by Ellen Wood
“You have been opposing me all the later years of your life. From that time when I wished to place you with Wall and Barnes, you have done nothing but act in opposition to me.”
“I have forgiven that,” said George, pointedly, a glow rising to his face at the recollection. “As to any other opposition, I am unconscious of it. You have given me advice occasionally respecting the farm; but the advice has not in general tallied with my own opinion, and therefore I have not taken it. If you call that opposing you, Mr. Chattaway, I cannot help it.”
“I see you have been mending that fence in the three-cornered paddock,” remarked Mr. Chattaway, passing to another subject, and speaking in a different tone. Possibly he had had enough of the last.
“Yes,” said George. “You would not mend it, and therefore I have had it done. I cannot let my cattle get into the pound. I shall deduct the expense from the rent.”
“You’ll not,” said Mr. Chattaway. “I won’t be at the cost of a penny-piece of it.”
“Oh yes, you will,” returned George, equably. “The damage was done by your team, through your waggoner’s carelessness, and the cost of making it good lies with you. Have you anything more to say to me?” he asked, after a pause. “I am very busy this morning.”
“Only this,” replied Mr. Chattaway significantly. “That the more you encourage Rupert Trevlyn, by making a companion of him, the worse it will be for him.”
George lifted his hat in salutation. The master of Trevlyn Hold replied by an ungracious nod, and turned his horse back down the lane. As George rode on, he met Edith and Emily Chattaway — the children, as Octave had styled them — running towards him. They had seen their father, and were hastening after him. Maude came up more leisurely. George stopped to shake hands with her.
“You look pale and ill, Maude,” he said, his low voice full of sympathy, his hand retaining hers. “Is it about Rupert?”
“Yes,” she replied, striving to keep back her tears. “He was not allowed to come in last night, and has been sent away without breakfast this morning.”
“I know all about it,” said George. “I met Rupert just now, and he told me. I asked him if he would go to Nora for some breakfast — I could not do less, you know,” he added musingly, as if debating the question with himself. “But he declined. I am almost glad he did.”
Maude was surprised. “Why?” she asked.
“Because I have had an idea — have felt it for some time — that any attention shown to Rupert, no matter by whom, only makes his position worse with Chattaway. And Chattaway has now confirmed it by telling me so.”
Maude’s eyelids drooped. “How sad it is!” she exclaimed with emotion— “and for one in his weak state! If he were only strong as the rest of us are, it would matter less. I fear — I do fear he must have slept under the trees in the avenue,” she continued. “Mr. Chattaway inquired where he had passed the night, and Rupert answered — —”
“I can so far relieve your fears, Maude,” interrupted George, glancing round, as if to make sure no ears were near. “He was at old Canham’s.”
Maude gave a deep sigh in her relief. “You are certain, George?”
“Yes, yes. Rupert told me so just now. He said how hard he found the settle. Here come your charges, Maude; so I will say good-bye.”
She suffered her hand to linger in his, but her heart was too full to speak. George bent lower.
“Do not make the grief weightier than you can bear, Maude. It is real grief; but happier times may be in store for Rupert — and for you.”
He released her hand, and cantered down the lane; and the two girls came up, telling Maude they should go home now, for they had walked long enough.
CHAPTER XV
TORMENTS
There appeared to be no place on earth for Rupert Trevlyn. Most people have some little nook they can fit themselves into and call their own; but he had none. He was only on sufferance at the Hold, and was made to feel more of an interloper in it day by day.
What could be the source of this ill-feeling towards Rupert? Did some latent dread exist in the heart of Mr. Chattaway, and from thence reach that of Cris, whispering that he, Rupert, the true heir of Trevlyn Hold, might at some future day, through some unforeseen and apparently impossible chance, come into his rights? No doubt it was so. There are no other means of accounting for it. It may be, they deemed, that the more effectually he was kept under, treated as an object to be despised, lowered from his proper station, the less chance would there be of that covert dread growing into a certainty. Whatever its cause, Rupert was shamefully put upon. It is true that he sat at their table, occupied the same sitting-room. But at table he was placed below the rest, was served last, and from the plainest dish. Mrs. Chattaway’s heart would ache; it had ached for many a year; but she could not alter it. In their evenings, when the rest were gathered round the fire, Rupert would be left out in the cold. Nothing in the world did he so covet as a warm seat near the fire. It had been sought by his father when he was Rupert’s age, and perhaps Miss Diana remembered this, for she would call Rupert forward, and sharply rebuke those who would have kept him from it.
But Miss Diana was not always in the room; not often, in fact. She had her own sitting-room upstairs, as Mrs. Chattaway had hers; and both ladies more frequently retired to them in an evening, leaving the younger ones to enjoy themselves, with their books and work, their music and games, unrestrained by their presence. And poor Rupert was condemned to remote quarters, where no one noticed him.
From that point alone, the cold, it was a severe trial. Of weakly constitution, a chilly nature, warmth was to Rupert Trevlyn almost an essential of existence. And it was what he rarely had at Trevlyn Hold. No wonder he was driven out. Even old Canham’s wood fire, that he might get right into if he pleased, was an improvement upon the drawing-room at the Hold.
After parting with George Ryle, Maude Trevlyn, in obedience to the imperious wills of her pupils, turned her steps homewards. Emily was a boisterous, troublesome, disobedient girl; Edith was more gentle and amiable, in looks and disposition resembling her mother; but the example of her sisters was infectious, and spoiled her. There was another daughter, Amelia, older than they were, and at school at Barmester: a very disagreeable girl indeed.
“What was George Ryle saying to you, Maude?” somewhat insolently asked Emily.
“He was talking of Rupert,” she incautiously answered, her mind buried in thought.
When they reached the Hold, Mr. Chattaway’s horse was being led about by a groom, waiting for its master, who had returned, and was indoors. As they crossed the hall, they met him coming out of the breakfast-room. Octave was with him, talking.
“Cris would have waited, no doubt, papa, had he known you wanted him. He ate his breakfast in a hurry, and went out. I suppose he has gone to Blackstone.”
“I particularly wanted him,” grumbled Mr. Chattaway, who was never pleasant at the best of times, but would be unbearable if put out. “Cris knew I should want him this morning. First Rupert, and then Cris! Are you all going to turn disobedient?”
He made a halt at the door, putting on his riding-glove. They stood grouped around him — Octave, Maude, and Emily. Edith had run out, and was near the horse.
“I would give a crown-piece to know what Mr. Rupert did with himself last night,” he savagely uttered. “John,” exalting his voice, “have you any idea where Rupert Trevlyn hid himself all night?”
The locking-out had been known to the household, and afforded considerable gossip. John had taken part in it; joined in its surmises and comments; therefore he was not at fault for a ready answer.
“I don’t know nothing certain, sir. It ain’t unlikely he went down to the Sheaf o’ Corn, and slept there.”
“No, no, he did not,” involuntarily burst from Maude.
It was an unlucky admission, for its tone was decisive, implying that she knew where he did sleep. She spoke in the moment’s impulse. The Shear of Corn was th
e nearest public-house; notorious for its irregular doings; and Maude felt shocked at the bare suggestion that Rupert would enter such a place.
Mr. Chattaway turned to her. “Where did he sleep? What do you know about it?” Maude’s face grew hot and cold. She opened her lips to answer, but closed them again without speaking, the words dying away in her uncertainty and hesitation.
Mr. Chattaway may have felt surprised. He knew perfectly well that Maude had held no communication with Rupert that morning. He had seen Rupert come in and go out; and Maude had not stirred from his presence. He bent his cold grey eyes upon her.
“From whom have you been hearing of Rupert’s doings?”
It is very probable that Maude would have been at a loss for an answer, but she was saved a reply, for Emily spoke up before she had time to give one, ill-nature in her tone and words.
“Maude must have heard it from George Ryle. You saw her talking to him, papa. She said he had been speaking of Rupert.”
Mr. Chattaway did not ask another question. It would have been superfluous to do so, in the conclusion he had come to. He believed Rupert had slept at Trevlyn Farm. How else could George Ryle have become acquainted with his movements?
“They’ll be hatching a plot to try to over-throw me,” he muttered to himself as he went out to his horse: for his was one of those mean, suspicious natures that are always fancying the world is antagonistic to them. “Maude Ryle has been wanting to get me out of Trevlyn Hold ever since I came into it. From the very hour she heard the Squire’s will read, and found I had inherited, she has been planning and plotting for it. She would rather see Rupert in it than me; and rather see her pitiful Treve in it than anyone. Yes, yes, Mr. Rupert, we know what you frequent Trevlyn Farm for. But it won’t answer. It’s waste of time. They must change England’s laws before they can upset Squire Trevlyn’s will. But it’s not less annoying to know that my tenure is constantly being hauled over and peered into, to see if they can’t find a flaw in it, or insert one of their own making.”
It was strange that these fears should continually trouble the master of Trevlyn Hold. A man who legally holds an estate, on which no shade of a suspicion can be cast, need not dread its being wrested from him. It was in Squire Trevlyn’s power to leave the Hold and its revenues to whom he would. Had he chosen to bequeath it to an utter stranger, it was in his power to do so: and he had bequeathed it to James Chattaway. Failing direct male heirs, it may be thought that Mr. Chattaway had as much right to it as anyone else. At any rate, it had been the Squire’s pleasure to bequeath it to him, and there the matter ended. That the master of Trevlyn Hold was ever conscious of a dread his tenure was to be some time disturbed, was indisputable. He never betrayed it to any living being by so much as a word; he strove to conceal it even from himself; but there it was, deep in his secret heart. There it remained, and there it tormented him; however unwilling he might have been to acknowledge the fact.
Could it be that a prevision of what was really to take place was cast upon him? — a mysterious foreshadowing of the future? There are people who tell us such warnings come.
The singularity of the affair was, that no grounds could exist for this latent fear. Whence then should it arise? Why, from that source whence it arises in many people — a bad conscience. It was true the estate had been legally left to him; but he knew that his own handiwork, his deceit, had brought it to him; he knew that when he suppressed the news of the birth of Rupert, and suffered Squire Trevlyn to go to his grave uninformed of the fact, he was guilty of nothing less than a crime in the sight of God. Mr. Chattaway had heard of that inconvenient thing, retribution, and his fancy suggested that it might possibly overtake him.
If he had only known that he might have set his mind at rest as to the plotting and planning, he would have cared less to oppose Rupert’s visits to the Farm. Nothing could be further from the thoughts of Rupert, or George Ryle, than any plotting against Chattaway. Their evenings, when together, were spent in harmless conversation, in chess, without so much as a reference to Chattaway. But that gentleman did not know it, and tormented himself accordingly.
He mounted his horse, and rode away. As he was passing Trevlyn Farm, buried in unpleasant thoughts, he saw Nora Dickson at the fold-yard gate, and turned his horse’s head towards her.
“How came your people to give Rupert Trevlyn a bed last night? They must know it would very much displease me.”
“Give Rupert Trevlyn a bed!” repeated Nora, regarding Mr. Chattaway with the uncompromising stare she was fond of according to that gentleman. “He did not sleep here.”
“No!” replied Mr. Chattaway.
“No,” reiterated Nora. “What should he want with a bed here? Has he not his own at Trevlyn Hold? A bed there isn’t much for him, when he ought to have owned the whole place; but I suppose he can at least count upon that.”
Mr. Chattaway turned his horse short round, and rode away without another word. He always got the worst of it with Nora. A slight explosion of his private sentiments with regard to her was given to the air, and he again became absorbed on the subject of Rupert.
“Where, then, did he pass the night?”
CHAPTER XVI
MR. CHATTAWAY’S OFFICE
It was Nora’s day for churning. The butter was made twice a week at Trevlyn Farm, and the making fell to Nora. She was sole priestess of the dairy. It was many and many a long year since any one else had interfered in it: except, indeed, in the actual churning. One of the men on the farm did that for her in a general way; but to-day they were not forthcoming.
When Nora was seen at the fold-yard gate by Mr. Chattaway, idly staring up and down the road, she was looking for Jim Sanders, to order him in to churn. Not the Jim Sanders mentioned in the earlier portion of our history, but Jim’s son. Jim the elder was dead: he had brought on rather too many attacks of inflammation (a disease to which he was predisposed) by his love of beer; and at last one attack worse than the rest came, and proved too much for him. The present Jim, representative of his name, was a youth of fourteen, not over-burdened with brains, but strong and sound, and was found useful on the farm, where he was required to be willing to do any work that came first to hand.
Just now he was wanted to churn. The man who usually performed that duty was too busy to be spared to-day; therefore it fell to Jim. But Jim could not be seen anywhere, and Nora returned indoors and commenced the work herself.
The milk at the right temperature — for Nora was too experienced a dairy-woman not to know that if she attempted to churn at the wrong one, it would be hours before the butter came — she took out the thermometer, and turned the milk into the churn. As she was doing this, the servant, Nanny, entered: a tall, stolid girl, remarkable for little except height.
“Is nobody coming in to churn?” asked she.
“It seems not,” answered Nora.
“Shall I do it?”
“Not if I know it,” returned Nora. “You’d like to quit your work for this pastime, wouldn’t you? Have you the potatoes on for the pigs?”
“No,” said Nanny.
“Then go and see about, it. You know it was to be done to-day. And I suppose the fire’s burning away under the furnace.”
Fanny stalked out of the dairy. Nora churned away steadily, and turned her butter on to the making-up board in about three-quarters of an hour. As she was proceeding with it, she saw George ride into the fold-yard, and leave his horse in the stable. Another minute and he came in.
“Has Mr. Callaway not come yet, Nora?”
“I have seen nothing of him, Mr. George.”
George took out his watch: the one bequeathed him by his father. It was only a silver one — as Mr. Ryle had remarked — but George valued it as though it had been set in diamonds. He would wear that watch and no other as long as he lived. His initials were engraved on it now: G. B. R. standing for George Berkeley Ryle.
“If Callaway cannot keep his appointment better than this, I shall beg him not t
o make any more with me,” he remarked. “The last time he kept me waiting three-quarters of an hour.”
“Have you seen Jim Sanders this morning?” asked Nora.
“I saw him in the stables as I rode out.”
“I should like to find him!” said Nora. “He is skulking somewhere. I have had to churn myself.”
“Where’s Roger?”
“Roger couldn’t hinder his time indoors to-day. Mr. George, what’s up at Trevlyn Hold again about Rupert?” resumed Nora, turning from her butter to glance at George.
“Why do you ask?”
“Chattaway rode by an hour ago when I was outside looking after Jim Sanders. He stopped his horse and asked how we came to give Rupert a bed last night, when we knew that it would displease him. Like his insolence!”
“What answer did you make?” said George, after a pause.
“I gave him one,” replied Nora, significantly. “Chattaway needn’t fear not getting an answer when he comes to me. He knows that.”
“But what did you say about Rupert?”
“I said that he had not slept here. If Chattaway — —”
Nora was interrupted by the entrance of Mr. Chattaway’s daughter, Octave. She had come to the farm, and, attracted by the sound of voices in the dairy, made her way to it. Miss Chattaway had taken it into her head lately to be friendly, to honour the farm with frequent visits. Mrs. Ryle neither encouraged nor repulsed her. She was civilly indifferent: but the young lady chose to take that as a welcome. Nora did not show her much greater favour than she was in the habit of showing her father. She bent her head over her butter-board, as if unaware that any one had entered.
George removed his hat which he had been wearing, as she stepped on to the cold floor of the dairy, and took the hand held out to him.