Chapter 103
And as he lay on the gra.s.s--it was full summer now--watching Maud's white dress flit about under the trees, I saw, or fancied I saw, something different to any former expression that had ever lighted up the soft languid mien of William Lord Ravenel.
"How tall that child has grown lately! She is about nineteen, I think?"
"Not seventeen till December."
"Ah, so young?--Well, it is pleasant to be young!--Dear little Maud!"
He turned on one side, hiding the sun from his eyes with those delicate ringed hands--which many a time our boys had laughed at, saying they were mere lady's hands, fit for no work at all.
Perhaps Lord Ravenel felt the cloud that had come over our intercourse with him; a cloud which, considering late events, was scarcely unnatural: for when evening came, his leave-taking, always a regret, seemed now as painful as his blase indifference to all emotions, pleasant or unpleasant, could allow. He lingered--he hesitated--he repeated many times how glad he should be to see Beechwood again; how all the world was to him "flat, stale, and unprofitable," except Beechwood.
John made no special answer; except that frank smile not without a certain kindly satire, under which the young n.o.bleman's Byronic affectations generally melted away like mists in the morning. He kindled up into warmth and manliness.
"I thank you, Mr. Halifax--I thank you heartily for all you and your household have been to me. I trust I shall enjoy your friends.h.i.+p for many years. And if, in any way, I might offer mine, or any small influence in the world--"
"Your influence is not small," John returned earnestly. "I have often told you so. I know no man who has wider opportunities than you have."
"But I have let them slip--for ever."
"No, not for ever. You are young still; you have half a lifetime before you."
"Have I?" And for the moment one would hardly have recognized the sallow, spiritless face, that with all the delicacy of boyhood still, at times looked so exceedingly old. "No, no, Mr. Halifax, who ever heard of a man beginning life at seven-and-thirty?"
"Are you really seven-and-thirty?" asked Maud.
"Yes--yes, my girl. Is it so very old?"
He patted her on the shoulder, took her hand, gazed at it--the round, rosy, girlish hand--with a melancholy tenderness; then bade "Good-bye"
to us all generally, and rode off.
It struck me then, though I hurried the thought away--it struck me afterwards, and does now with renewed surprise--how strange it was that the mother never noticed or took into account certain possibilities that would have occurred naturally to any worldly mother. I can only explain it by remembering the unworldliness of our lives at Beechwood, the heavy cares which now pressed upon us from without, and the notable fact--which our own family experience ought to have taught us, yet did not--that in cases like this, often those whom one would have expected to be most quick-sighted, are the most strangely, irretrievably, mournfully blind.
When, the very next day, Lord Ravenel, not on horse-back but in his rarely-used luxurious coronetted carriage, drove up to Beechwood, every one in the house except myself was inconceivably astonished to see him back again.
He
"You did not know father and mother when they were young?" said Maud, catching our conversation and flas.h.i.+ng back her innocent, merry face upon us.
"No, scarcely likely." And he smiled. "Oh, yes--it might have been--I forget, I am not a young man now. How old were Mr. and Mrs. Halifax when they married?"
"Father was twenty-one and mother was eighteen--only a year older than I." And Maud, half ashamed of this suggestive remark, ran away. Her gay candour proved to me--perhaps to others besides me--the girl's entire free-heartedness. The frank innocence of childhood was still hers.
Lord Ravenel looked after her and sighed. "It is good to marry early; do you not think so, Mr. Fletcher?"
I told him--(I was rather sorry after I had said it, if one ought to be sorry for having, when questioned, given one's honest opinion)--I told him that I thought those happiest who found their happiness early, but that I did not see why happiness should be rejected because it was the will of Providence that it should not be found till late.
"I wonder," he said, dreamily, "I wonder whether I shall ever find it."
I asked him--it was by an impulse irresistible--why he had never married?
"Because I never found any woman either to love or to believe in.
Worse," he added, bitterly, "I did not think there lived the woman who could be believed in."
We had come out of the beech-wood and were standing by the low churchyard wall; the sun glittered on the white marble head-stone on which was inscribed, "Muriel Joy Halifax."
Lord Ravenel leaned over the wall, his eyes fixed upon that little grave. After a while, he said, sighing:
"Do you know, I have thought sometimes that, had she lived, I could have loved--I might have married--that child!"
Here Maud sprang towards us. In her playful tyranny, which she loved to exercise and he to submit to, she insisted on knowing what Lord Ravenel was talking about.
"I was saying," he answered, taking both her hands and looking down into her bright, unshrinking eyes, "I was saying, how dearly I loved your sister Muriel."
"I know that," and Maud became grave at once. "I know you care for me because I am like my sister Muriel."
"If it were so, would you be sorry or glad?"
"Glad, and proud too. But you said, or you were going to say, something more. What was it?"
He hesitated long, then answered:
"I will tell you another time."
Maud went away, rather cross and dissatisfied, but evidently suspecting nothing. For me, I began to be seriously uneasy about her and Lord Ravenel.
Of all kinds of love, there is one which common sense and romance have often combined to hold obnoxious, improbable, or ridiculous, but which has always seemed to me the most real and pathetic form that the pa.s.sion ever takes--I mean, love in spite of great disparity of age.
Even when this is on the woman's side, I can imagine circ.u.mstances that would make it far less ludicrous and pitiful; and there are few things to me more touching, more full of sad earnest, than to see an old man in love with a young girl.
Lord Ravenel's case would hardly come under this category; yet the difference between seventeen and thirty-seven was sufficient to warrant in him a trembling uncertainty, and eager catching at the skirts of that vanis.h.i.+ng youth whose preciousness he never seemed to have recognized till now. It was with a mournful interest that all day I watched him follow the child about, gather her posies, help her to water her flowers, and accommodate himself to those whims and fancies, of which, as the pet and the youngest, Mistress Maud had her full share.
When, at her usual hour of half-past nine, the little lady was summoned away to bed, "to keep up her roses," he looked half resentful of the mother's interference.
"Maud is not a child now; and this may be my last night--" he stopped, sensitively, at the involuntary foreboding.
"Your last night? Nonsense! you will come back soon again. You must--you shall!" said Maud, decisively.
"I hope I may--I trust in Heaven I may!"
He spoke low, holding her hand distantly and reverently, not attempting to kiss it, as in all his former farewells he had invariably done.
"Maud, remember me! However or whenever I come back, dearest child, be faithful, and remember me!"
Maud fled away with a sob of childish pain--partly anger, the mother thought--and slightly apologized to the guest for her daughter's "naughtiness."
Lord Ravenel sat silent for a long, long time.
Just when we thought he purposed leaving, he said, abruptly, "Mr.
Halifax, may I have five minutes' speech with you in the study?"