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The Star-Gazers
For, from where they stood, as it were on the very verge of the cultivated land, there was a stretch of miles upon miles of rolling surface, here sand, there bog, the one brown and purple with the heather or yellow with the gorse, the other in little patches of vivid green or creamy pink, where the sphagnum grew, and the cotton rushes had their home.
“What a desolate looking spot it is,” said the major thoughtfully, as they watched the active little figure tripping along the sandy road; “and yet it has its beauties after all.”
“Ye-es, I suppose it has,” said Glynne, “but I never think about its being ugly or beautiful.”
“No, my dear, you don’t,” said the major half pettishly; “and that’s what annoys me. Here you are, as beautiful a girl as well can be.”
“Am I, uncle, dear?” said Glynne, with the same calm, pleasant smile.
“Are you? Why of course you are, and with a splendid intellect, only you won’t use it.”
“Don’t scold me, uncle,” said the girl, creeping closer to him, “I don’t want to be clever, I don’t want to know more than I know. I am so happy: why should I change?”
The old man’s brow grew knotty and corrugated, partly, from perplexity, partly from annoyance, and he gazed sharply down at the sweet face looking lovingly in his.
“There, there,” he said, “I won’t scold you, my darling. Look, there’s little Lucy waving her handkerchief before she enters Fort Science. Fine fellow that brother of hers.”
“Yes, Mr Alleyne is nice,” said Glynne, returning her friend’s salute; and then, as Lucy disappeared at the curve of a steep path that ran up the sandy mound, they turned and walked back towards the hall.
“And so you are very happy, my dear?” said the major, after a thoughtful pause.
“Oh yes, uncle, so very happy,” replied Glynne quietly. “You and papa both love me.”
“Oh, I don’t know about that,” said the major. “I’m not so sure that I do.”
“But I am,” said the girl gently, “quite sure. Then Lucy loves me very much, and our friends are all so kind, and even the servants always smile pleasantly when I want anything done.”
“Of course they do,” said the major, testily.
“And it sets me wondering, when people talk about sorrow, and the weariness of the world.”
“Humph! I suppose so,” the major said, stopping short; “and how about Rolph?”
“Oh, he loves me too, uncle,” replied Glynne in the same quiet, placid tone and manner. “I was going to tell you: he has asked me if I would be his wife.”
“And you – you have told him you would be?”
“Yes, uncle. Papa approves of it, I know; and Robert is so brave and strong and manly. Don’t you think it is right?”
The major gave his hat a tilt on one side, and scratched his grey head vigorously.
“Look here, Glynne,” he cried; “you are the most extraordinary girl I ever knew.”
“I’m very sorry, uncle,” she replied. “I can’t help being so.”
“No, no, of course not. But look here – do you love Rolph?”
“Oh yes, uncle, very much indeed.”
“How do you know you do?” cried the major, in the tone of an examiner dealing viva voce with a candidate for a post in the army.
“Oh, because he loves me,” said Glynne, naïvely; “and, you see, I’ve known him a little ever since he was a boy.”
“Yes, but look here; what makes you love him? Have you no other reason?”
“No, uncle, dear,” said Glynne; and there was not the slightest heightening of colour, nor a trace of excitement as she spoke.
“But, my dear child,” cried the major in the most perplexed way, “people don’t fall in love like that.”
“Don’t they, uncle?”
“No, no, of course not. There’s a lot of passion and storm, and tempest and that sort of thing.”
“But only in books.”
“Oh, yes, in real life. I remember when I fell in love with Lady Mary Callaghan.”
“Were you really once in love, uncle?” cried Glynne with the first touch of animation that she had shown.
“Of course I was – of course – once – but it didn’t come to anything. Well, there was a lot of fire and fury over that.”
“Was there, uncle?”
“Yes, to be sure. I felt as if I couldn’t live without her, and she felt as if she couldn’t live without me, and we were always writing letters to one another and couldn’t keep apart.”
“Oh, I never felt anything of that kind, uncle, and I rarely write letters if I can help it.”
“Then you can’t be in love,” said the major triumphantly.
“But were you really in love, uncle, with Lady Mary – Mary – ”
“Callaghan, my dear. Yes.”
“But you did not marry her, uncle.”
“N-no – no; you are quite right, my dear, I did not. Circumstances occurred and – er – we were not married. But really, Glynne, my dear, you are a most extraordinary girl.”
“I am very sorry.”
“Don’t say that, my dear; but – er – I – er – this is a very serious thing, this promising yourself in marriage, and I – er – I – er – should like you to be perfectly sure that you are doing wisely. I think a great deal of you, my dear – old bachelor as I am, and it would trouble me more than I can say if you did not make a happy match.”
“Dear uncle,” she said tenderly, as she clasped her hands upon his arm, and clung to him more closely. “But you need not be afraid, for Robert says he loves me very dearly, and what more could a woman desire?”
“Humph! No, of course not, my dear,” said the major, looking more perplexed than ever, as he gazed down into the unruffled face by his side. “Untouched, if I know anything of womankind,” he said to himself, “but if I attempt to interfere I shall be making trouble, and upset Jack as well. What the devil shall I do?”
There came no mental answer to this self-put question, and the communings were stopped by Glynne herself, who went on thoughtfully and in the most matter-of-fact way.
“I told Robert that we must not think of being married for some time to come, and he said he was glad of that.”
“Said he was glad of it!” cried the major, looking at her aghast.
“Yes, uncle, dear. You see he has to make so many engagements beforehand. His card is quite full for matches of one kind and another.”
“Is it indeed?” said the major sarcastically.
“Yes, uncle. He has to go in training – in training – in training – for, what did he call it? Oh, I remember; in training for the various events, and he would not like to break any of them and pay forfeit.”
The major’s eyes rolled in their sockets, and he seemed to be trying to swallow something that was extremely unsavoury, but he held his peace.
“He says these engagements take up a great deal of his time; but the people like him, so that he can’t very well get out of them.”
“Ah, it would be a pity to disappoint them,” said the major, while Glynne, in her happy, childlike content, did not notice his tone, but talked on as calmly as if the great event of a woman’s life were a most commonplace affair, justifying to the fullest extent her uncle’s idea that her heart was quite untouched.
They had spent so long over their walk that Sir John had had time to finish his visit to the pigs, and they all reached the park gates together.
“Halloa!” he exclaimed, looking inquiringly from one to the other, “so you two have had a good talk. Here, what does your uncle say, my dear?” he continued, with a suspicious tone in his voice.
“Uncle? Say?” replied Glynne, opening her beautiful eyes a little wider. “Oh, uncle has said very little, papa. I’m afraid I have done nothing but prattle to him all the time.”
“What about?” said her father, sharply.
“Oh, principally about my engagement,” she replied calmly.
“Well, and what does he say to it?” said Sir John, half-defiantly.
“Uncle thinks it a very serious step.”
“Yes, of course.”
“And that I ought to be careful in taking it.”
“To be sure, my dear, to be sure. Well?”
“Well, that was all, papa,” she replied. “Lunch must be ready. I’ll go in and take off my things. You are coming soon? Oh, here is Robert. I won’t stop for fear of keeping you waiting.”
The captain was some fifty yards away, but Glynne did not stay. She merely waved her hand, and hurried to the front of the house, while her future lord came slowly on, whistling, with his hands in his pockets.
“You’ve not opposed the match, then?” whispered Sir John.
“No,” said the major, “but I think less of it than ever.”
“Humph!” ejaculated his brother. “Have you spoken to Rolph yet?”
“No. Haven’t seen him.”
“Then, for goodness’ sake, drop all prejudice, Jem, and shake hands warmly. You see they are devotedly attached.”
“No, I don’t,” said the major, gruffly; “but I’ll shake hands.”
“Yes, do, Jem, do. It’s the one desire of my life to see Glynne engaged to a good, manly fellow who cares for her, and, now the opportunity has come, I look to you to help me.”
“Humph!” ejaculated the major, as Rolph came up, and Sir John struck the iron while it was hot, to use his own form of expression.
“Ready for lunch, Rob?”
“Awfully,” said the captain. “Quite an edge on.”
“That’s right,” cried Sir John. “Come along. Oh, look here though,” he added, as if upon second thoughts; “I’ve had no experience before in this sort of thing, and I want to get it over, and go on again as usual. I never do anything without telling the major here.”
Rolph bowed, and the major returned his salute stiffly.
“I’ve been telling him about you know what, and it’s all settled now, so you can shake hands, you know.”
“Yes; my brother has told me about your proposal,” said the major, coldly. “You have won a prize, sir, and I wish you joy.”
“Thankye, major, thankye,” cried Rolph, seizing his hand and shaking it violently. “You don’t want to say anything more to me, do you?”
“N-no,” said the major, whose inward thoughts made him look ten years older. “N-no.”
“That’s right,” cried the captain, with a sigh of relief. “Shall we go in to lunch now, Sir John?”
“To be sure, yes, my boy. Go on. I daresay Glynne is waiting. Come along, Jem.”
He took his brother’s arm; and, as the captain disappeared, —
“Thankye, Jem, thankye,” he said earnestly. “Now for lunch. I’m as hungry as a hunter, and my mind’s at rest.”
“Humph!”
Volume One – Chapter Six.
Dust in the Observatory
“Well, Mr Oldroyd, and what do you think? Pray, tell me frankly. You have found out what is the matter with him?”
“Yes, ma’am, I think I have.”
“Then, pray, speak.”
Mrs Alleyne leaned forward with every curve in her face as well as her eyes contradicting the form of her words. “Pray speak,” sounded and looked like a command to speak at once under pain of the lady’s displeasure. She was a woman of over fifty, with white hair and high clear forehead; but what would have been a handsome face was detracted from by a pinched, care-worn expression, as if there was some great trouble upon her mind; and this trouble had soured her disposition, and made her imperious and harsh. Her cold and rather repellent manner was not softened by her formal white cap or her dress, which was a stiff, black silk, that in its old age appeared to have doubts as to whether it ought not to be a brown, save where it was relieved by white cuffs and a plain muslin kerchief, such as is seen in old pictures, loosely crossed over the breast, and secured behind.
Neither did the room and its furnishings tend to soften matters, for, though good, everything looked worn and faded, notably the ancient Turkey carpet, and the stiff maroon curtains that had turned from red into drab, and hung limp and long beside the two tall gaunt windows, looking out upon a clump of desolate Scotch firs.
The rest of the furniture was depressing, and did not suggest comfort. The solid mahogany chairs were stiff, and the worn horse-hair coverings would have been places of torture to a child; the great dining-table was highly polished and full of reflections, but it had nothing pleasant to reflect, and whoever looked, longed to see it draped with some warm, rich cloth. While the great high-backed sideboard stood out like a polished mahogany sarcophagus upon which someone had placed a bronze funereal urn, though really inside that tomb-like structure there was a cellarette with a decanter or two of generous wine; and the bronze urn contained no ashes, merely an iron heater to make it hiss when it was used for tea.
The blank, drab-painted walls seemed to ask appealingly for something to ameliorate their chilling aspect; but there was no mirror, no bracket bearing bust or clock; only opposite to the windows had the appeal been heard. There, in the very worst light for the purpose, a large picture had been hung, whose old gilt frame was tarnished and chipped, and the gloomy canvas, with its cracked varnish, had been covered by some genius of the Martin type with hundreds of figures in every conceivable posture of misery and despair. Fire was issuing from the earth, and lightnings were angularly veining the clouds, the tableau being supposed to represent the end of the world; and the consequence was that, as far as the walls were concerned, the aspect of the room was not improved.
Now, in every good dining-room, the fireside is, or should be, the most cheerful part. Prior to the days of the Georges, people knew this, and bright tiles and carvings and solid pillars gave a cheery look and countenance to the fire; and this style, thanks to the most sensible modern aesthetes, has come again into vogue, with handsome overmantels, kerbs, and dogs; but Mrs Alleyne’s fireside was chilly, the fender and fire-irons were well-polished, but attenuated and of skewery form as to the latter, sharp edge as to the former, while the narrow drab shelf that formed the mantelpiece had for ornaments two obelisks that appeared to have been cast in that objectionable meat-jelly known as brawn.
It only needed the yellowish roller blinds to be drawn half-way down to make the very atmosphere seem oppressive. And this had been done, so that, as the lady of The Firs sat opposite Philip Oldroyd, the young doctor, who was patiently trying to solve that medical problem known as making a practice in an extremely healthy district, could not help thinking to himself that the place was enough to drive a susceptible person melancholy mad.
Oldroyd did not answer for a few moments, but sat thinking, and Mrs Alleyne watched him intently, scanning his great head, and somewhat plain, but intelligent features with his deep, brown, thoughtful eyes, and closely shaven face. The latter was a sacrifice to Mrs Grundy, so that no objection should be made to his appearance by the more critical inhabitants of a narrow-minded country district, the result having been the destruction of a fine and flowing beard at the cost of much nicking of the skin, and the discomfort of shaving regularly, fine weather or foul.
“I think, Mrs Alleyne, that I know exactly what is the matter with your son.”
“Yes, yes,” said the lady, impatiently. “Mr Oldroyd, you torture me.”
“Then, now I will relieve you, madam,” he said with a pleasant smile. “He has really no physical complaint whatever.”
“I do not understand you,” she said coldly.
“I will be more plain then. He has no disease at all.”
“Mr Oldroyd!” said the lady in a disappointed tone, that to the young doctor’s ears seemed to say as well: – “How foolish of me to call in this inexperienced country practitioner, who, beyond a little general idea of his profession, knows next to nothing at all.”
“Oh, yes, my dear madam, you think he is very ill, and – pray excuse my plainness – in your motherly eyes he appears to be wasting away.”
Mrs Alleyne did not reply, but gazed at the speaker haughtily, and looked as cold and repellent as the room.
“Your son, I repeat, has no organic disease; he has a marvellously fine physique, great mental powers, and needs no doctor at all, unless it is to give him good advice.”
“I presumed, Mr Oldroyd, that it was the doctor’s duty to give advice.”
“Exactly, my dear madam; but pray be patient with me if I talk to you a little differently from what you expected. You were prepared for me to look solemn, shake my head and say that the symptoms were rather serious, but not exactly grave; that we must hope for the best; that I was very glad you sent for me when you did; and that I would send in some medicine, and look in again to-morrow. Now, you said, ‘Be frank with me;’ I say the same to you. Did you not expect something of this kind?”
“Well,” said Mrs Alleyne, with something that looked like – not the dawning of a smile, but the ghost of an old one, called up to flit for a moment about her lips, “yes, I did expect something of the kind.”
“Exactly,” said Oldroyd, smiling genially, and as if he enjoyed this verbal encounter. “Now, kindly listen to me. As I say, your son has a fine physique, but what does he do with it? Does he take plenty of active out-door exercise?”
Mrs Alleyne shook her head.
“Does he partake of his meals regularly?”
“No, Mr Oldroyd,” said Mrs Alleyne, with a sigh.
“Does he sleep sufficiently and well?”
“Alas! No.”
“Of course he does not, my dear madam. Here is a man who never employs his muscles; never takes the slightest recreation; disappoints nature when she asks for food; and turns night into day as he performs long vigils watching the stars, and burning the midnight oil. How, in the name of all that is sensible, can such a man expect to enjoy good health? Why, nature revolts against it and steals it all away, to distribute among people who obey her laws.”
Mrs Alleyne sighed, and thought better of the doctor than she did before.
“It is impossible for such a man to be well, Mrs Alleyne; the wonder is that he has any health at all.”
“But he is really ill, now, Mr Oldroyd.”
“A little touched in the digestion, that is all.”
“And you will prescribe something for that?”
“Yes, ma’am, I’ll prescribe turpentine.”
“Turpentine!” cried Mrs Alleyne, aghast.
“Yes, madam, out of nature’s own pharmacopaeia. Let him go and climb the hills every day, and inhale it when the sun is on the fir woods. Let him get a horse and ride amongst the firs, or let him take a spade and dig the ground about this house, and turn it into a pleasant garden, surrounded by fir trees. That is all he wants.”
“Oh, doctor, is that all?” said Mrs Alleyne more warmly; and she laid her thin, white hand upon her visitor’s arm.
“Well, not quite,” he said, with a smile. “He is a great student; no one admires his work more than I, or the wonderful capacity of his mind, but he must be taken out of it a little – a man cannot always be studying the stars.”
“No, no; he does too much,” said Mrs Alleyne. “You are quite right. But what would you recommend?”
“Nature again, madam. Something to give him an interest in this world, as well as in the other worlds he makes his study. In short, Mrs Alleyne, it would be the saving of your son if he fell in love.”
“Doctor!”
“And took to himself some sweet good girl as a wife.”
“Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha!”
The doctor started, and looked for the source of the gush of mirth.
A sweet ringing silvery laugh, that sounded like bell music in the gloomy room, for Lucy Alleyne had entered unheard, to catch the doctor’s last words, and burst into this girlish fit of merriment.
“Lucy!” exclaimed Mrs Alleyne with an angry glance, as she rose from her chair.
“Oh, I am so sorry, mamma. I beg your pardon, Mr Oldroyd, but it did seem so droll.”
She laughed again so merrily that it seemed infectious, and the young doctor would have joined in had not Mrs Alleyne been there; besides, as this was a professional call, he felt the necessity for some show of dignity.
“May I ask, Lucy, what is the meaning of this extremely unseemly mirth,” said Mrs Alleyne, with a good deal of annoyance in her tone.
“Don’t be angry with me, mamma dear, but it did seem so comical; the idea of Moray falling in love and being married.”
“I fail to see the ridiculous side of the matter,” said Mrs Alleyne, “especially at a time when Mr Oldroyd has been consulted by me upon the question of your brother’s health.”
“Oh, but you don’t think he is really ill, Mr Oldroyd, do you?” cried Lucy, anxiously.
“Indeed, I do not, Miss Alleyne. He requires nothing but plenty of open-air exercise, with more food and regular sleep.”
“And a wife,” said Lucy, with a mirthful look.
“And a wife,” said Oldroyd, gravely; and he gazed so intently at Lucy that her merry look passed away, and she coloured slightly, and glanced hastily at her mother.
“We must make Moray go out more, mamma dear,” she said hurriedly. “I’ll coax him to have walks with me, and I’ll teach him botany; Major Day would be delighted if he’d come with him – I mean go with him; and – oh, I say, mamma, isn’t dinner nearly ready? I am so hungry.”
“Lucy!” cried Mrs Alleyne, with a reproachful look, as Oldroyd rose.
“It is an enviable sensation, Miss Alleyne,” he said, as a diversion to the elder lady’s annoyance; “one of nature’s greatest boons. As I was saying, Mrs Alleyne, à propos of your son, he neglects his health in his scientific pursuits, and the beautifully complicated machine of his system grows rusty. Why, the commonest piece of mechanism will not go well if it is not properly cared for, so how can we expect it of ourselves.”
“Quite true, Mr Oldroyd. Did you ride over? Is your horse waiting?”
“Oh, no, I walked. Lovely weather, Miss Alleyne. Good-day, madam, good-day.”
“But you have not taken any refreshment, Mr Oldroyd. Allow me to – ”
“Why, dinner must be ready, mamma,” said Lucy. “Will not Mr Oldroyd stop?”
“Of course, yes, I had forgotten,” said Mrs Alleyne, with a slight colour in her cheek, and a peculiar hesitancy in her voice. “We – er – dine early – if you would join us, we should be very glad.”
“With great pleasure, madam,” said the young doctor, frankly; “it will save me a five miles’ walk, for I must go across the common this afternoon to Lindham.”
“To see poor old Mrs Wattley?” cried Lucy eagerly, as Mrs Alleyne tried to hide by a smile, her annoyance at her invitation being accepted.
“Yes; to see poor old Mrs Wattley,” said Oldroyd, nodding.
“Is she very ill?” said Lucy sympathetically.
“Stricken with a fatal disease, my dear young lady,” he replied.
“Oh!” ejaculated Lucy.
“One, however, that gives neither pain nor trouble. She will not suffer in the least.”
“I’m glad of that,” cried Lucy, “for I like the poor old lady. What is her complaint?”
“Senility,” said Oldroyd, smiling. “Why, my dear Miss Alleyne, she is ninety-five.”
“Will you come with me, Lucy,” said Mrs Alleyne, who had been vainly trying to catch her daughter’s eye, and then – “perhaps Mr Oldroyd will excuse us.”
“Not if you are going to make any additions to the meal on my account, madam,” said the doctor, hastily. “I am the plainest of plain men – a bachelor who lives on chops and steaks, and it needs a sharp-edged appetite to manage these country cuts.”
Mrs Alleyne smiled again, and the visitor was left alone.
“Old lady didn’t like my staying,” he said to himself. “Shouldn’t have asked me, then. I am hungry, but – Oh! what a pretty, natural, clever little witch it is. I wish I’d a good practice; I should try my luck if I had, and I don’t think there is any one in the way.”
“Humph! End of the world,” he said, rising and crossing to look at the picture. “What a ghastly daub!”
“What a wilderness; why don’t they have the garden done up?” he continued, going to one of the windows, and looking at the depressing, neglected place without. “Ugh! what a home for such a bright little blossom. It must be something awful on a wet, wintry day.”
“Sorry I stopped,” he said, soon after.
“No, I’m not; I’m glad. Now, I’ll be bound to say there’s boiled mutton and turnips for dinner, and plain rice pudding. It’s just the sort of meal one would expect in a house like this. Mum!”
He gave his lips a significant tap, for the door opened, and Lucy entered, accompanied by a sour-looking maid with a clayey skin and dull grey eyes, bearing a tray.
“Be as quick as you can, Eliza,” said Lucy. “You won’t mind my helping, Mr Oldroyd, will you?” she continued. “We only keep one servant now.”
“Mind? Not I,” he replied cheerily. “Let me help too. I’ll lay the knives and forks.”
“No, no, no!” cried Lucy, as she wondered what Mrs Alleyne would have said if she had heard her allusion to “one servant now.”