Works of Ellen Wood

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by Ellen Wood


  Hannah made her acquaintance one morning on the lawn, and was no little astonished at the tight corkscrew curls tucked under the bonnet, and the prim, patronising tone with which the governess addressed her; but nurse did not belong to the house; there was no occasion to conciliate her. Evidently Miss Barker was no admirer of young children, for as little Bertie ran up to Alice, she exclaimed, “Dear me, what a fat child!”

  Hannah looked at her for a moment with indignation, and replied, “fat, yes, Ma’am, Master Bertie, thank God, is fat,” and then added, in an under tone, loud enough to be heard, “It’s just as well if some others were as fat!” and viewed, as she turned away, the lady’s thin, spare form with utter disgust.

  Amy and her husband were the only visitors at Brampton, yet no one seemed dull. Amy could never be dull with her child, and Mrs. Linchmore appeared ever happy and contented.

  They were good musicians, both Mrs. Linchmore and her guest; the former excelled in playing, the latter in singing. Amy’s voice was sweet and musical, not wanting in power — one of those voices so charming to the senses, claiming the attention of every hearer, thrilling through the heart with wonderful pathos, leaving pleasing memories behind, or else the eyes filled with tears, as some mournful notes stir the soul with long forgotten memories.

  Mrs. Linchmore’s voice was at times too powerful, grating harshly on the ear; she dashed at the notes in the quick parts, and handled them too roughly and rapidly; there was a want of feeling pervading the whole, which made one feel glad when the voice ceased, and the fingers alone glided softly over the keys. It was marvellous how fast they flew; while the notes sounded clearly and distinctly, like the tinkling of bells. Now the tune swelled loud and strong; then appeared to die faintly away under the light touch of those wonderful fingers. Mrs. Linchmore knew she played well, however much Amy excelled her in singing, and would sit down after one of the latter’s songs, and enchant her listeners with some soft, beautiful air, played to perfection; then would come a song, and after that another piece, short, but more silvery sounding than the first, while Amy’s voice was well-nigh forgotten, and Mrs. Linchmore, with her beautiful smiling face and pleasant words, was considered the musician of the evening, and had all due homage awarded her. As it was in music, so it was in everything else, Mrs. Linchmore took by right of “tact” what Amy ought to have laid claim to, but then, one was a woman of the world, the other only just entering it. Amy wanted confidence; Mrs. Linchmore none.

  As the days grew shorter still, Robert Vavasour whiled away the long evenings by again, as of old, playing at chess with his hostess, while Amy, who did not understand the game, sat and talked or sang to Mr. Linchmore; at other times she grew weary of those long games, so entirely engrossing her husband’s attention, and brought her work or a book, and drawing a chair close by, watched the progress of the play.

  By degrees the players themselves claimed her attention; how deeply interested they seemed! how intent on the pieces! Amy, as she plied her needle diligently at the work in her lap, was constantly looking at Mrs. Linchmore. How often her dark eyes flashed across the board in her adversary’s face, and when the game was at an end how she laughed and talked, and how the rings sparkled on her white hands, as she re-arranged the pieces again in their places. Amy thought she wore too many rings: they certainly danced and flashed in the lamp light, and dazzled her so that she felt quite fascinated, and wondered what Robert thought, and whether he admired her, or saw still the hard look. Amy half wished he did, or that she possessed only a quarter of the power Mrs. Linchmore seemed to have of pleasing him. Perhaps he had found his evenings dull with only his wife to talk or read to. Why had he not told her he was so fond of chess? she might have learnt it; yes, she would learn it; and again Amy glanced at the board to watch the pieces and try and make out how they moved; then tired of looking, her attention would be once more riveted on Mrs. Linchmore, and with a dissatisfied sigh she wished herself back at Somerton.

  Thus came the first doubt to the young wife’s heart; yet scarcely known to her, save for a strange cold feeling stirring sometimes within.

  Anne rode over one day to Brampton, and the flying visit of her old friend did Amy good: marriage seemed in no way to have altered her, she was just as merry-laughing and joking in much the same style as ever. Her husband was as proud of her as he well could be, rebuking her at times, not with words, but a look, when he thought her spirits were carrying her a little too far, while Anne appeared to look up and reverence him in all things, being checked in a moment by his grave face.

  The morning passed pleasantly. As Anne rose to go she said, “Tell Isabella I am sorry to have missed seeing her, although I should have been more sorry had you been absent, as my visit, strictly speaking, was to you, in fact for you alone.”

  “I will give the first part of the message,” replied Amy laughing, “and bury the other half in my heart, as it would be but a poor compliment repeated. Why not remain to luncheon; I expect Mrs. Linchmore home very shortly, she has driven into Standale.”

  “Standale! I thought she hated the place.”

  “The place, yes; but not the station.”

  “What on earth has taken her there?”

  “To meet a friend.”

  “Man or woman?” laughed Anne.

  “Indeed I never asked,” replied Amy. “It was quite by accident I heard her say that unless Mr. Linchmore made haste she would not arrive in time to meet the train.”

  “Oh! then he has gone too. Depend upon it, it’s some old ‘fogy’ or another; Miss Tremlow, perhaps, with her carpet bag stuffed full of yellow pocket handkerchiefs; you know,” continued she, mimicking that lady’s tone and manner, “this is such a damp place, and the rheumatics are worse than ever.”

  As Anne rode away Amy remained at the window with little Bertie, who had been brought down for inspection and approval, and duly admired and caressed.

  “I wish Anne had been going to remain, Robert,” said Amy, “she is so pleasant.”

  “She is all very well for a short time,” he replied, “but really her tongue, to use rather a worn out simile, is like the clapper of a bell; always ringing.”

  “Do you think she talks too much?”

  “Most decidedly I do.”

  “But you do not admire a silent woman,” said Amy drawing near the fire, and placing Bertie on the hearth rug.

  “More so than a very talkative one; but there is such a thing as a happy medium.”

  Amy sighed. “I wish we were back at Somerton,” she said.

  “Is my wife home-sick already? Would she not find it dull after Brampton?”

  “I could not find it dull. Should I not have you—” she would have said all to myself, but checked herself and added— “you and Bertie.”

  “Why not have left out, Bertie?” he replied, “I shall grow jealous of that boy, Amy, if you always class us together. Can you not forget him sometimes?”

  “Forget him? Oh! no, never!” said Amy, catching up the child, who immediately climbed from his mother’s arms on to Robert’s knee and remained there; while his father, notwithstanding his jealousy, glanced proudly at his boy, and caressed both him and his mother.

  “Ah! you are just as fond of Bertie as I am,” she said, as her husband drew her to his side.

  But even as she spoke she became conscious of a shadow between her and the light which streamed in through the large bay window of the dining-room; while Vavasour rose and held out his hand saying apologetically, “We did not hear the carriage drive up.”

  “No, I could hardly expect you would, with so much to interest you within doors.”

  Amy arose quickly as the voice struck her ear.

  “Frances! Miss Strickland!” she said.

  “Yes, the same. You look surprised. Did you not expect me?”

  “No,” replied Amy, shortly.

  “It is quite an unexpected pleasure, and has surprised us both,” returned Robert, as he noticed his wife’s unus
ual manner.

  “It is my fault. I told Isabella not to mention I was coming,” returned she. “Perhaps I wanted to see if you would be pleased, or recognise me; every one says I am so very much altered.”

  “I see no difference,” replied Amy, as Frances glanced straight at her.

  “There is none,” she answered, and the tone went to Amy’s heart with a nervous thrill. “And so this is your boy. What is he called?”

  “Robert,” answered Amy, feeling for the first time a strange dislike at saying his pet name. But her husband was not so scrupulous.

  “We call him Bertie,” he said.

  “And so will I. Come and make friends, Bertie. What lovely hair he has, so soft and curly. I suppose, — indeed I can see, — you are quite proud of the boy, Mr. Vavasour.”

  “Mrs. Vavasour is, if I am not.”

  “Of course. All mothers are of their first-born. Do not go so near the fire, Bertie. You make me tremble lest anything should befall you.”

  What could happen to the child? Amy drew him further away still, then took him in her arms as if only there he was safe and shielded from all harm.

  When Frances left the room Amy sighed more deeply than before, yet scarcely knew why she felt so low and sad, or why Frances’ appearance should have brought with it a nervous dread; save that in that long-ago time, which she had tried to bury and forget, Frances had been her bitterest enemy, and she could not but feel that her coming now was disagreeable to her, nay more, caused a sudden, nameless fear to arise in her heart; and now although Frances’ words were friendly, yet Amy detected, or fancied she did — a lurking sarcasm in their tone.

  “I wish we were back at Somerton, Robert,” she said.

  “Again!” exclaimed Robert, “now Amy, you deserve to be scolded for this. What an impatient little woman you are! Shall we not be home in a month?”

  “Ah! in a month;” sighed Amy again, as she drew her child nearer to her heart, while her heart whispered, “Can anything happen in a month?”

  CHAPTER VIII.

  GOING FOR THE DOCTOR.

  “In God’s name, then, take your own way,” said Christian; “and, for my sake, let never man hereafter limit a woman in the use of her tongue; since he must make it amply up to her, in allowing her the privilege of her own will. Who would have thought it?”

  Peveril of the Peak.

  Three years and more have passed away since we left Matthew the pikeman counting the stones in Goody Grey’s box. Many changes have occurred since then, the greatest of all has fallen on his own cottage — Matthew has grown a sober man.

  But we must go back a little.

  We left Jane closing the cottage door, after the singular meeting that had taken place between her and Goody Grey, on Marks telling the latter of his sister-in-law’s extraordinary fainting fit. When he and his wife returned to the cottage, Jane was carried up to bed, apparently too weak to be able to sit up, and there she remained for several weeks, more crazed than ever to Matthew’s fancy, frightening him out of his wits at times, lest his wife should find out anything about the charm, and attribute, as he did, his sister-in-law’s illness to it. One night his fears grew to such a pitch, he went and buried the box in the garden, and waited events in an easier frame of mind. Days passed, and at length Jane grew better, but strenuously refused to leave her room, and go below. In vain Mrs. Marks remonstrated, in vain she stormed, Jane was not to be persuaded, and at length was allowed to do as she pleased. But suddenly her illness took a turn; she crawled down stairs to dinner, and one day, to Matthew’s intense disgust, resumed her old seat in the chimney corner.

  As the months rolled on the scrubbing and scouring within the cottage went on more mildly, while Mrs. Marks’ strong stout arm grew thinner and weaker; the brush fell less harshly and severely on the ear, as it rushed over the table; the high pattens clanked less loudly in the yard; while the voice grew less shrill, and was no longer heard in loud domineering tones. The change was gradual; Matthew did not notice it at first, until just a few weeks before Amy returned to Brampton with her husband; then the change was unmistakable, the scrubbing and scouring ceased altogether. Mrs. Marks gave in, and acknowledged she was ill.

  How Matthew’s conscience smote him then! He knew he had never had the courage to face Goody Grey with the box still filled with the small gravel, as when she gave it him, neither had he dared throw the stones away, lest, in offending the giver, worse disasters would follow; and he was too superstitious to think Goody Grey would know nothing at all about it, and believe as he might tell her that he had done as she had directed. No; he was certain that one word of distrust in his story, and he should break down altogether. He tried to reason with himself, and think that the tramping about in all weathers long ago had made his wife ill; but it would not do, his mind was not to be persuaded, and always reverted with increased dismay to the box, while his eye invariably rested upon its snug resting-place under the laurel, as he passed it on his way out to the gate. Many a time he determined upon digging up the box, and restoring it to its owner, just as it was: but when the time for action came, and he drew near the spot, his courage failed him, and he would pass on, cursing the hour when he had been tempted to ask the wise woman for the charm which he believed had done so much evil; while his fear of telling the secret in his tipsy unconsciousness had done what all Mrs. Marks’ storming had failed to do — made him, for the time being, a sober man. He shunned the “Brampton Arms” as if the plague dwelt there, and sat in the chimney corner opposite Jane, gloomy, and fearful almost of his own shadow, while his sister-in-law’s eyes seemed to pierce him through more keenly than ever.

  Mrs. Marks had steadily kept her promise, silently and secretly working with a will to seek out Hodge’s son. Like most energetic women, a first failure did not daunt or dispirit her, it only roused her energies the more vigorously. She was not to be defeated. The more difficult of accomplishment the more determined was she, and in the end successful. She dodged Hodge’s “wide-awake” friend, and found Tom; nay more, she spoke with him, tried to reclaim him; but there she failed — she was not the sort of woman to win him over. A kind word might have done much, but that, Mrs. Mark’s heart had not for such a reprobate as he. She told him the truth, the plain hard truth, heaping maledictions on his head unless he gave up his evil ways, forsook his godless companions, and returned home. She used no persuasion, no entreaty. Had she spoken to him kindly of his mother, perhaps his heart might have softened; but Mrs. Marks’ voice came loud and strong, words followed one another fast and indignantly, so that ere she had well-nigh exhausted all the scorn she had, his mind was made up, and he obstinately refused to return home, simply because she desired, nay, commanded him to do so. What! become the laughing-stock of the whole of Deane? be known and marked in the village as the vile sinner she denounced him to be? He laughed at her threats and taunts, and left her, feeling perhaps more hardened than ever.

  Matthew was not far wrong when he tried to persuade himself the walking about in all weathers — so mysterious to him — had ruined his wife’s health. A pouring steady rain was falling the day of her interview with Hodge’s son, but true to her purpose, she had walked for miles along a heavy road, and across still damper fields to find him; then, flushed and heated with her passionate words and subsequent defeat, had started back again through the same rain, and reached home thoroughly wet through; then came a violent cold, and from that time her strength seemed to fail, although unacknowledged to herself, while her limbs lost their power, and pained her strangely; still she worked on, with the will to get well, but alas! the strength to do so was gone.

  She wrote to Mrs. Hodge advising her to have nothing further to do with such a good-for-nothing son, but forget him as fast as she could. Mrs. Marks’ letter was not meant unkindly, but she never attempted to lessen Tom’s fault or palliate his conduct; the truth stood out in all its glaring hideousness. Having no children herself, she knew nothing of a mother’s strong, steadfast
love. The knowledge that her son, her first-born, was with a gang of poachers who had wounded the Squire’s visitor and killed one of the game watchers, threw dismay into the mother’s heart and broke it. She died, begging her husband to still look for Tom, and reclaim him if possible — a promise her husband felt impossible of fulfilment, as he, like Mrs. Marks, thought badly of his son’s heart.

  Mrs. Marks could scarcely move her limbs at all now, except to creep down the narrow stairs of a day into the small parlour, where she sat and scolded to her heart’s content, Sarah, the girl who came as a help now the mistress was ill, following her every movement with her eyes, if she could not with her feet.

  As her sister grew worse, Jane roused herself wonderfully, becoming as active as before she had been idle, and apparently as sane as she had been crazy; while as to Matthew, he turned into a model husband, helping in the work to be done as far as lay in his power, and nursing his sick wife with a tender solicitude quite foreign to his nature, while she grumbled at everything and everyone in turn, her eye, as I have said before, finding out their shortcomings in a moment, and denouncing them without mercy. But she was ill, must be ill to sit there so quietly and allow others to scrub down the table or be up to their elbows in the washing-tub; she deserved their pity and their silence, and they gave her both.

  “There, that will do,” said she one day, as Matthew tried to settle the pillows more comfortably at her back. “I don’t think it’s near so easy like as it was before you touched it, but it wouldn’t be you if you didn’t want always to have a finger in the pie. Sarah, leave off that racket among the cups and saucers; what on earth are you at, girl? Are you trying to break them all? What are you after?”

  “I was a-dusting of the shelves, Mum,” was the reply.

  “Fine dusting, upon my word, and with a corner of your apron, too; be off and fetch a cloth this moment, such slop-work as that’ll never do here; let me catch you at it again, that’s all, or that clatter of the crockery either, when my head aches and buzzes like as if a thousand mills was at work in it.”

 

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