her womanly bloom than in her unformed girlhood.
"How does the Montreal affair go on?" she asked.
"What affair?"
"Fred and Miss Kinnaird."
"I am sorry to say he has not put it out of his head."
"Surely she is a very nice person."
"Pshaw! He has no right to think of a wife these dozen years."
"Not even think? When he is not to have one at any rate till he is a field officer!"
"And he is a fool to have one then. A mere enc.u.mbrance to himself and the entire corps."
"Yes, I know," said Albinia, "she always gets the best cabin."
"And that is no place for her! No man, as I have told Fred over and over again, ought to drag a woman into hardships for which she is not fitted, and where she interferes with his effectiveness and the comfort of every one else."
The identical lecture of twelve years since, when he had feared Albinia"s becoming this inconvenient appendage! If he had repeated it on all like occasions, she did not wonder that it had wearied his aide-de-camp.
"Perhaps," she said, "the backwoods may have fitted Miss Emily for the life; and I can"t but be glad of Fred"s having been steady to anything."
Considering this speech like the Kehama days, the General went on to dilate on the damage that marriage was to the "service," removing the best officers, first from the mess, and then from the army.
"What a pity William was born too late to be a Knight of St. John!" said Albinia.
All laughed, but she doubted whether he were pleased, for he addressed himself to one of the aunts, while Maurice spoke to her in an under tone--"I believe he is quite right. Homes are better for the individual man, but not for the service. How remarkably the a.n.a.logy holds with this other service!"
"You mean what St. Paul says of the married and unmarried?"
"I always think he and his sayings are the most living lessons I know on the requirements of the other army."
Albinia mused on the insensible change in Maurice. He had not embraced his profession entirely by choice. It had always been understood that one of the younger branches must take the family living; and as Fred had spurned study, he had been bred up to consider it as his fate, and if he had ever had other wishes, he had entirely accepted his destiny, and sincerely turned to his vocation. The knowledge that he must be a clergyman had ruled him and formed him from his youth, and acting through him on his sister, had rendered her more than the accomplished, prosperous young lady her aunts meant to have made her. Yet, even up to a year or two after his Ordination, there had been a sense of sacrifice; he loved sporting, and even b.a.l.l.s, and it had been an effort to renounce them. He had avoided coming to London because his keen enjoyment of society tended to make him discontented with his narrow sphere; she had even known him to hesitate to ride with the staff at a review, lest he should make himself liable to repinings. And now how entirely had all this pa.s.sed away, not merely by outgrowing the enterprising temper and boyish habits, nor by contentment in a happy home, but by the sufficiency and rest of his service, the engrossment in the charge from his great Captain. Without being himself aware of it, he had ceased to distrust a holiday, because it was no longer a temptation; and his animation and mirth were the more free, because self-regulation was so thoroughly established, that restraint was no longer felt.
Mrs. Annesley was talking of the little Kendals, who she had ruled should be at Fairmead.
"No," said Maurice, "Albinia thought her son too mighty for Winifred.
Our laudable efforts at cousinly friendship usually produce war-whoops that bring the two mammas each to s.n.a.t.c.h her own offspring from the fray, with a scolding for the sake of appearances though believing the other the only guilty party."
"Now, Maurice," cried Albinia, "you confess how fond Mary is of setting people to rights."
"Well--when Maurice bullies Alby."
"Aye, you talk of the mammas, and you only want to make out poor Maurice the aggressor."
"Never mind, they will work in better than if they were fabulous children. Ah, you are going to contend that yours is a fabulous child.
Take care I don"t come on you with the indestructible--"
"Take care I don"t come on you with Mary"s lessons to Colonel Bury on the game-law."
"Does it not do one good to see those two quarrelling just like old times?" exclaimed one aunt to the other.
"And William looking on as contemptuous as ever?" said Albinia.
"Not at all. I rejoice to have this week with you. I should like to see your boy. Maurice says he is a thorough young soldier."
Mr. Kendal looked pleased.
The man of study had a penchant for the man of action, and the brothers-in-law were drawing together. Mars, the great geographical master, was but opening his gloomy school on the Turkish soil, and the world was discovering its ignorance beyond the Pinnock"s Catechisms of its youth. Maurice treated Mr. Kendal as a dictionary, and his stores of Byzantine, Othman, and Austrian lore, chimed in with the perceptions of the General, who, going by military maps, described plans of operations which Mr. Kendal could hardly believe he had not found in history, while he could as little credit that Mr. Kendal had neither studied tactics, nor seen the spots of which he could tell such serviceable minutiae.
They had their heads together over the map the whole evening, and the next morning, when the General began to ask questions about Turkish, his sister was proud to hear her husband answering with the directness and precision dear to a military man.
"That"s an uncommonly learned man, Albinia"s husband," began the General, as soon as he had started with his brother on a round of errands.
"I never met a man of more profound and universal knowledge."
"I don"t see that he is so grave and unlike other people. Fred reported that he was silence itself, and she might as well have married Hamlet"s ghost."
"Fred saw him at a party," said Maurice; then remembering that this might not be explanatory, he added, "He shines most when at ease, and every year since his marriage has improved and enlivened him."
"I am satisfied. I hardly knew how to judge, though I did not think myself called upon to remonstrate against the marriage, as the aunts wished. I knew I might depend on you, and I thought it high time that she should be settled."
"I have been constantly admiring her discernment, for I own that at first his reserve stood very much in my way, but since she has raised his spirits, and taught him to exert himself, he has been a most valuable brother to me.
"Then you think her happy? I was surprised to see her such a fine-looking woman; my aunts had croaked so much about his children and his mother, that I thought she would be worn to a shadow."
"Very happy. She has casual troubles, and a great deal of work, but that is what she is made for."
"How does she get on with his children?"
"Hearty love for them has carried her through the first difficulties, which appalled me, for they had been greatly mismanaged. I am afraid that she has not been able to undo some of the past evil; and with all her good intentions, I am sometimes afraid whether she is old enough to deal with grown-up young people."
"You don"t mean that Kendal"s children are grown up? I should think him younger than I am."
"He is so, but civil servants marry early, and not always wisely; and the son is about twenty. Poor Albinia dotes on him, and has done more for him than ever his father did; but the lad is weak and tender every way, with no stamina, moral or physical, and with just enough property to do him harm. He has been at Oxford and has failed, and now he is in the militia, but what can be expected of a boy in a country town, with nothing to do? I did not like his looks last week, and I don"t think his being there, always idle, is good for that little manly scamp of Albinia"s own."
"Why don"t they put him into the service?"
"He is too old."
"Not too old for the cavalry!"