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Works of Ellen Wood

Page 667

by Ellen Wood


  “Oh yes, he did,” said Peter, bitterly; “he took care of that. I am at his mercy any day, both in goods and person. He forgets, William, the service I rendered him, and my having to pay it: it is nothing but that that has kept me down in life. Put an execution in my house! I wonder where he expects to go to? Not to heaven, I should think?”

  “He said his client pressed for the money — would not, in fact, wait.”

  “I dare say he did; it’s just like him to say it. His client is himself.”

  “No?” exclaimed William Arkell, lifting his head.

  “I firmly believe it to be so. He is pressing for another ten pounds now; it was due yesterday.”

  “Have you got it for him? If not, why do you give me this?”

  “I have got it,” said Peter; “I have to receive money to-day. Thank you a thousand times, William, for this and all else. How is business?”

  “Don’t ask. I feel too ill to fret over it just now. I’d give it up to-morrow but for Travice.”

  Certain words all but escaped Peter Arkell’s lips, but they were suppressed again. He wondered — he had wondered long — why William Arkell continued to live at an expensive rate. That it was his wife’s doings, not his, Peter knew; but he could not help thinking that, had he been a firm, clever man, as William was, he should not have yielded to her.

  He met her in the hall as he went out. She wore a rich, trailing silk, and bracelets of gold. Peter stopped to shake hands with her; but she was never too civil to him, or to his daughter Lucy. In point of fact, Lucy had for some time haunted Mrs. Arkell’s dreams in a very unpleasant manner, entailing a frequent nightmare, hideous to contemplate.

  “What did Peter Arkell want here?” she asked of her husband, before she was well in the room; and her tone was by no means a gracious one.

  “Not much,” carelessly answered Mr. Arkell, who had drawn over the fire in another fit of shivering.

  She took her seat in the chair Peter had vacated, and slightly lifted her rich dress, lest the scorching fire should mar its beauty.

  “I suppose he came to borrow money,” she said, no pleasant look upon her countenance.

  “On the contrary, he came to pay me some.”

  “To pay you some! What for?”

  “To repay me some, I should have said. I paid something for him during his absence — ten pounds — and he has now returned it.”

  For one single moment she felt inclined to doubt the words, and to say so. The next, she remembered how simply truthful was her husband.

  “I want Travice,” she said, presently. “I sent to the manufactory for him, but he was out. Will he be long, do you know?”

  “I dare say not. Peter told me he was at the railway station. He went, I suppose, to meet them.”

  Mrs. Arkell lifted her head with a sort of start.

  “Did you know he had gone?” she asked, sharply.

  “I knew nothing at all of it. What are you so cross about?”

  Mrs. Arkell bit her lips — her habit when put out.

  “I have always objected to Travice’s excessive intimacy with the Peter Arkells,” she slowly said. “You know I have. But I might just as well have objected to the wind’s blowing, for all the effect it has had. I hope it will not prove that I had cause.”

  “Cause! What cause? What do you mean, Charlotte?”

  “Well, I think they are a mean, deceitful set. I think they are scheming to entrap Travice into an engagement with Lucy Arkell.”

  Ill as Mr. Arkell felt, he yet burst into a laugh. The notion of Peter’s scheming to entrap anyone, or anything, was so ludicrous: simple, single-minded Peter, who had probably never given a thought to Lucy’s marrying at all since she was in existence! and his wife was utterly above meanness of any sort — the very soul of openness and honour.

  “Where did you pick up that notion?” he asked, when his laugh was over.

  “I picked it up from observation and common sense,” answered Mrs. Arkell, resentful of the laugh. “Travice used always to be there; and now that they are back, I suppose he will be again. He has lost no time in beginning, it seems.”

  “And if he is there, it does not follow that he goes for the sake of Lucy.”

  “It looks wonderfully like it, though.”

  “Nonsense, Charlotte! In the old days, when I was a young man, as Travice is, and Mildred was a girl like Lucy, quite as attractive — —”

  “Quite as what?” shrieked Mrs. Arkell. “I hope your taste does not put forward Lucy Arkell as attractive — or as Mildred’s having been so before her. They are as like as two peas. A couple of uneducated, old-fashioned, old-maidish things, possessing not a single attraction.”

  “Opinions differ,” said Mr. Arkell, quietly. “But if it be as you intimate, there’s the less danger for Travice. What I was about to say was this — that in the old days I was in the habit of going to that house more than Travice goes to it now, and busy people, even my own mother, never believed but that I went for the sake of Mildred. I did not; neither did I marry her.”

  “The cases are different. You had no companion at home; Travice has his sisters. And it might have ended in your marrying Mildred, had I not come down on that long visit here, and saved you.”

  “Yes, it might.” He was looking dreamily into the fire, his thoughts buried in the past; utterly oblivious to the present, and to the effect his remark might make. Mrs. Arkell felt particularly savage when she heard it.

  “And a nice wife you’d have had! She is only fit for what she is — a lady’s maid. Lucy will follow her example, perhaps, when old Peter’s poverty has sent him into the grave. I always hated Lucy Arkell — it may be a strong term to use — but it’s the truth. From the time that she was only as high as the elbow of that chair, and her mother, with the fine Cheveley notions, used to deck her out as a little court doll, I hated her!”

  “And I have always thought her one of the sweetest and most loveable of children,” quietly returned Mr. Arkell. “Opinions differ, I say, Charlotte. But why should you have hated her?”

  “Because — I think it must have been” (and Mrs. Arkell looked into the fire also in reflection, and for once spoke her true sentiments)— “I think it must have been because you and Travice made so much of her. I only know it has been.”

  “I’d not cherish it, Charlotte.”

  “You would not, I know. Tell me,” she added, with quite a gust of passion in voice and eye, “would you like to see your fine, attractive, noble son, thrown away upon Lucy Arkell?”

  “My head is as bad as it can be, Charlotte; I wish you’d not worry me. I think I must be going to have some fever.”

  “He might marry half Westerbury. With his good looks, his education, his fine prospects — —”

  “Yes, do put in them,” interrupted Mr. Arkell. “Very fine they are, in the present aspect of affairs.”

  “Affairs will get good again. I don’t believe the half that’s said about the badness of trade. You have made a good thing of it,” she added significantly.

  “Pretty well; I and my father before me. But those times have gone by for ever.”

  “I don’t believe it; I believe the trade will revive again and be as lucrative as before; and Travice will be able to maintain a home such as we have maintained. It is a fine prospect, I don’t care how you may deny it in your gloom; and I say that Travice, enjoying it, might marry half the desirable girls in Westerbury.”

  “He’d be taken up for bigamy if he did.”

  “Can’t you be serious?” she angrily asked. “Whereas, if he got enthralled by that bane, Lucy Arkell, and —— Good patience, here she is!” broke off Mrs. Arkell, as her eyes fell on the courtyard. “The impudence of that! Not half an hour in the town, and to come here!”

  Lucy, in her grey travelling cloak, and fresh straw bonnet, came staggering in under a load: a flower-pot, with a great plant in bloom. She looked well. In moments of excitement, there was something of her mother’s loveli
ness in her face; in the lustre of the soft and sweet dark eyes, in the rose bloom of the delicate cheeks, and at those times she was less like Mildred. Lucy put her load on the table, and turned to offer her hand to Mrs. Arkell. Mrs. Arkell touched the tips of the fingers, but Mr. Arkell took her in his arms and kissed her twice; and then recollected himself and fell into proper repentance.

  “I ought not to have done it, Lucy; I forgot myself. But, my dear, in the joy of seeing you, and seeing you so pretty, I quite lost sight of precaution. I am shivering with cold and illness, Lucy, and may be going to have I don’t know what.”

  Lucy laughed. She was not afraid, and said so.

  “Mamma made me bring this down at once for your conservatory,” she said, addressing Mrs. Arkell. “It is a wax plant, and a very beautiful one. The last time we were here, you were regretting you had not a nice one, and when mamma saw this, she thought of you. She sends her very kind regards, Mrs. Arkell, and hopes you will accept it. And now that’s my message, and there’s my load, and I have delivered both,” concluded Lucy, merrily.

  In the face of the present — and it was really a beautiful one of its nature — Mrs. Arkell could not maintain her utter ungraciousness. She unbent a very little: unwillingly thanked Lucy for the plant, and inquired how Mrs. Peter Arkell was.

  “I think we had better send our girls to the sea-side, if they could come back improved as Lucy has,” remarked Mr. Arkell; and the remark aggravated his wife. “Are those roses on your cheeks real, Lucy, or have you learnt the use of that fashionable cosmetic, rose-powder?”

  “They are quite real,” answered Lucy, the cheeks blushing their own testimony to the answer. “It has done us all so much good! Mr. Prattleton said he should not have known mamma, had he met her in a strange place, she is looking so different. But I am warm just now. It was coming through the streets with that: everybody stared at me.”

  “Could not Travice have brought it?” asked Mr. Arkell.

  “He did offer; but mamma said I should bring it more carefully than he, and she sent me off with it at once. She had been taking care of it herself all the way.”

  “Where is Travice?” inquired Mrs. Arkell, the sharp tone perceptible in her voice again, more especially to Mr. Arkell’s ears.

  “He was helping mamma indoors when I came. Papa had gone somewhere: he left us at the station.”

  Mr. Arkell did not say that he had been there. He was looking very poorly just then, and his hands, quite trembling with cold, were blue as he stretched them out to the fire. Lucy, an admirable sick nurse from her training, the being with her ailing mother, threw back her grey cloak, knelt down, and took them into her own warm hands to chafe them.

  It was what one of Mr. Arkell’s own daughters would not, or could not, have done. He looked down on the pretty upturned face, every line of which spoke of a sweet goodness. She was more lovely, more attractive than Mildred had been — or was it that his eyes had then had a film before them? — and he felt that — were he in Travice’s place ——

  “I wonder you liked to stay so long away, leaving Henry to himself!” interrupted Mrs. Arkell.

  “He was at Mr. Wilberforce’s, you know,” replied Lucy. “He was very well there; very happy.”

  “I suppose he comes home to-day.”

  “No, not until the college school breaks up for Christmas. Mr. Wilberforce thinks he had better not disturb himself before. Have you heard of the gold medal? But of course you have. I hope I shall not grow too proud of my brother. But oh, Mrs. Arkell! pray tell me! What do you think of that dreadful thing, the loss of Mr. Dundyke? Will he ever come back again?”

  “Ever come back again!” repeated Mrs. Arkell, believing that Lucy was putting on an affectation of childishness. “How can a murdered man come back?”

  “Was he murdered? I thought they supposed he was drowned, but were not certain what it was. Was he murdered?” she repeated, looking at Mr. Arkell, for Mrs. Arkell did not appear inclined to answer her.

  “I fear he was, Lucy.”

  “Oh, what a dreadful thing! Mrs. Arkell, what will Mrs. Dundyke do?”

  “Oh, she has enough to live upon, I believe.”

  “I did not quite mean it in that light,” said Lucy, gently, as Mrs. Arkell’s remark jarred upon her ear. “And old Marmaduke Carr has died,” she resumed, “and there’s going to be a law-suit about the property. What a great many things seem to have happened since we went away! Mr. Arkell, which side do you think has the most right to gain the law-suit?”

  “The most right? Well, there’s a great deal to be said on both sides, Lucy. If there was no marriage, of course the property does belong to the Carrs of Eckford; if there was a marriage, they have no right to it whatever. In any case, the blame lies with Robert Carr; and his descendants suffer.”

  “Do you think there was a marriage?” continued Lucy.

  Mr. Arkell shook his head.

  “I don’t, my dear, now. Had there been one, some traces of it would have been found ere this.”

  “Then young Mrs. Carr will lose the law-suit!”

  “Undoubtedly. It appears very strange to me that Fauntleroy should go on with it.”

  The hands were warm now, and Lucy rose.

  “You have done me good, Lucy,” said Mr. Arkell, as she was putting on her gloves to leave; “good in all ways. A bright face and a cheering manner! my dear, in sickness, they are worth their weight in gold.”

  Making the best of her way home, she found Travice alone. Henry was upstairs with his mother, uncording boxes.

  “What a time you have been, Lucy!” was the salutation; for it had seemed very long to him.

  “Have I? I did not once sit down. Mr. Arkell says I look well after my sojourn, but I told him he should see mamma.”

  “So he should. But I must be going, Lucy. Do you look well?”

  He took both her hands in his, and stood before her, his face a little bent, regarding her intently. Lucy blushed violently under the gaze. Suddenly, without any warning, his lips were on hers; and he took the first kiss that he had taken from Lucy since her childhood.

  “Don’t be angry with me, Lucy! Think it a cousin’s kiss, if you will.”

  As he went out, the large shadow of a large, gaily-dressed woman, passing between him and the setting sun, was cast upon Travice Arkell. The shadow of Barbara Fauntleroy. If he could but have foreseen the type it was of the terrible shadow that was to fall upon him in the future!

  VOLUME III.

  CHAPTER I.

  DIAMOND CUT DIAMOND — A SURPRISE.

  It happened on that same second of December that Mr. Littelby took his place for the first time as conductor of the business of Mynn and Mynn. He had arrived at Eckford the previous day, as per agreement, but was not installed formally in the office until this. Old Mynn, not in his gout now, had come down early, and was brisk and lively; George Mynn was also there.

  He was an admitted solicitor just as much as were Mynn and Mynn; he was to be their confidential locum tenens; the whole management and conduct of affairs was, during their absence, to fall upon him; he was, in point of fact, to be practically a principal, not a clerk, and at the end of a year, if all went well, he was to be allowed a share in the business, and the firm would be Mynn, Mynn, and Littelby.

  It was not, then, to be wondered at, that the chief of the work this day was the inducting him into the particulars of the various cases that Mynn and Mynn happened to have on hand, more especially those that were to come on for trial at the Westerbury assizes, and would require much attention beforehand. They were shut up betimes, the three, in the small room that would in future be Mr. Littelby’s — a room which had hitherto been nobody’s in particular, for the premises were commodious, but which Mr. Richards had been in the habit of appropriating as his own, not for office purposes, but for private uses. Quite a cargo of articles belonging to Mr. Richards had been there: coats, parcels, pipes, letters, and various other items too numerous to mention. On the pre
vious day, Richards had received a summary mandate to “clear it out,” as it was about to be put in order for the use of Mr. Littelby. Mr. Richards had obeyed in much dudgeon, and his good feeling towards the new manager — his master in future — was not improved. It had not been friendly previously, for Mr. Richards had a vague idea that his way would not be quite so much his own as it had been.

  He sat now at his desk in the public office, into which clients plunged down two steps from the landing on the first flight of stairs, as if they had been going into a well. His subordinate, a steady young man named Pope, who was browbeaten by Richards every hour of his life, sat at a small desk apart. Mr. Richards, ostensibly occupied in the perusal of some formidable-looking parchment, was, in reality, biting his nails and frowning, and inwardly wishing he could bring the ceiling down on Mr. Littelby’s head, shut up in that adjoining apartment; and could he have invented a decent excuse for sending out Pope, in the teeth of the intimation Mr. George Mynn had just given, that Pope was to stop in, for he should want him, Mr. Richards would have had his own ear to the keyhole of the door.

  Mr. Littelby and Mr. Mynn sat at the square table, some separate bundles of papers before them, tied up with red string; Mr. George Mynn stood with his back to the fire. Never was there a keener or a better man of business than Mynn the elder, when his state of health allowed him a respite from pain. He had been well for two or three weeks now, and the office found the benefit of it. He was the one to explain matters to Mr. Littelby; Mr. George only put in a word here and there. In due course they came to a small bundle of papers labelled “Carr,” and Mr. Mynn, in his rapid, clear, concise manner, gave an outline of the case. Before he had said many words, Mr. Littelby raised his head, his face betokening interest, and some surprise.

  “But I thought the Carr case was at an end,” he observed. “At least, I supposed it would naturally be so.”

 

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