Book Read Free

Delphi Works of M. E. Braddon

Page 887

by Mary Elizabeth Braddon


  Judith was altogether the queen of the friendly little party. Lavendale helped her to take off the great sable-bordered pelisse, and she emerged from her furs in a gown of black brocade, which intensified the dazzling whiteness of neck and arms, and a black satin petticoat embroidered with silver. Her only ornament was a large diamond cross, tied round her neck with a broad black ribbon, but the diamonds were as magnificent as any to be seen in London.

  “Was it not that cross which the Queen wore at her coronation?” asked Lady Polwhele, screwing up her wrinkled eyelids to peer across the table at the gems.

  “I believe this was one of the trifles which her Majesty did me the honour to wear on that occasion,” answered Judith carelessly.

  “I wonder she gave it back to you; I wouldn’t, if I’d been Queen of England. You should have sued me for it.”

  “I don’t believe Judith would ever have found out her loss,” said Mrs. Vansittart: “she has a plethora of gems. She lets me blaze in borrowed splendour sometimes, but I take no pleasure in my finery. ’Tis the sense of possession that is the real delight.”

  “Ay, I know that by sad experience,” said the Dowager. “I detest the family diamonds because I know I shall have to see them worn by somebody else, if I live long enough. When I see Polwhele flirting with some scraggy minx, I fancy how she would look with my collet necklace on her bony neck. And he is such a weak young simpleton that I never see him civil to a young woman without expecting to hear next morning that he has proposed to her.”

  “I don’t think your ladyship need anticipate immediate peril,” said Asterley, with a significant air. “From the kind of life his lordship has been leading of late, I should think there was nothing further from his thoughts than matrimony. A young man cannot marry two French dancers; and from what I know of the ladies with whom Lord Polwhele has been seen about town lately, if he marries one ‘twill be at the risk of getting shot or stabbed by the other. O, I don’t mean that the lady would murder him herself. She would get some serviceable Irish captain to invite him to a meeting in the Five Fields or at Wormwood Scrubs.”

  “You have no right to talk of such things, Asterley, and in the hearing of a mother!” whimpered the Dowager.

  “I beg your ladyship’s pardon; but when all the town knows the story—”

  “The town reeks with malicious inventions,” said Lavendale lightly. “I daresay young Lord Polwhele is not a whit worse than his neighbours.”

  Lady Judith leant back in her chair and listened with a supercilious air, as if she had been looking on at a gathering of ants and emmets. They sat and babbled about their acquaintances: how he or she had run mad, and how people did such monstrous stupendous things that it was strange no fiery rain came down from heaven, or inward convulsion upheaved the earth, to wreak the vengeance of the Omnipotent on this modern Sodom. Lady Judith listened, and said scarce a word. Of course the world was wicked; she had known as much from her childhood. She had heard of gambling debts and family quarrels, elopements and suicides, madness, scrofula, hereditary hatreds, and fatal duels, in her nursery. There was nothing new in the latest scandal, only another turn of the old figures in the old kaleidoscope. She heard and smiled.

  “My dear souls, how stale your talk is!” she said at last: “not one of your scandals has any originality. They sound as if you had adapted them from the French. They are reminiscences of the Regent and his roués. Confess now that they are stolen from the Philippiques.”

  “May I show you your rooms, ladies?” said Irene, “and then we might have time for some music before supper.”

  “O, hang music!” cried Miss Vansittart. “We have music enough in London. ’Tis nothing but talk of Cuzzoni and Faustina, Handel and Bononcini, all day long; everybody fighting for his or her favourite singer: and ’tis dangerous to confess one admires Senesino, lest one should be torn to pieces by the votaries of Farinelli. Let us clean ourselves, and then sit down to a good round game — bassett, or pharaoh.”

  Durnford rang the bell, and the housekeeper came with a couple of maids, carrying wax candles; and the ladies gathered up their cloaks and hoods, and prepared to be ushered to their several rooms.

  “One word, Lavendale,” cried the vivacious Dowager, wheeling suddenly on the threshold: “is there a ghost?”

  “There is the ghost which appeared to Saul, madam, in the twenty-seventh chapter of the first book of Samuel.”

  “Pshaw, coxcomb! you know what I mean. Is this fine old house of yours haunted? It ought to be, if you lay claim to respectability. Have you ever seen a ghost within these walls?”

  “Not one, your ladyship, but a hundred. The ghosts of lost hopes, the ghosts of good resolutions, the phantom of my boyish innocence, the shadow of my wasted youth, the spectre of my dissolute manhood. These rooms were full of ghosts, Lady Polwhele, till this dear lady,” taking Judith’s hand and kissing it, “exorcised them all by her magical presence. You will find no ghosts to-night. Love has laid them.”

  “Au revoir, Count Rhodomont: I think that should be your name,” said the Dowager, as she skipped lightly off, followed by the other women.

  Everybody was delighted with everything: the rooms, the fires, and bright clusters of candles, shining upon old Venetian looking-glasses in silvered frames; the oak passages, which would have seemed gloomy enough had the house been dark and empty, but which were now lighted by wax candles in polished brass sconces, and garnished with garlands of evergreens.

  There was an air of Christmas gaiety and gladness throughout the house.

  “And yet I am convinced there is a ghost,” protested Lady Polwhele.

  CHAPTER XI.

  “THERE IS ANOTHER AND A BETTER WORLD.”

  Christmas Eve and Christmas Day were celebrated with all due observances. Lord Lavendale and all his guests attended the village church on Christmas morning, to the edification of the neighbourhood, which consisted of about a score of smock-frock farmers, with their labourers and dairy-maids, and a sprinkling of small gentry. Among these his lordship’s party created a sensation, and almost every eye was directed to the big raised pew, with its carved wainscot and silk curtains, and its comfortable fireplace in an angle of the wall.

  It was long since Lavendale had seen the inside of a church, and he looked round the village fane with wondering, interested eyes, and comparing it with the glory and vastness of St. Peter’s at Rome, which was the last church he remembered to have worshipped in, four years ago at an Easter service. He had come here to-day to humour Lady Judith, who had urged that, as they were going to live at Lavendale by and by, and to settle down into sober country folks, they ought at once to conform to the obligations of their position.

  He looked round the church, and remembered the years that were gone, when he had sat in that pew by his mother’s side, nestling in the folds of her brocade gown, or sheltered by her furred mantle, and following the words of the lesson in the large-type Bible open on her lap; his childish finger travelling along the line, his childish lips whispering the words. He, the unbeliever, had begun, as other children, in implicit trustfulness. The old familiar Bible stories came back to him, the vivid pictures of the old patriarchal life, full of reality, lifelike in their exquisite simplicity. How he had loved and believed in those old histories! how solemn and earnest had been his childish piety! Then came his orphanage and university life, amidst a reckless, impious crew; and then the Mohawk Club, and the Calf’s Head Club, and an assumption of blatant vice as a profession. He had been proud when he was told that society called him the bad Lord Lavendale, in contradistinction to his father, who had been the very pink and pattern of pious respectability.

  Well, there was time to mend yet, time to lead a new and honourable life. The words of the ghostly voice were in his ear as the pitch-pipe gave the note, and the villagers began to sing “Hark, the Herald Angels”:

  “Repent, Lavendale; prepare to die!”

  Yes, he would repent, but it should be a repentance made obv
ious by good works; his preparation for a better world should be the work of years.

  “Why should I not live at least to sober middle age, as my father did?” he asked himself, and then turned to Judith, the chosen companion of those future years of happiness and virtue.

  How beautiful she looked in the neat simplicity of her black silk hood, the sober propriety of her satin mantle and cambric neckerchief! She had attired herself thus modestly in honour of the rustic temple, and looked as she had never looked at a fashionable assembly, in the reckless exhibition of her charms.

  Lavendale thought of a couplet of Pope’s as he looked at her.

  To him his love was fairer with lowered eyelids and modestly veiled bosom, and arms hidden in long black gloves: how delightful a contrast to that painted hag of quality, Lady Polwhele, whose wrinkles no white lead could disguise, and whose Court finery looked hideous in the searching wintry sunshine! Mrs. Asterley, too, was as fine as brocade and ribbons could make her. Miss Vansittart wore a braided cloth gown, and a furred military spencer; and had a masculine air which contrasted curiously with Irene’s simple dove-coloured hood and mantle, with pale blue ribbons, altogether girlish and innocent-looking.

  The five ladies made a display which gave the villagers enough to think about all through the somewhat drowsy service and the particularly prosy sermon; after which the quality walked between two rows of bowing and curtsying Lubins and Biddys, to the lych-gate where the coaches were waiting.

  Never had Lavendale felt in a serener frame of mind than on that Christmas Day. After the return from church he and Lady Judith explored the old house together, and planned what alterations they would begin next summer when they returned from their foreign tour.

  “And can you really be contented to live three parts of the year in Surrey?” he asked: “to live a sober domestic life with a small establishment like this, you who at Ringwood had the state and retinue of a princess, and had your house filled always with a succession of the most distinguished people in Europe? Can your fiery spirit subdue itself to narrow means and domesticity?”

  “My fiery spirit is passing weary of pomp and splendour and bustle and frivolity,” she answered. “Fashion and rattle, coquetry and high play, served very well to divert my thoughts from an old love and an endless regret. But now I have my old love again and nothing to regret: fashion, cards, dice, lotteries, the flatteries of rakes and profligates may go hang — I can live without them all. I want nothing but love and Lavendale.”

  He took her through the library, on his way to introduce her to his old friend Vincenti.

  She stopped in the middle of the room, and looked about her with a half-wondering interest.

  “What a vast, sober, solemn — rather gloomy room!” she exclaimed, with a faint shudder.

  “Think you so, love? It has no gloom for me. It was my father’s favourite room, and my mother’s: I have spent many a twilight hour with her before bedtime, have said my evening prayers at her knees on yonder hearth. It is more associated with her image than any other room in this house.”

  “Then I can understand your fondness for it; but I confess that for me it has a melancholy aspect. It will not be my favourite room. That sunny parlour facing southward will make ever so much brighter a nest, if you will let me furnish it in the French fashion, like Lady Bolingbroke’s room at Dawley. And now take me to your ancient philosopher, of whom you have told me so much.”

  Vincenti received the beautiful stranger with a stately courtesy, at once foreign and old-fashioned, and altogether different from the flippant touch-and-go of the “pretty fellow” period. Judith sat with him for nearly half an hour, talking of Italy, which she was to visit for the first time with Lavendale.

  “I fancy it a land of romance and of opera, and that I shall hear the reapers singing a chorus as they stoop over their sickles, and see a cluster of dancers at every turn in the road; and that the innkeepers will all address me in recitative, and the postboys will all roll out buffo songs,” she protested laughingly.

  “That playhouse world is not Vincenti’s Italy,” said Lavendale: “his country is the land of science and philosophy, of Galileo and Giordano Bruno, of Vesalius and Sarpi.”

  The Christmas dinner exhibited a profusion which would have shocked Lady Dainty, but which was the only idea of hospitality when George II. was king. Hams and turkeys, chines and shoulders of veal, soup and fish, jellies, mince-pies, and the traditional plum pudding, with Burgundy and champagne in abundance; and even, for those who were coarse enough to ask for it, strong home-brewed ale, ale of a dark tawny brightness, betwixt brown and amber, the very look of which in a glass suggested a swift progress from uproarious mirth to drunken stupor.

  Lady Polwhele drank the home-brewed with the gusto of a chairman or a ticket-porter.

  “After all, there is a true British smack about a glass of ale that beats your foreign wines hollow,” she said, as she finished her fourth tumbler.

  Lady Judith only sipped her champagne, just touching the glass with her ruby lips, smiling at Lavendale as she sipped. She sat in the place of honour at her host’s side, and amidst that profusion of beef and poultry they two dined upon nectar and ambrosia, and were only intoxicated with each other’s looks and smiles, and stolen whispers unheard in the clatter of voices.

  For the evening there were cards and music; and anon the hall-doors were flung open to the cold night, and the village mummers came trooping in to perform their Christmas fooleries, and to be regaled afterwards with the remains of the feast. Then came Christmas games in the great hall: blindman’s buff and hunt the slipper, at which last game Lady Polwhele disported herself with a vivacity which would have been particular even in Miss Hoyden.

  “The Dowager forgets that though ’tis meritorious in her to appear five-and-twenty, ’tis foolish to try to pass for five,” murmured Judith, in her lover’s ears, as they sat in a recess by the fireplace, watching those juvenile revels.

  Buxom Mrs. Asterley rivalled the Dowager in exuberance, and contrived to be caught and kissed at blindman’s buff oftener than she need have been, in the hope of rousing some lurking demon of jealousy in her husband’s breast. But Captain Asterley only resembled Othello insomuch that he was not easily jealous; so the harmony of the evening was not interrupted by his evil passions.

  Next morning came the fox-hunt. Lady Judith and her lover both rode to hounds, and his lordship sent a couple of led nags in their train, while he contrived to find a decent mount for Miss Vansittart. Judith rode as straight as an arrow, and, reckless in this as in all things, went at the biggest fence with a careless easy grace which delighted her lover.

  “I did not know you were a hunting-woman,” he said, as they rode neck and neck across a field.

  “I am an everything woman. I should have died of the spleen at Ringwood, if I had not hunted.”

  “You did not while I was there.”

  “You were there; and I had something else to think about.”

  “And yet you seemed so cold, so indifferent,” he said, slackening his pace as he grew more earnest.

  “I had so much to hide, love, I had need to put on a show of scorn. Come on, sir; we shall lose the hounds if you talk to me.”

  The Christmas week was nearly over. It was the thirtieth of December. Lord and Lady Bolingbroke had joined the party: the lady something of an invalid, but infinitely gracious and devoted to her husband, who loved her passionately, yet delighted in boasting of his old conquests in her presence, a self-glorification which she suffered with much good-humour. Nor was she offended at his exuberant compliments to his old flirt, Lady Judith, whom he reminded how pleasantly they had got on together at Ringwood Abbey, when his wife was nursing her gout at the Bath. He had elegant compliments even for Lady Polwhele, whose white lead had been laid on thicker than ever in his honour, and whose family diamonds blazed upon a bosom of more than Flemish development. He had not succeeded in bringing the poet. Mr. Pope had an invalid mother in his ho
use at Twitnam, and could not trust himself away from home for above twenty-four hours at a time. There was some disappointment at his non-arrival, yet a general feeling of relief. Those bright observant eyes saw too deep into the follies and pettinesses of society.

  It was in the after-dinner dusk of that thirtieth of December, and while his guests were all talking and laughing in a joyous circle round the hall fire before repairing to the tea-tables in the adjacent saloon, that Lavendale visited his friend in the laboratory. He had stolen away from that light-hearted circle while Judith was occupied with Bolingbroke’s gay badinage, and now he sank with an exhausted air into an old oaken settle opposite the table at which Vincenti sat reading.

  Here there was no gloaming hour of rest and respite from daily cares. The student lighted his lamp directly daylight began to fade. He could brook scarce a minute’s interruption of his studies. The lamp shone full upon Lavendale’s face.

  “How pale and tired you look!” said Vincenti. “I hope you are not ill?”

  “I hardly know whether I am very ill or only very tired,” answered Lavendale. “I ought not to have hunted the other day. I have not been my own man since. My London doctor told me I must never hunt; but I have no faith in physic or physicians. However, the fellow was right so far. I am not strong enough for a tearing cross-country gallop. And my blood was up the other day, and my second horse was fresh as fire. It was a glorious run: Lady Judith and I were with the hounds to the last, though three-fifths of the field were left in the lurch. No, I must hunt no more.”

  “You will be wise if you stick to that resolution. Do you think if I had squandered my strength upon follies as young men do that I should be alive to-day? I have garnered the sands of life, my lord; I have measured every grain.”

 

‹ Prev