A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (mini ebook reader .TXT) 📕
I threw off my shawl and bonnet, laughing for fear I should break down and cry, and took my seat. As I did so, there came a loud knock at the door. So loud, that Jessie nearly dropped the snub-nosed teapot.
"Good gracious, Joan! who is this?"
I walked to the door and opened it--then fell back aghast. For firelight and candlelight streamed full across the face of the lady I had seen at the House to Let.
"May I come in?"
She did not wait for permission. She walked in past me, straight to the fire, a
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society, Mr. Locksley—I came away. They left by the early train this
morning.”
“They—who?”
“Lady Dynely and Eric. Oh, you don’t know, then—I thought perhaps she
had told you over your chessmen last evening. Yes, they started for
Lincolnshire this morning—to be gone a week at the least; and I am
queen regent, monarch of all I survey, until their return. The first use
I make of my liberty is to spend a whole long day at dear old
Caryllynne. It is not nearly so ancient nor so stately as the Abbey, but
I love it a hundred times more. Have you ever been there, Mr. Locksley?”
She looked up at him, half wondering at the dark gravity of his face.
“I have been there, Miss Forrester.”
“Indeed! Strange that Mrs. Matthews, the housekeeper, told me nothing
about it.”
“I have not been in the house.”
“Then you have missed an artistic treat. The Caryll picture gallery is
the pride of the neighborhood; there is nothing like it in the whole
country. Mrs. Caryll, as I have told you, is really a devotee of art,
and always was. There are Cuyp’s, and Wouverman’s, and Sir Joshua’s
portrait, and sunsets by Turner, and sunrises by Claude Lorraine, a
gallery of modern and a gallery of Venetian art. Oh, you really must see
it, and at once. I shall drive you over and play cicerone. Nothing I
like so well as showing the dear, romantic old Manor.”
“You are most kind, Miss Forrester,” he said, with a sort of effort,
“but it is quite impossible. I mean,” seeing her look of surprise, “that
as I leave Devonshire to-morrow, I will have no time. Wandering artists
don’t keep valets, so I must attend to the packing of my own
portmanteau, and that, with some letters to write, will detain me until
midnight.”
He was not looking at her, else he might have seen and possibly
understood the swift, startled pallor that came over her face.
“You are going away?” she said, slowly.
“The portrait is finished, my work here is done. I owe Lady Dynely and
you, Miss Forrester, many thanks for your kind efforts to render my
sojourn agreeable.”
“If Lady Dynely were here,” Miss Forrester answered, her color
returning, and in her customary gay manner, “she would say the thanks
were due you, for helping to while away two poor women’s long, dull
evenings. Isn’t it rather a pity to go before she returns? She will
regret it extremely, I know.”
“If I had known of this sudden departure, I would have made my adieux to
her ladyship last night. May I further trespass on your great kindness,
Miss Forrester, and charge you with my farewell?”
She bent her head and set her lips a little as she cut the ponies
sharply with her whip. It had come upon her almost like a blow, this
sudden revelation, but her pride and thorough training hid all sign.
“Artists are like gypsies—ever on the wing—that I know of old. And
whither do you go, Mr. Locksley? Back to the green lanes and rural quiet
and the inspiring surroundings of old Brompton.”
“Farther still,” he said, with a smile; “to Spain. I have roamed almost
over every quarter of the habitable globe in my forty years of life, but
Spain is still a terra incognita. I have had an intense desire ever
since I gave myself up wholly to art to make a walking tour over the
country. One should find a thousand subjects there for brush and
pencil.”
“To Spain,” she repeated, mechanically; “and then?”
“Well, I can hardly say. I shall devote a year at least to Spain, and
then most probably I shall return to Rome and make it my headquarters
for life.”
There was dead silence. The ponies bowled swiftly along; the road that
led to the village had long been passed. Neither noticed it. The
thoughtful gravity had deepened on his face. Her hands grasped the reins
tightly, her lips were set in a certain rigid line. Her voice, when she
spoke again, had lost somewhat of its clear, vibrating ring.
“You picture a very delightful future, Mr. Locksley; I almost envy you.
Oh, no need to look incredulous—the Bohemian life is the freest,
brightest, happiest on earth, but it is not for me. What I waylaid you
for—to return to first principles—is this. I have had a letter from my
dear old guardian, Mrs. Caryll, and she begs me to send her a duplicate
of my portrait. She has one, but that was painted five years ago, and I
have been chanting the praises of your handiwork until she is seized
with a longing for a copy. You flatter me so charmingly on canvas, Mr.
Locksley, that I really should like to gratify her if it were possible
to procure her the copy. But I suppose all that is out of the question
now.”
“Mrs. Caryll shall have the copy. I trust she is well. I saw her so
often in Rome,” he said, half apologetically, “that I take an interest
in her naturally.”
“She is as well as she is ever likely to be,” France answered, rather
sadly, “and so lonely without me that I think of throwing over
everything and going back to join her. I should infinitely prefer it,
but she will not hear of it and neither will Lady Dynely. I must remain,
it seems, and run the round of Vanity Fair whether I wish it or not. I
ought not to complain—I did enjoy last season. Come what will,” with
a half laugh, “I have been blessed.”
“Mrs. Caryll has no intention then of returning to England?”
“She will never return. It is full of bitter associations for her. It
would break her heart to see poor old Caryllynne.”
“She still takes her son’s wrongdoing so much to heart—she is still so
bitter against him? Pardon me, Miss Forrester, I have heard that story,
of course.”
“There is no apology needed. You will wonder, perhaps when I tell you,
you remind us all of him. That is the secret of Lady Dynely’s interest
in you from the first.”
The clear, penetrating, hazel eyes were fixed full on his face. That
trained face never moved a muscle.
“As to being bitter against him,” pursued France, “it is just the
reverse. It is remorse for her own cruelty that drives her nearly to
despair at times. For she was cruel to him, poor fellow, when he came to
her in his great trouble and shame—most cruel, most unmotherly. He came
to her in his sorrow and humiliation, and she drove him from her with
bitter scorn and anger. That is the thought that blights her life,
that has preyed upon her health, that makes the thought of home horrible
to her. She drove him from her into poverty and exile here, and here she
will never return. A thousand times she has said to me, that, to look
upon his face once more, to hold him in her arms, to hear him say he
forgave her, she would give up her very life, give up all things except
her hope of Heaven.”
“She has said that?”
She was too wrapped in her subject to heed his husky voice, to mark the
change that had come over his face.
“Again and again. The hope of seeing him once more is the sole hope that
keeps her alive.”
“She thinks that he is still living?”
“She thinks it. Every year since that time, with the exception of the
two last, he has sent her some remembrance. A line, a trinket, a flower,
a token of some sort to let her know he still exists. Those tokens have
come to her from every quarter of the globe. India, Africa, America, and
all countries of Europe. There is never an address—merely the post-mark
to denote whence they came, and his name in his own familiar hand. Ah!
if we but knew where to look for him—where to find him, I believe I
would travel the wide earth over, if at the end I could find Gordon
Caryll.”
“Miss Forrester! you would do this?”
“A hundred times more than this! He was my hero, Mr. Locksley, as far
back as I can remember. There is no one, in all the world, I long so to
see.”
“And yet the day that finds him robs you of a fortune.”
She looked up at him indignantly, impetuous tears in her eyes, an
excited flush on either dusk cheek, more beautiful than he had ever seen
her.
“A fortune! Mr. Locksley, do you think no better of me than that? Oh!
what would a million fortunes be to the joy of seeing him once more—of
restoring him to his mother! Caryllynne is not mine—only held in trust.
One day or other, I feel, Gordon Caryll will return, and then ‘the king
shall have his own again!’”
What was it she read in the face of the man looking down at her?
Something more than intense admiration surely, though she read that
there plainly enough. It brought her down from her heroics, from
cloudland to earth, from romance to her sober senses. She pulled up the
ponies sharply.
“We must go back,” she said, in a constrained tone. “I have passed the
turning to the village. As you insist upon going at once to the inn, I
suppose a ‘wilful man must have his way.’”
He touched the reins lightly with his hand, and checked her in the act
of turning.
“Excuse me, Miss Forrester; I have changed my mind. I resist no longer.
Since you are so kind as to be my guide, I will gladly go with you to
Caryllynne and see the picture.”
She looked at him again—rather haughtily it seemed.
“You are quite sure it is your wish, Mr. Locksley, and not a matter of
politeness? You are quite sure it will not inconvenience you at all?”
“Quite sure, Miss Forrester. I wish to go.”
She turned without a word and drove off. The distance was short. In a
few minutes the great Manor gates were reached, and not an instant too
soon. The summer storm, threatening all day, was upon them at last. As
they passed beneath the lofty arch of masonry, two great drops splashed
upon their faces.
They sped up the avenue, beneath the dark waving trees, at full speed. A
groom came out to take the horses. Two or three old servants, on board
wages, still kept up the place. Not an instant too soon; the rain was
beginning to fall heavily and fast, and a sharp flash of blue lightning
cut the dark air.
“Hurry! hurry!” was Miss Forrester’s cry, as, laughing and breathless,
she ran up the steps. “Welcome to Caryllynne, Mr. Locksley!”
He removed his hat with a certain reverence, as though he stood in a
church; emotion on his face she could not read. She led the way into the
vast tiled hall, the black and white marble flooring covered with skins
of wild beasts.
Mrs. Mathews, the housekeeper, came forward to receive her young lady.
“We have come to see the pictures, Mrs. Mathews,” Miss Forrester said,
“and, as we appear to be storm-bound for some hours, I think I must ask
you to give us some lunch. This is Mr. Locksley, and as Mr. Locksley has
not dined, pray give us something that will serve as a substitute.”
Sixteen years ago Mrs. Mathews had been housekeeper
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