Complete Works of Stanley J Weyman
Page 42
Kate’s face was scarlet. “But I thought — I understood,” she stammered, “that Mr. Clode was to be rector here?”
“Not at all,” said Mr. Bonamy, with some asperity. “The whole thing was settled before ten o’clock this morning. Mary told me at the door that Lindo had been here since, so I supposed he had told you something about it.”
“He did not tell me a word of it!” Kate answered impulsively, the generous trick her lover had played breaking in upon her mind in all its fulness. “Not a word of it! But papa” — with a pause and then a rush of words— “he asked me to be his wife, and I — I told him I would.”
For a moment Mr. Bonamy stared at his daughter as if he thought she had lost her wits. Probably since his boyhood he had never been so much astonished. “I was talking of Mr. Lindo,” he said at length, speaking with laborious clearness. “You are referring to your cousin, I fancy.”
“No,” Kate said, striving with her happy confusion. “I mean Mr. Lindo, papa.”
“Indeed! indeed!” Mr. Bonamy answered after another pause, speaking still more slowly, and gazing at her as if he had never seen her before, nor anything at all like her. “You have a good deal surprised me. And I am not easily surprised, I think. Not easily, I think.”
“But you are not angry with me, papa?” she murmured rather tearfully.
For a moment he still stared at her in silence, unable to overcome his astonishment. Then by a great effort he recovered himself. “Oh, no,” he said, with a smack of his old causticity, “I do not see why I should be angry with you, Kate. Indeed, I may say I foretold this. I always said that young man would introduce great changes, and he has done it. He has fulfilled my words to the letter, my dear!”
CHAPTER XXVI.
LOOSE ENDS.
Dr. Gregg was one of the first persons in the town to hear of the late rector’s engagement. His reception of the news was characteristic. “I don’t believe it!” he shrieked. “I don’t believe it! It is all rubbish! What has he got to marry upon, I should like to know?”
His informant ventured to mention the living of Pocklington.
“I don’t believe it!” the little doctor shrieked. “If he had got that he would see her far enough before he would marry her. Do you think I am such a fool as to believe that?”
“But you see, Bonamy — the earl’s agency will be rather a lift in the world for him. And he has money.”
“I don’t believe it!” shrieked Gregg again. But, alas! he did. He knew that these things were true, and when he next met Bonamy he smiled a wry smile, and tried to swallow his teeth, and grovelled, still with the native snarl curling his lips at intervals. The doctor, indeed, had to suffer a good deal of unhappiness in these days. Clode, about whom he had boasted largely, was conspicuous by his absence. Lord Dynmore’s carriage might be seen any morning in front of the Bonamy offices. And rumor said that the earl had taken a strange fancy to the young clergyman whom he had so belabored. Things seemed to Gregg and to some other people in Claversham to be horribly out of joint at this time.
Among others, poor Mrs. Hammond found her brain somewhat disordered. To the curate’s unaccountable withdrawal, as to the translation of the late rector to Pocklington, she could easily reconcile herself. But to Mr. Lindo’s engagement to the lawyer’s daughter, and to the surprising intimacy between the earl and Mr. Bonamy, she could not so readily make up her mind. Why, it was reported that the earl had walked into town and taken tea at Mr. Bonamy’s house! Still, facts are stubborn things, nor was it long before Mrs. Hammond was heard to say that the lawyer’s conduct in supporting Mr. Lindo in his trouble had produced a very favorable impression on her mind, and prepared her to look upon him in a new light.
And Laura? Laura, during these changes, showed herself particularly bright and sparkling. She was not of a nature to feel even defeat very deeply, or to philosophize much over past mistakes. Her mother saw no change in her — nay, she marvelled, recalling her daughter’s intimacy with Mr. Clode and the obstinacy she had exhibited in siding with him, that Laura could so completely put him out of her mind and thoughts. But the least sensitive feel sometimes. The most thoughtless have their moments of care. Even the cat, with its love of home and comfort, will sometimes wander on a wet night. And there are times when Laura, doubting the future and weary of the present, wishes she had had the courage to do as her heart bade her, and make the plunge, careless what the world, and her rivals, might say of her marriage to a curate. For Clode’s rugged face and masculine will dominate her still. Though a year has elapsed, and she has not heard of him, nor probably will hear of him now, she thinks of him with regret and soreness. She had not much to give, but to her sorrow she knows now that she gave it to him, and that in that struggle for supremacy both were losers.
The good wine last. Kate broke the news to Jack herself, and found it no news. “Yes, I have just seen Lindo,” he answered quietly, taking her hand, and looking her in the face with dry eyes. “May he make you very happy, Kate, and — well, I can wish you nothing better than that.” Then Kate broke down and cried bitterly. When she recovered herself Jack was gone.
If you were to describe that scene to Jack Smith’s friends in the Temple they would jeer at you. They would cover you with ridicule and gibes. There is no one so keen, so sharp, so matter-of-fact, so certain to succeed as he, they say. They have only one fault to find with him, that he works too hard; that he bids fair to become one of those legal machines which may be seen any evening taking in fuel at solitary club tables, and returning afterward to dusty chambers, with the regularity of clockwork. But there is one thing even in his present life which his Temple friends do not know, and which gives me hope of him. Week by week there comes to him a letter from the country from a long-limbed girl in short frocks, whose hero he is. Time, which, like Procrustes’ bed, brings frocks and legs to the same length at last, heals wounds also.
When a day not far distant now shall show him Daintry in the bloom of budding womanhood, is it to be thought that Jack will resist her? I think not. But, be that as it may, with no better savor than that of his loyalty, the silent loyalty of an English friend, could the chronicle of a Bayard — much less the tale of a country town — come to an end.
THE END
THE STORY OF FRANCIS CLUDDE
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
CHAPTER XIII.
CHAPTER XIV.
CHAPTER XV.
CHAPTER XVI.
CHAPTER XVII.
CHAPTER XVIII.
CHAPTER XIX.
CHAPTER XX.
CHAPTER XXI.
CHAPTER XXII.
CHAPTER XXIII.
CHAPTER XXIV.
CHAPTER XXV.
CHAPTER I.
“HÉ, SIRE ANE, HÉ!”
On the boundary line between the two counties of Warwick and Worcester there is a road very famous in those parts, and called the Ridgeway. Father Carey used to say — and no better Latinist could be found for a score of miles round in the times of which I write — that it was made by the Romans. It runs north and south along the narrow spine of the country, which is spread out on either side like a map, or a picture. As you fare southward you see on your right hand the green orchards and pastures of Worcestershire stretching as far as the Malvern Hills. You have in front of you Bredon Hill, which is a wonderful hill, for if a man goes down the Avon by boat it goes with him — now before, and now behind — a whole day’s journey — and then stands in the same place. And on the left hand you have the great Forest of Arden, and not much besides, except oak trees, which grow well in Warwickshire.
I describe this road, firstly, because it is a notable
one, and forty years ago was the only Queen’s highway, to call a highway, in that country. The rest were mere horse-tracks. Secondly, because the chase wall of Coton End runs along the side of it for two good miles; and the Cluddes — I am Francis Cludde — have lived at Coton End by the Ridgeway time out of mind, probably — for the name smacks of the soil — before the Romans made the road. And thirdly, because forty years ago, on a drizzling February day in 1555 — second year of Mary, old religion just reestablished — a number of people were collected on this road, forming a group of a score or more, who stood in an ordered kind of disorder about my uncle’s gates and looked all one way, as if expecting an arrival, and an arrival of consequence.
First, there was my uncle Sir Anthony, tall and lean. He wore his best black velvet doublet and cloak, and had put them on with an air of huge importance. This increased each time he turned, staff in hand, and surveyed his following, and as regularly gave place to a “Pshaw!” of vexation and a petulant glance when his eye rested on me. Close beside him, looking important too, but anxious and a little frightened as well, stood good Father Carey. The priest wore his silk cassock, and his lips moved from time to time without sound, as though he were trying over a Latin oration — which, indeed, was the fact. At a more respectful distance were ranged Baldwin Moor, the steward, and a dozen servants; while still farther away lounged as many ragamuffins — landless men, who swarmed about every gentleman’s door in those times, and took toll of such abbey lands as the king might have given him. Against one of the stone gate-pillars I leaned myself — nineteen years and six months old, and none too wise, though well grown, and as strong as one here and there. And perched on the top of the twin post, with his chin on his knees, and his hands clasped about them, was Martin Luther, the fool.
Martin had chosen this elevated position partly out of curiosity, and partly, perhaps, under a strong sense of duty. He knew that, whether he would or no, he must needs look funny up there. His nose was red, and his eyes were running, and his teeth chattering; and he did look funny. But as he felt the cold most his patience failed first. The steady, silent drizzle, the mist creeping about the stems of the oak trees, the leaden sky proved too much for him in the end. “A watched pot never boils!” he grumbled.
“Silence, sirrah!” commanded my uncle angrily. “This is no time for your fooling. Have a care how you talk in the same breath of pots and my Lord Bishop!”
“Sanctæ ecclesiæ,” Father Carey broke out, turning up his eyes in a kind of ecstasy, as though he were knee to knee with the prelate— “te defensorem inclytum atque ardentem — —”
“Pottum!” cried I, laughing loudly at my own wit.
It was an ill-mannered word, but I was cold and peevish. I had been forced to this function against my will. I had never seen the guest whom we were expecting, and who was no other than the Queen’s Chancellor, Stephen Gardiner, but I disliked him as if I had. In truth, he was related to us in a peculiar fashion, which my uncle and I naturally looked at from different standpoints. Sir Anthony viewed with complacence, if not with pride, any connection with the powerful Bishop of Winchester, for the knight knew the world, and could appreciate the value it sets on success, and the blind eyes it has for spots if they do but speckle the risen sun. I could make no such allowance, but, with the pride of youth and family, at once despised the great Bishop for his base blood, and blushed that the shame lay on our side. I hated this parade of doing honor to him, and would fain have hidden at home with Petronilla, my cousin, Sir Anthony’s daughter, and awaited our guest there. The knight, however, had not permitted this, and I had been forced out, being in the worst of humors.
So I said “Pottum!” and laughed.
“Silence, boy!” cried Sir Anthony fiercely. He loved an orderly procession, and to arrange things decently. “Silence!” he repeated, darting an angry glance first at me and then at his followers, “or I will warm that jacket of yours, lad! And you, Martin Luther, see to your tongue for the next twenty-four hours, and keep it off my Lord Bishop! And, Father Carey, hold yourself ready — —”
“For here Sir Hot-Pot cometh!” cried the undaunted Martin, skipping nimbly down from his post of vantage; “and a dozen of London saucepans with him, or may I never lick the inside of one again!”
A jest on the sauciness of London serving-men was sure to tell with the crowd, and there was a great laugh at this, especially among the landless men, who were on the skirts of the party, and well sheltered from Sir Anthony’s eye. He glared about him, provoked to find at this critical moment smiles where there should have been looks of deference, and a ring round a fool where he had marshaled a procession. Unluckily, he chose to visit his displeasure upon me. “You won’t behave, won’t you, you puppy!” he cried. “You won’t, won’t you!” and stepping forward he aimed a blow at my shoulders, which would have made me rub myself if it had reached me. But I was too quick. I stepped back, the stick swung idly, and the crowd laughed.
And there the matter would have ended, for the Bishop’s party were now close upon us, had not my foot slipped on the wet grass and I fallen backward. Seeing me thus at his mercy, the temptation proved too much for the knight. He forgot his love of seemliness and even that his visitors were at his elbow — and, stooping a moment to plant home a couple of shrewd cuts, cried, “Take that! Take that, my lad!” in a voice that rang as crisply as his thwacks.
I was up in an instant; not that the pain was anything, and before our own people I should have thought as little of shame, for if the old may not lay hand to the young, being related, where is to be any obedience? Now, however, my first glance met the grinning faces of strange lackeys, and while my shoulders still smarted, the laughter of a couple of soberly-clad pages stung a hundred times more sharply. I glared furiously round, and my eyes fell on one face — a face long remembered. It was that of a man who neither smiled nor laughed; a man whom I recognized immediately, not by his sleek hackney or his purple cassock, which a riding-coat partially concealed, or even by his jeweled hand, but by the keen glance of power which passed over me, took me in, and did not acknowledge me; which saw my humiliation without interest or amusement. The look hurt me beyond smarting of shoulders, for it conveyed to me in the twentieth part of a second how very small a person Francis Cludde was, and how very great a personage was Stephen Gardiner, whom in my thoughts I had presumed to belittle.
I stood irresolute a moment, shifting my feet and glowering at him, my face on fire. But when he raised his hand to give the Benediction, and the more devout, or those with mended hose, fell on their knees in the mud, I turned my back abruptly, and, climbing the wall, flung away across the chase.
“What, Sir Anthony!” I heard him say as I stalked off, his voice ringing clear and incisive amid the reverential silence which followed the Latin words; “have we a heretic here, cousin? How is this? So near home too!”
“It is my nephew, my Lord Bishop,” I could hear Sir Anthony answer, apology in his tone; “and a willful boy at times. You know of him; he has queer notions of his own, put into his head long ago.”
I caught no more, my angry strides carrying me out of earshot. Fuming, I hurried across the long damp grass, avoiding here and there the fallen limb of an elm or a huge round of holly. I wanted to get out of the way, and be out of the way; and made such haste that before the slowly moving cavalcade had traversed one-half of the interval between the road and the house I had reached the bridge which crossed the moat, and, pushing my way impatiently through the maids and scullions who had flocked to it to see the show, had passed into the courtyard.
The light was failing, and the place looked dark and gloomy in spite of the warm glow of burning logs which poured from the lower windows, and some show of green boughs which had been placed over the doorways in honor of the occasion. I glanced up at a lattice in one of the gables — the window of Petronilla’s little parlor. There was no face at it, and I turned fretfully into the hall — and yes, there she was, perched up in one of the h
igh window-seats. She was looking out on the chase, as the maids were doing.
Yes, as the maids were doing. She too was watching for his High Mightiness, I muttered, and that angered me afresh. I crossed the rushes in silence, and climbed up beside her.
“Well,” I said ungraciously, as she started, hearing me at her shoulder, “well, have you seen enough of him yet, cousin? You will, I warrant you, before he leaves. A little of him goes far.”
“A little of whom, Francis?” she asked simply.
Though her voice betrayed some wonder at my rough tone, she was so much engaged with the show that she did not look at me immediately. This of course kept my anger warm, and I began to feel that she was in the conspiracy against me.
“Of my Lord of Winchester, of course,” I answered, laughing rudely; “of Sir Hot-Pot!”
“Why do you call him that?” she remonstrated in gentle wonder. And then she did turn her soft dark eyes upon me. She was a slender, willowy girl in those days, with a complexion clear yet pale — a maiden all bending and gracefulness, yet with a great store of secret firmness, as I was to learn. “He seems as handsome an old man,” she continued, “as I have ever met, and stately and benevolent, too, as I see him at this distance. What is the matter with you, Francis? What has put you out?”
“Put me out!” I retorted angrily. “Who said anything had put me out?”
But I reddened under her eyes; I was longing to tell her all, and be comforted, while at the same time I shrank with a man’s shame from saying to her that I had been beaten.
“I can see that something is the matter,” she said sagely, with her head on one side, and that air of being the elder which she often assumed with me, though she was really the younger by two years. “Why did you not wait for the others? Why have you come home alone? Francis,” [with sudden conviction] “you have vexed my father! That is it!”
“He has beaten me like a dog!” I blurted out passionately; “and before them all! Before those strangers he flogged me!”