‘And when will you tell me what you promised?’ she asked him one afternoon, speaking in a low voice, as they were standing together at the window of the billiard-room,1 in that idle half-hour which always occurs before the necessity for dinner preparation has come. She had been riding and was still in her habit, and he and returned from shooting. She knew that she looked more than ordinarily well in her tall straight hat and riding gear, and was wont to hang about the house, walking skilfully with her upheld drapery, during this period of the day. It was dusk, but not dark, and there was no artificial light in the billiardroom. There had been some pretence of knocking about the balls, but it had been only pretence. ‘Even Diana,’ she had said, ‘could not have played billiards in a habit.’ Then she had put down her mace,2 and they had stood talking together in the recess of a large bow-window.
‘And what did I promise?’ said Crosbie.
‘You know well enough. Not that it is a matter of any special interest to me; only as you undertook to promise, of course my curiosity had been raised.’
‘If it be of no special interest,’ said Crosbie, ‘you will not object to absolve me from my promise.’
‘That is just like you,’ she said. ‘And how false you men always are. You made up your mind to buy my silence on a distasteful subject by pretending to offer me your future confidence; and now you tell me that you do not mean to confide in me.’
‘You begin by telling me that the matter is one that does not in the least interest you.’
‘That is so false again! You know very well what I meant. Do you remember what you said to me the day you came? and am I not bound to tell you after that, that your marriage with this or that young lady is not matter of special interest to me? Still, as your friend –’
‘Well, as my friend!’
‘I shall be glad to know –. But I am not going to beg for your confidence; only I tell you this fairly, that no man is so mean in my eyes as a man who fights under false colours.’
‘And am I fighting under false colours?’
‘Yes, you are.’ And now, as she spoke, the Lady Alexandrina blushed beneath her hat; and dull as was the remaining light of the evening, Crosbie, looking into her face, saw her heightened colour. ‘Yes, you are. A gentleman is fighting under false colours who comes into a house like this, with a public rumour of his being engaged, and then conducts himself as though nothing of the kind existed. Of course, it is not anything to me specially; but that is fighting under false colours. Now, sir, you may redeem the promise you made me when you first came here – or you may let it alone.’
It must be acknowledged that the lady was fighting her battle with much courage, and also with some skill. In three of four days Crosbie would be gone; and this victory, if it were ever to be gained, must be gained in those three or four days. And if there were to be no victory, then it would be only fair that Crosbie should be punished for his duplicity, and that she should be avenged as far as any revenge might be in her power. Not that she meditated any deep revenge, or was prepared to feel any strong anger. She liked Crosbie as well as she had ever liked any man. She believed that he liked her also. She had no conception of any very strong passion, but conceived that a married life was more pleasant than one of single bliss. She had no doubt that he had promised to make Lily Dale his wife, but so had he previously promised her, or nearly so. It was a fair game and she would win it if she could. If she failed, she would show her anger; but she would show it in a mild, weak manner – turning up her nose at Lily before Crosbie’s face, and saying little things against himself behind his back. Her wrath would not carry her beyond that.
‘Now, sir, you may redeem the promise you made me when you first came here – or you may let it alone.’ So she spoke, and then she turned her face away from him, gazing out into the darkness.
‘Alexandrina!’ he said.
‘Well, sir? But you have no right to speak to me in that style. You know that you have no right to call me by my name in that way!’
‘You mean that you insist upon your title?’
‘All ladies insist on what you call their title, from gentlemen, except under the privilege of greater intimacy than you have the right to claim. You did not call Miss Dale by her Christian name till you had obtained permission, I suppose?’
‘You used to let me call you so.’
‘Never! Once or twice, when you have done so, I have not forbidden it, as I should have done. Very well, sir, as you have nothing to tell me, I will leave you. I must confess that I did not think you were such a coward.’ And she prepared to go, gathering up the skirts of her habit, and taking up the whip which she had laid on the window-sill.
‘Stay a moment, Alexandrina,’ he said: ‘I am not happy, and you should not say words intended to make me more miserable.’
‘And why are you unhappy?’
‘Because – I will tell you instantly, if I may believe that I am telling you only, and not the whole household.’
‘Of course I shall not talk of it to others. Do you think that I cannot keep a secret?’
‘It is because I have promised to marry one woman, and because I love another. I have told you everything now; and if you choose to say again that I am fighting under false colours I will leave the castle before you can see me again.’
‘Mr Crosbie!’
‘Now you know it all, and may imagine whether or no I am very happy. I think you said it was time to dress – suppose we go?’ And without further speech the two went off to their separate rooms.
Crosbie, as soon as he was alone in his chamber, sat himself down in his arm-chair, and went to work striving to make up his mind as to his future conduct. It must not be supposed that the declaration just made by him had been produced solely by his difficulty at the moment. The atmosphere of Courcy Castle had been at work upon him for the last week past. And every work that he had heard, and every work that he had spoken, had tended to destroy all that was good and true within him, and to foster all that was selfish and false. He had said to himself a dozen times during that week that he never could be happy with Lily Dale, and that he never could make her happy. And then he had used the old sophistry in his endeavour to teach himself that it was right to do that which he wished to do. Would it not be better for Lily that he should desert her, than marry her against the dictates of his own heart? And if he really did not love her, would he not be committing a greater crime in marrying her than in deserting her? He confessed to himself that he had been very wrong in allowing the outer world to get such a hold upon him, that the love of a pure girl like Lily could not suffice for his happiness. But there was the fact, and he found himself unable to contend against it. If by any absolute self-sacrifice he could secure Lily’s well-being, he would not hesitate for a moment. But would it be well to sacrifice her as well as himself?
He had discussed the matter in this way within his own breast, till he had almost taught himself to believe that it was his duty to break off his engagement with Lily; and he had also almost taught himself to believe that a marriage with a daughter of the house of Courcy would satisfy his ambition and assist him in his battle with the world. That Lady Alexandrina would accept him he felt certain, if he could only induce her to forgive him for his sin in becoming engaged to Miss Dale. How very prone she would be to forgiveness in this matter, he had not divined, having not as yet learned how easily such a woman can forgive such a sin, if the ultimate triumph be accorded to herself.
And there was another reason which operated much with Crosbie, urging him on his present mood and wishes, though it should have given an exactly opposite impulse to his heart. He had hesitated as to marrying Lily Dale at once, because of the smallness of his income. Now he had a prospect of considerable increase to that income. One of the commissioners at his office had been promoted to some greater commissionership, and it was understood by everybody that the secretary at the General Committee Office would be the new commissioner. As to that there was no doubt. But t
hen the question had arisen as to the place of secretary. Crosbie had received two or three letters on the subject and it seemed that the likelihood of his obtaining this step in the world was by no means slight. It would increase his official income from seven hundred a year to twelve, and would place him altogether above the world. His friend, the present secretary, had written to him, assuring him that no other probable competitor was spoken of as being in the field against him. If such good fortune awaited him, would it not smooth any present difficulty which lay in the way of his marriage with Lily Dale? But, alas, he had not looked at the matter in that light! Might not the countess help him to this preferment? And if his destiny intended for him the good things of this world – secretaryships, commissionerships, chairmanships, and such like, would it not be well that he should struggle on in his upward path by such assistance as good connections might give him?
He sat thinking over it all in his own room on that evening. He had written twice to Lily since his arrival at Courcy Castle. His first letter has been given. His second was written much in the same tone; though Lily, as she had read it, had unconsciously felt somewhat less satisfied than she had been with the first. Expressions of love were not wanting, but they were vague and without heartiness. They savoured of insincerity, though there was nothing in the words themselves to convict them. Few liars can lie with the full roundness and self-sufficiency of truth; and Crosbie, bad as he was, had not yet become bad enough to reach that perfection. He had said nothing to Lily of the hopes of promotion which had been opened to him; but he had again spoken of his own worldliness – acknowledging that he received an unsatisfying satisfaction from the pomps and vanities of Courcy Castle. In fact he was paving the way for that which he had almost resolved that he would do, now he had told Lady Alexandrina that he loved her; and he was obliged to confess to himself that the die was cast.
As he thought of all this, there was not wanting to him some of the satisfaction of an escape. Soon after making that declaration of love at Allington he had begun to feel that in making it he had cut his throat. He had endeavoured to persuade himself that he could live comfortably with his throat cut in that way; and as long as Lily was with him he would believe that he could do so; but as soon as he was again alone he would again accuse himself of suicide. This was his frame of mind even while he was yet at Allington, and his ideas on the subject had become stronger during his sojourn at Courcy. But the self-immolation had not been completed, and he now began to think he could save himself. I need hardly say that this was not all triumph to him. Even had there been no material difficulty as to his desertion of Lily – no uncle, cousin, and mother whose anger he must face – no vision of a pale face, more eloquent of wrong in its silence than even uncle, cousin, and mother, with their indignant storm of words – he was not altogether heartless. How should he tell all this to the girl who had loved him so well; who had so loved him, that, as he himself felt, her love would fashion all her future life either for weal or for woe?’ ‘I am unworthy of her, and will tell her so,’ he said to himself. How many a false hound of a man has endeavoured to salve his own conscience by such mock humility? But he acknowledged at this moment, as he rose from his seat to dress himself, that the die was cast, and that it was open to him now to say what he pleased to Lady Alexandrina. ‘Others have gone through the same fire before,’ he said to himself, as he walked downstairs, ‘and have come out scatheless.’ And then he recalled to himself the names of various men of high repute in the world who were supposed to have committed in their younger days some such little mistake as that into which he had been betrayed.
In passing through the hall he overtook Lady Julia De Guest, and was in time to open for her the door of the drawing-room. He then remembered that she had come into the billiard-room at one side, and had gone out of the other, while he was standing with Alexandrina at the window. He had not, however, then thought much of Lady Julia; and as he now stood for her to pass by him through the doorway, he made to her some indifferent remark.
But Lady Julia was on some subjects a stern woman, and not without a certain amount of courage. In the last week she had seen what had been going on, and had become more and more angry. Though she had disowned any family connection with Lily Dale, nevertheless she now felt for her sympathy and almost affection. Nearly every day she had repeated stiffly to the countess some incident of Crosbie’s courtship and engagement to Miss Dale – speaking of it as with absolute knowledge, as a thing settled at all points. This she had done to the countess alone, in the presence of the countess and Alexandrian, and also before all the female guests of the castle. But what she had said was received simply with an incredulous smile. ‘Dear me! Lady Julia,’ the countess had replied at last, ‘I shall begin to think you are in love with Mr Crosbie yourself, you harp so constantly on this affair of his. One would think that young ladies in your part of the world must find it very difficult to get husbands, seeing that the success of one young lady is trumpeted so loudly.’ For the moment, Lady Julia was silenced; but it was not easy to silence her altogether when she had a subject for speech near her heart.
Almost all the Courcy world were assembled in the drawing-room as she now walked into the room with Crosbie at her heels. When she found herself near the crowd she turned round, and addressed him in a voice more audible than that generally required for purposes of drawing-room conversation. ‘Mr Crosbie,’ she said, ‘have you heard lately from our dear friend, Lily Dale?’ And she looked him full in the face, in a manner more significant, probably, than even she had intended it to be. There was, at once, a general hush in the room, and all eyes were turned upon her and upon him.
Crosbie instantly made an effort to bear the attack gallantly, but he felt that he could not quite command his colour, or prevent a sudden drop of perspiration from showing itself upon his brow. ‘I had a letter from Allington yesterday,’ he said. ‘I suppose you have heard of your brother’s encounter with the bull?’
‘The bull!’ said Lady Julia. And it was instantly manifest to all that her attack had been foiled and her flank turned.
‘Good gracious! Lady Julia, how very odd you are!’ said the countess.
‘But what about the bull!’ asked the Honourable George.
‘It seems that the earl was knocked down in the middle of one of his own fields.’
‘Oh, dear!’ exclaimed Alexandrina. And sundry other exclamations were made by all the assembled ladies.
‘But he wasn’t hurt’ said Crosbie. ‘A young man named Eames seems to have fallen from the sky and carried off the earl on his back.’
‘Ha, ha, ha, ha!’ growled the other earl, as he heard of the discomfiture of his brother peer.
Lady Julia, who had received her own letters that day from Gues-twick, knew that nothing of importance had happened to her brother; but she felt that she was foiled for that time.
‘I hope that there was not really been any accident,’ said Mr Gazebee, with a voice of great solicitude.
‘My brother was quite well last night, thank you,’ said she. And then the little groups again formed themselves, and Lady Julia was left alone on the corner of a sofa.
‘Was that all an invention of yours, sir?’ said Alexandrina to Crosbie.
‘Not quite. I did get a letter this morning from my friend Bernard Dale – that old harridan’s nephew; and Lord De Guest has been worried by some of his animals. I wish I had told her that his stupid old neck had been broken.’
‘Fie, Mr Crosbie!’
‘What business has she to interfere with me?’
‘But I mean to ask the same question that she asked, and you won’t put me off with a cock-and-bull story like that.’ But then, as she was going to ask the question, dinner was announced.
‘And is it true that De Guest has been tossed by a bull?’ said the earl, as soon as the ladies were gone. He had spoken nothing during dinner except what words he had muttered into the ear of Lady Dumbello. It was seldom that conversation had many
charms for him in his own house; but there was a savour of plesantry in the idea of Lord De Guest having been tossed, by which even he was tickled.
‘Only knocked down, I believe,’ said Crosbie.
‘Ha, ha, ha!’ growled the earl; then he filled his glass, and allowed someone else to pass the bottle. Poor man! There was not much left to him now in the world which did amuse him.
‘I don’t see anything to laugh at,’ said Plantagenet Pallister,3 who was sitting at the earl’s right hand, opposite to Lord Dumbello.
‘Don’t you?’ said the earl. ‘Ha, ha ha!’
‘I’ll be shot if I do. From all I hear De Guest is an uncommon good farmer. And I don’t see the joke of tossing a farmer merely because he’s a nobleman also. Do you?’ and he turned round to Mr Gazebee, who was sitting on the other side. The earl was an earl, and was also Mr Gazebee’s father-in-law. Mr Plantagenet Palliser was the heir to a dukedom. Therefore, Mr Gazebee merely simpered, and did not answer the question put to him. Mr Palliser said nothing more about it, nor did the earl; and then the joke died away.
Mr Plantagenet Palliser was the Duke of Omnium’s heir – heir to that nobleman’s title and to his enormous wealth; and, therefore, was a man of mark in the world. He sat in the House of Commons, of course. He was about five-and-twenty years of age, and was, as yet, unmarried. He did not hunt or shoot or keep a yacht, and had been heard to say that he had never put a foot upon a race-course in his life. He dressed very quietly, never changing the colour or form of his garments; and in society was quiet, reserved, and very often silent. He was tall, slight, and not ill-looking; but more than this cannot be said for his personal appearance – except, indeed, this, that no one could mistake him for other than a gentleman.4 With his uncle, the duke, he was on good terms – that is to say, they had never quarrelled. A very liberal tastes in common, and did not often meet. Once a year Mr Palliser visited the duke at his great country seat for two or three days, and usually dined with him two or three times during the season in London. Mr Palliser sat for a borough which was absolutely under the duke’s command; but had accepted his seat under the distinct understanding that he was to take whatever part in politics might seem good to himself. Under these well-understood arrangements, the duke and his heir showed to the world quite a pattern of a happy family. ‘So different to the earl and Lord Porlock!’ the people of West Barsetshire used to say. For the estates, both of the duke and of the earl, were situated in the western division of that country.
The Small House at Allington Page 32