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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68293 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68293)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Dulcie Carlyon, Volume I (of 3), by
-James Grant
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Dulcie Carlyon, Volume I (of 3)
- A novel
-
-Author: James Grant
-
-Release Date: June 11, 2022 [eBook #68293]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DULCIE CARLYON, VOLUME I (OF
-3) ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- DULCIE CARLYON.
-
-
- A Novel.
-
-
-
- BY
-
- JAMES GRANT,
-
- AUTHOR OF 'THE ROMANCE OF WAR,' ETC.
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES.
-
- VOL. I.
-
-
-
- LONDON:
- WARD AND DOWNEY,
- 12, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.
-
- 1886.
-
- [_All Rights Reserved._]
-
-
-
-
-NEW NOVELS AT EVERY LIBRARY.
-
-
-FROM THE SILENT PAST. By Mrs. HERBERT MARTIN. 2 Vols.
-
-COWARD AND COQUETTE. By the Author of 'The Parish of Hilby.' 1 vol.
-
-MIND, BODY, AND ESTATE. By the Author of 'Olive Varcoe.' 3 vols.
-
-AT THE RED GLOVE. By KATHARINE S. MACQUOID. 3 vols.
-
-WHERE TEMPESTS BLOW. By the Author of 'Miss Elvester's Girls.' 3
-vols.
-
-IN SIGHT OF LAND. By Lady DUFFUS HARDY. 3 vols.
-
-AS IN A LOOKING-GLASS. By F. C. PHILIPS. 1 vol.
-
-LORD VANECOURT'S DAUGHTER. By MABEL COLLINS. 3 vols.
-
-
-WARD AND DOWNEY, PUBLISHERS, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-In Loving Memory
-
-OF
-
-MY ELDEST SON,
-
-JAMES SIMPSON GRANT,
-
-_Captain Cheshire Regiment,_
-
-I INSCRIBE
-
-THIS MILITARY STORY.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
-
-
-CHAPTER
-
-I. IN THE HOWE OF THE MEARNS
-
-II. WEDDED
-
-III. THE SPURNED OFFER
-
-IV. REVELSTOKE COTTAGE
-
-V. DULCIE
-
-VI. THE SECRET PACKET
-
-VII. A FAREWELL
-
-VIII. THE SILVER LOCKET
-
-IX. MR. KIPPILAW, W.S.
-
-X. ALONE IN THE WORLD
-
-XI. SHAFTO IN CLOVER
-
-XII. VIVIAN HAMMERSLEY
-
-XIII. AMONG THE GROUSE
-
-XIV. THE TWO FINELLAS
-
-XV. AT REVELSTOKE AGAIN
-
-XVI. ''TIS BUT THE OLD, OLD STORY'
-
-XVII. AT CRAIGENGOWAN
-
-XVIII. AT THE BUFFALO RIVER
-
-XIX. ELANDSBERGEN
-
-XX. BAFFLED!
-
-
-
-
-DULCIE CARLYON.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-IN THE HOWE OF THE MEARNS.
-
-'This will end in a scene, Fettercairn, and you know how I hate
-scenes.'
-
-'So do I, they are such deuced bad form.'
-
-'I shall need all my self-possession to get over the _esclandre_ this
-affair may cause,' exclaimed the lady, fanning herself violently.
-
-'Well, life is made up of getting over things,' responded her husband.
-
-'But not things so disgraceful as this, Fettercairn!'
-
-'Is this son of yours in his senses?'
-
-'Who is that loves? it has been asked,' said the culprit referred to.
-
-'A marriage between you and a penniless girl in her rank of life is
-not to be thought of, Lennard.'
-
-'Her rank of life, father?'
-
-'Yes!'
-
-'Her father's rank was superior to that of the first of our family,
-when life began with him.'
-
-'What is that to you or to me now?'
-
-'Much to me.'
-
-'Too much, it would seem.'
-
-The excited speakers were a Peer, Cosmo, Lord Fettercairn, his wife,
-the Lady thereof, and their youngest son, Lennard Melfort, a captain
-of the line, home on leave from India, who had been somewhat timidly
-venturing to break--knowing the inordinate family vanity of his
-parents--we say to break the news of his love for a girl possessed of
-more beauty than this world's goods; and, in his excitement and
-indignation, his lordship's usual easy, indolent, and drawling way
-was forgotten now when addressing his son.
-
-Cosmo, Lord Fettercairn of that Ilk (and Strathfinella in the Mearns)
-was by nature a proud, cold, selfish, and calculating man, whose
-chief passion in life was a combined spirit of enormous vanity and
-acquisitiveness, which he inherited from his predecessors, whom he
-resembled in political caution and selfishness, and also in personal
-appearance, to judge from the portraits of three generations, by Sir
-John de Medina, Aikman, and Raeburn, adorning the walls of the
-stately room in the house of Craigengowan, where this rather stormy
-interview took place.
-
-Tall and thin in figure, with flat square shoulders and
-sandy-coloured hair, cold grey eyes, and irregular features, he was
-altogether a contrast to his son Lennard, who inherited his slightly
-aquiline nose and perfect face from his mother, but his firm dark
-eyes and rich brown hair from a previous generation; and these,
-together with an olive complexion, rendered more dusky by five years'
-exposure to an Indian sun, made his aspect a very striking one.
-
-My Lady Fettercairn's birth and breeding were, as Sir Bernard Burke
-had recorded, irreproachable, and she certainly seemed a _grande
-dame_ to the tips of her long slender fingers. She was about
-forty-five years of age, but looked ten younger. The upper part of
-her aristocratic face was strikingly handsome; but the lower, with
-its proud and firm lips, was less pleasant to look at. Her
-complexion was almost colourless, her hair of the lightest brown,
-like her eyebrows and lashes; while her eyes were clear and blue as
-an Alpine sky, and, as Lennard often thought with a sigh, they seemed
-quite as--cold.
-
-Her manner was always calm, assured, and self-possessed. She would
-smile, but that smile never degenerated into honest laughter, while
-her pale and impressive face was without a line--especially on her
-forehead--that seemed to indicate either thought or reflection, and
-certainly she had never known care or sorrow or even annoyance until
-now.
-
-'She is beautiful, mother,' urged the young man, breaking an ominous
-silence, with reference to the object of his love.
-
-'Perhaps; but she is not one of us,' exclaimed Lady Fettercairn,
-cresting up her handsome head haughtily, and a whole volume of
-intense pride and hauteur was centred in the last word she spoke.
-
-'Who is this Flora MacIan, as she calls herself?' asked his father in
-a similar tone; 'but I need not ask. You have already told us she is
-the governess in a house you have been recently visiting--that of
-Lady Drumshoddy--a governess, with all her beauty, poor and obscure.'
-
-'Not so obscure,' said Lennard, a wave of red passing under the tan
-of his olive cheek; 'her father was a gallant old officer of the
-Ross-shire Buffs, who earned his V.C. at the battle of Khooshab, in
-Persia, and her only brother and support fell when leading on his
-Grenadiers at the storming of Lucknow. The old captain was, as his
-name imports, a cadet of the Macdonalds of Glencoe.'
-
-'With a pedigree of his family, no doubt, from the grounding of the
-Ark to the battle of Culloden,' sneered his father.
-
-'Then his family would end soon after ours began,' retorted the son,
-becoming greatly ruffled now. 'You know, father, we can't count much
-beyond three generations ourselves.'
-
-Lord Fettercairn, wounded thus in his sorest point, grew white with
-anger.
-
-'We always suspected you of having some secret, Lennard,' said his
-mother severely.
-
-'Ah, mother, unfortunately, as some one says, a secret is like a hole
-in your coat--the more you try to hide it, the more it is seen.'
-
-'An aphorism, and consequently vulgar; does _she_ teach you this
-style of thing?' asked the haughty lady, while Lennard reddened again
-with annoyance, and gave his dark moustache a vicious twist, but
-sighed and strove to keep his temper.
-
-'I have found and felt it very bitter, father, to live under false
-colours,' said he gently and appealingly, 'and to keep that a secret
-from you both, which should be no secret at all.'
-
-'We would rather not have heard this secret,' replied Lord
-Fettercairn sternly, while tugging at his sandy-coloured mutton-chop
-whiskers.
-
-'Then would you have preferred that I should be deceitful to you, and
-false to the dear girl who loves and trusts me?'
-
-'I do not choose to consider _her_,' was the cold reply.
-
-'But I do, and must, now!'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Because we are already married--she is my wife,' was the steady
-response.
-
-'Married!' exclaimed his father and mother with one accord, as they
-started from their chairs together, and another ominous silence of a
-minute ensued.
-
-'My poor, lost boy--the prey of an artful minx!' said Lady
-Fettercairn, looking as if she would like to weep; but tears were
-rather strangers to her cold blue eyes.
-
-'Mother, dear mother, if you only knew her, you would not talk thus
-of Flora,' urged Lennard almost piteously. 'If we had it in our
-power to give love and to withhold it, easy indeed would our progress
-be through life.'
-
-'Love--nonsense!'
-
-'Save to the two most interested, who are judges of it,' said
-Lennard. 'Surely you loved my father, and he you.'
-
-'Our case was very different,' replied Lady Fettercairn, in her anger
-actually forgetting herself so far as to bite feathers off her fan
-with her firm white teeth.
-
-'How, mother dear?'
-
-'In rank and wealth we were equal.'
-
-Lennard sighed, and said:
-
-'I little thought that you, who loved me so, would prove all but one
-of the mothers of Society.'
-
-'What do you mean, sir?' demanded his father.
-
-'What a writer says.'
-
-'And what the devil does he say?'
-
-'That "love seems such a poor and contemptible thing in their eyes in
-comparison with settlements. Perhaps they forget their own youth;
-one does, they say, when he outlives romance. And I suppose bread
-and butter is better than poetry any day."'
-
-'I should think so.'
-
-'We had other and brilliant views for you,' said his mother in a tone
-of intense mortification, 'but now----'
-
-'Leave us and begone, and let us look upon your face no more,'
-interrupted his father in a voice of indescribable sternness, almost
-hoarse with passion, as he pointed to the door.
-
-'Mother!' said Lennard appealingly, 'oh, mother!' But she averted
-her face, cold as a woman of ice, and said, 'Go!'
-
-'So be it,' replied Lennard, gravely and sadly, as he drew himself up
-to the full height of his five feet ten inches, and a handsome and
-comely fellow he looked as he turned away and left the room.
-
-'Thank God, his elder brother, Cosmo, is yet left to us!' exclaimed
-Lady Fettercairn earnestly.
-
-It was the last time in this life he ever heard his mother's voice,
-and he quitted the house. On the terrace without, carefully he
-knocked the ashes out of his cherished briar-root, put it with equal
-care into its velvet-lined case, put the case into his pocket, and
-walked slowly off with a grim and resolute expression in his fine
-young face, upon which from that day forth his father and mother
-never looked again.
-
-Then he was thinking chiefly of the sweet face of the young girl who
-had united her fortunes with his, and who was anxiously awaiting the
-result of the interview we have described.
-
-Sorrow, mortification, and no small indignation were in the heart of
-Lennard Melfort at the result of the late interview.
-
-'I have been rash,' he thought, 'in marrying poor Flora without their
-permission, but that they would never have accorded, even had they
-seen her; and none fairer or more beautiful ever came as a bride to
-Craigengowan.'
-
-Pausing, he gave a long and farewell look at the house so named--the
-home of his boyhood.
-
-It stands at some distance from the Valley of the Dee (which forms
-the natural communication between the central Highlands and the
-fertile Lowlands) in the Hollow or Howe of the Mearns. Situated amid
-luxuriant woods, glimpses of Craigengowan obtained from the highway
-only excite curiosity without gratifying it, but a nearer approach
-reveals its picturesque architectural features.
-
-These are the elements common to most northern mansions that are
-built in the old Scottish style--a multitude of conical turrets,
-steep crowstepped gables and dormer gablets, encrusted with the
-monograms and armorial bearings of the race who were its lords when
-the family of Fettercairn were hewers of wood and drawers of water.
-
-The turrets rise into kindred forms in the towers and gables, and are
-the gradual accumulation of additions made at various times on the
-original old square tower, rather than a part of the original design,
-but the effect of the whole is extremely rich and picturesque.
-
-In the old Scottish garden was an ancient sun and moon dial, mossy
-and grey, by which many a lover had reckoned the time in the days of
-other years.
-
-Of old, Craigengowan belonged to an exiled and attainted Jacobite
-family, from whom it passed readily enough into the hands of the
-second Lord Fettercairn, a greedy and unscrupulous Commissioner on
-the forfeited estates of the unfortunate loyalists. It had now many
-modern comforts and appliances; the entrance-hall was a marble-paved
-apartment, off which the principal sitting-rooms opened, and now a
-handsome staircase led to the upper chambers, whilom the abode of
-barons who ate the beef and mutton their neighbours fed in the valley
-of the Dee.
-
-The grounds were extensive and beautiful, and Lord Fettercairn's
-flower gardens and conservatories were renowned throughout Angus and
-the Mearns.
-
-To the bitter storm that existed in his own breast, and that which he
-had left in those of his parents, how peaceful by contrast looked the
-old house and the summer scenery to Lennard--the place on which he
-probably would never gaze again.
-
-There was a breeze that rustled the green leaves in the thickets, but
-no wind. Beautiful and soft white clouds floated lazily in the deep
-blue sky, and a recent shower had freshened up every tree, meadow,
-and hedgerow. The full-eared wheat grew red or golden by the banks
-of the Bervie, and the voice of the cushat dove came from the autumn
-woods from time to time as with a sigh Lennard Melfort turned his
-back on Craigengowan for ever, cursing, as he went, the pride of his
-family, for, though not an old one, by title or territory, they were
-as proud as they were unscrupulous in politics.
-
-The first prominent member of the family, Lennard Melfort, had been a
-Commissioner for the Mearns in the Scottish Parliament, and for
-political services had been raised to the peerage by Queen Anne as
-Lord Fettercairn and Strathfinella, and was famous for nothing but
-selling his Union vote for the same sum as my Lord Abercairnie, £500,
-and for having afterwards 'a rug at the compensation,' as the English
-equivalent money was called. After the battle of Sheriffmuir saw
-half the old peerages of Scotland attainted, he obtained
-Craigengowan, and was one 'who,' as the minister of Inverbervie said,
-'wad sell his soul to the deil for a crackit saxpence.'
-
-With the ex-Commissioner the talent--such as it was--of the race
-ended, and for three generations the Lords of Fettercairn had been
-neither better nor worse than peers of Scotland generally; that is,
-they were totally oblivious of the political interests of that
-country, and of everything but their own self-aggrandisement by
-marriage or otherwise.
-
-Lennard Melfort seemed the first of the family that proved untrue to
-its old instincts.
-
-'And I had made up my mind that he should marry Lady Drumshoddy's
-daughter--she has a splendid fortune!' wailed Lady Fettercairn.
-
-'Married my governess--the girl MacIan!' snorted my Lady Drumshoddy
-when she heard of the dreadful mésalliance. 'Why marry the creature?
-He might love her, of course--all men are alike weak--but to marry
-her--oh, no!'
-
-And my Lady Drumshoddy was a very moral woman according to her
-standard, and carried her head very high.
-
-When tidings were bruited abroad of what happened, and the split in
-the family circle at Craigengowan, there were equal sorrow and
-indignation expressed in the servants' hall, the gamekeepers' lodges,
-and the home farm, for joyous and boyish Captain Melfort was a
-favourite with all on the Fettercairn estates; and Mrs. Prim, his
-mother's maid, actually shed many tears over the untoward fate he had
-brought upon himself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-WEDDED.
-
-'And you will love me still, Flora, in spite of this bitter affront
-to which you are subjected for my sake?' said Lennard.
-
-'Yes,' said the girl passionately, 'I love you, Lennard--love you so
-much,' she added, while her soft voice broke and her blossom-like
-lips quivered, 'that were I to lose you I would die!'
-
-'My darling, you cannot lose me now,' he responded, while tenderly
-caressing her.
-
-'Are we foolish to talk in this fashion, Lennard?'
-
-'Foolish?'
-
-'Yes--or rash. I have heard that it is not lucky for people to love
-each other so much as we do.'
-
-'Could we love each other less?'
-
-'I don't think so,' said she simply and sweetly, as he laid her cheek
-on his breast with her upturned eyes gazing into his.
-
-The girl was slight and slender, yet perfect was every curve of her
-shapely figure, which was destitute of any straight line; even her
-nose was, in the slightest degree, aquiline. Her beautifully arched
-mouth, the scarlet line of her upper lip, and the full round of the
-nether one were parted in a tender smile, just enough to show her
-teeth, defied all criticism; her complexion was pure and soft, and
-her eyes were of the most liquid hazel, with almost black lashes.
-Her hair was of the same tint, and Flora seemed a lady to perfection,
-especially by the whiteness and delicacy of her beautifully shaped
-little hands.
-
-When she walked she did so gracefully, as all Highland women do, and
-like them held her head poised on her slender neck so airily and
-prettily that her nurse, Madelon, called her 'the swan.'
-
-'How I trembled, Lennard,' said she, after a pause, 'as I thought of
-the _mauvais quart d'heure_ you were undergoing at Craigengowan.'
-
-'It was a _mauvais_ hour and more, darling.'
-
-'And ever and anon I felt that strange chill, or shudder, which Nurse
-Madelon says people feel when some one crosses the place where their
-grave is to be. How can your parents be so cruel to you?'
-
-'And to you, Flora!'
-
-'Ah, that is different,' she replied, with her eyes full of unshed
-tears, and in a pained voice. 'Doubtless they consider me a very
-designing girl; but in spite of that, you will always care for me as
-much as you do now?'
-
-'Why such fears? Ever and always--ever and always, my darling,' said
-Lennard Melfort, stopping her questioning lips most effectually for a
-time.
-
-'Oh, if you should ever come to regret, and with regret to love me
-less!' said she, in a low voice, with her eyes for a moment fixed on
-vacancy.
-
-'Why that boding thought, Flora?'
-
-'Because, surely, such great love never lasts.'
-
-He kissed her again as the readiest response.
-
-But the sequel proved that his great love outlasted her own life,
-poor girl!
-
-Then they sat long silent, hand locked in hand, while the gloaming
-deepened round them, for words seem poor and feeble when the heart is
-very full.
-
-'How long will they continue to despise me?' said Flora suddenly,
-while across her soft cheeks there rushed the hot blood of a long and
-gallant line of Celtic ancestors.
-
-An exclamation of bitterness--almost impatience, escaped Lennard.
-
-'Let us forget them--father, mother, all!' said he.
-
-The girl looked passionately into the face of her lover-husband--the
-husband of a month; and never did her bright hazel eyes seem more
-tender and soft than now, with all the fire of love and pride
-sparkling in their depths, for her Highland spirit and nature
-revolted at the affront to which she was subjected.
-
-The bearing of Lennard Melfort and the poise of his close-shorn head
-told that he was a soldier, and a well-drilled one; and the style of
-his light grey suit showed how thoroughly he was a gentleman; and to
-Flora's loving and partial eye he was every-way a model man.
-
-They had been married just a month, we have said, a month that very
-day, and Lennard had brought his bride to the little burgh town,
-within a short distance of Craigengowan, and left her in their
-apartments while he sought with his father and mother the bootless
-interview just narrated.
-
-For three days before he had the courage to bring it about, they had
-spent the time together, full of hopeful thoughts, strolling along
-the banks of the pretty Bervie, from the blue current of which ever
-and anon the bull-trout and the salmon rise to the flies; or in the
-deep and leafy recourses of the adjacent woods, and climbing the
-rugged coast, against which the waves of the German Sea were rolling
-in golden foam; or ascending Craig David, so called from David II. of
-Scotland--a landmark from the sea for fifteen leagues--for both had a
-true and warm appreciation and artistic love of Nature in all her
-moods and aspects.
-
-The sounds of autumn were about them now; the hum of insects and the
-song of the few birds that yet sang; the fragrance of the golden
-broom and the sweet briar, with a score of other sweet and
-indefinable scents and balmy breaths. All around them was scenic
-beauty and peace, and yet with all their great love for each other,
-their hearts were heavy at the prospect of their future, which must
-be a life of banishment in India, and to the heaviness of Lennard was
-added indignation and sorrow. But he could scarcely accuse himself
-of having acted rashly in the matter of his marriage, for to that his
-family would never have consented; and he often thought could his
-mother but see Flora in her beauty and brightness, looking so
-charming in her smart sealskin and bewitching cap and feather, and
-long skirt of golden-brown silk that matched her hair and eyes--every
-way a most piquante-looking girl!
-
-Young though he was, and though a second son, Lennard Melfort had
-been a favourite with more than one Belgravian belle and her mamma,
-and there were few who had not something pleasant or complimentary to
-say of him since his return from India. At balls, fêtes, garden and
-water parties, girls had given him the preference to many who seemed
-more eligible, had reserved for him dances on their programmes, sang
-for him, made unmistakable _œillades_, and so forth; for his
-handsome figure and his position made him very acceptable, though he
-had not the prospects of his elder brother, the Hon. Cosmo.
-
-Lady Fettercairn knew how Lennard was regarded and valued well, and
-nourished great hopes therefrom; but this was all over and done with
-now.
-
-To her it seemed as if he had thrown his very life away, and that
-when his marriage with a needy governess--however beautiful and well
-born she might be--became known, all that charmed and charming circle
-in Belgravia and Tyburnia would regard him as a black sheep indeed;
-would shake their aristocratic heads, and pity poor Lord and Lady
-Fettercairn for having such a renegade son.
-
-Flora's chief attendant--a Highland woman who had nursed her in
-infancy--was comically vituperative and indignant at the affront put
-by these titled folks upon 'her child' as she called her.
-
-Madelon Galbraith was strong, healthy, active, and only in her
-fortieth year, with black eyes and hair, a rich ruddy complexion, a
-set of magnificent white teeth, and her manner was full of emphatic,
-almost violent, gesticulation peculiar to many Highlanders, who seem
-to talk with their hands and arms quite as much as the tongue.
-
-Sometimes Madelon spoke in her native Gaelic, but generally in the
-dialect of the Lowlands.
-
-'Set them up indeed,' she muttered; 'wha are the Melforts o'
-Fettercairn, that they should slight you--_laoghe mo chri_?' she
-added, softly (calf of my heart). 'What a pity it is ye canna fling
-at their heads the gold they love, for even a Lowland dog winna yowl
-gin ye pelt him wi' banes. But you've begun wi' love and marriage,
-and a gude beginning mak's a gude ending.'
-
-'But we shall be so poor, Nursie Madelon, and I have ruined my poor
-Lennard,' urged Flora, as the kind woman caressed her.
-
-'They say a kiss and a cup of water mak' but a wersh breakfast,'
-laughed Madelon; 'but you're no sae puir as that comes to, my
-darling.'
-
-'Not quite' said Flora, laughing faintly, in turn. 'Yet I have
-sorely injured my husband's prospects.'
-
-'Tut, tut, my bairn. Ony man can woo, but he weds only whar his
-weird lies; and so Captain Melfort wedded you, and wha better? Then
-what is a Lord that we should _lippen_ to _him_? As long as ye serve
-a tod ye maun carry his tail? And your father's daughter may carry
-her head wi' the highest.'
-
-Lennard Melfort now resolved neither verbally nor by letter to have
-further intercourse with his family at Craigengowan or elsewhere, but
-before he could make up his mind what to do or could betake him
-south, as he meant to quit Scotland without delay, on the day
-subsequent to the stormy interview Madelon announced a visitor, and
-on a salver brought in a card inscribed--'MR. KENNETH KIPPILAW, W.S.'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE SPURNED OFFER.
-
-'The family agent from Edinburgh, Flora,' said Lennard, in answer to
-her inquiring glance. 'Mrs. Melfort,' he added, introducing her to
-their visitor, who bowed with a critical glance and appreciative
-smile.
-
-'I have been telegraphed for by your father, Captain Melfort,' said
-Mr. Kippilaw, as they shook hands and he was motioned to a chair.
-
-A hale, hearty, unpretentious, business-like man, about forty years
-of age, Mr. Kenneth Kippilaw was too well-bred and too sensible to
-begin the matter in hand by any remarks about youthful imprudence,
-early marriages, or so forth, as he knew the pride and temperament of
-the young man before him, but laid down his hat, and, after some of
-that familiar weather talk which is the invariable prelude to any
-conversation over all the British Isles, he gently approached the
-object of his mission, which Flora, in the simplicity and terror of
-her heart, never doubted was a separation of some kind between
-herself and Lennard, so with a pallid face she bowed and withdrew.
-
-'To what am I indebted for the pleasure of this--a--unexpected
-interview?' asked Lennard, a little stiffly.
-
-'Instructions just received from your father, Captain Melfort.'
-
-'Then you have come from Craigengowan?'
-
-'Straight.'
-
-'Has he made up his mind to accept my wife as his daughter-in-law?'
-
-'Quite the reverse, I regret to say.'
-
-Lennard's face darkened with indignation, and he gave his moustache
-an angry twist.
-
-'Are my father and mother determined to ignore the fact that she is a
-lady by birth?' asked Lennard after a gloomy pause.
-
-'Yes--they know, of course, that she is a lady,' stammered Mr.
-Kippilaw, feeling his mission an ungracious one, 'but poor--one who
-has sunk into obscurity and dependence--pardon me, I but use their
-own identical words.
-
-'Well?'
-
-'What is done in this instance unfortunately cannot be undone,
-Captain Melfort; but his lordship, feeling, of course, keenly in the
-matter, is willing to continue your allowance, and even to double it,
-on one condition.
-
-'Name it.'
-
-Mr. Kippilaw sighed, for though, as a lawyer, considerably hardened,
-he felt the delicacy of the whole situation, and Lennard's dark eyes
-seemed to focus and pierce him.
-
-'The condition--to the point!'
-
-'Is--that you will return to India----'
-
-'I mean to do so forthwith,' interrupted Lennard sharply.
-
-'Or you may live anywhere out of Britain, but never attempt to
-intrude Mrs. Melfort upon your family or their circle, and contrive,
-if possible, to let that circle forget your existence.'
-
-'Insolent--and cruel as insolent!' exclaimed Lennard Melfort as he
-started from his chair and paced about the room, with his dark eyes
-flashing and the veins in his forehead swollen like whip-cord.
-
-'The words I speak are not my own,' said Mr. Kippilaw, deprecatingly.
-
-'Return to Craigengowan, and tell my father that I reject his bribe
-to insult my wife--for a bribe it is--with the scorn it merits. Not
-a penny of his money will I accept while my sword and pay, or life
-itself, are left me. Tell Lord and Lady Fettercairn that I view
-myself as their son no more. As they discard me, so do I discard
-them; and even their _very name_ I shall not keep--remember that!'
-
-'Dear me--dear me, all this is very sad!'
-
-'They have thrust me from them as if I had been guilty of a crime----'
-
-'Captain Melfort!'
-
-'A crime I say--yet a day may come when they will repent it; and from
-this hour I swear----'
-
-'Not in anger,' interrupted Mr. Kippilaw, entreatingly; 'take no
-hasty vow in your present temper.'
-
-'I swear that to them and theirs I shall be--from this hour--as one
-in the grave!'
-
-'But,' urged the lawyer, 'but suppose--which God forbid--that aught
-happened to your elder brother, Mr. Cosmo Melfort?'
-
-'I wish Cosmo well; but I care not for my interest in the title--it
-may become dormant, extinct, for aught that I care. Neither I nor
-any of mine shall ever claim it, nor shall I again set foot in
-Craigengowan, or on the lands around it--no, never again, never
-again!'
-
-To every argument of the kind-hearted Mr. Kippilaw, who really loved
-the Fettercairn family and esteemed the high-spirited Lennard, the
-latter turned a deaf ear.
-
-He departed in despair of softening matters between the rash son and
-indignant parents. To them he greatly modified the nature of the
-useless interview, but they heard of Lennard's determination with
-perfect unconcern, and even with a grim smile of contempt, never
-doubting that when money pressure came upon him they would find him
-at their mercy. But that time never came.
-
-Mr. Kippilaw returned to Edinburgh, and there the affair seemed to
-end.
-
-The parting words of Lord Fettercairn to him were said smilingly and
-loftily:--
-
-'The French have a little phrase, which in six words expresses all
-our experiences in life.'
-
-'And this phrase, my lord?'
-
-'Is simply--_tout passe, tout casse, tout lasse_--that we outlive
-everything in turn and in time--and so this matter of Lennard's pride
-will be a matter of time only. Be assured we shall outlive the
-indignation of our misguided son.'
-
-'But will you outlive your own?'
-
-'Never!'
-
-'I can but hope that you will, my lord. Remember the hackneyed
-quotation from Pope--"To err is human, to forgive divine."
-
-'I never forgive!' replied his lordship bitterly.
-
-The name of Lennard was never uttered again by his parents, nor even
-by his brother Cosmo (then reading up at Oxford) till the hour for
-forgiveness was past; and even Cosmo they contrived to innoculate
-with their own cruel and unchristian sentiment of hostility.
-Lennard's portrait was removed from its place of honour in the
-dining-hall, and banished to the lumber-attic; the goods, chattels,
-and mementoes he left at home were scattered and dispersed; even his
-horses were sold, and the saddles he had used; and the Fettercairn
-family would--could they have done so--have obliterated his name from
-the great double-columned tome of Sir Bernard Burke.
-
-Heedless of all that, the young husband and his dark-eyed girl-wife
-were all the world to each other.
-
-'After mamma followed papa to the grave, Lennard--for she never held
-up her head after she heard of his death at Khooshab,' said Flora, as
-she nestled her head in his neck, 'I seemed to be condemned to a life
-of hardship, humiliation, and heartlessness, till I met you, dearest.
-I felt that even the love of some dumb animal--a dog or a horse--was
-better than the entire absence of affection in the narrow circle of
-my life. I did so long for something or some one to love me
-exclusively--I felt so miserably, so utterly alone in the world. Now
-I have you--_you_ to love me. But in winning you I have robbed you
-of the love of all your people.'
-
-'Talk not of it, and think not of it, dearest Flora. We are now more
-than ever all in all to each other.'
-
-The money bribe, offered in such a way and for such a purpose,
-exasperated Lennard still more against his family, and drew many a
-tear of humiliation from Flora in secret.
-
-She thought that she had wrought Lennard a great wrong by winning his
-love for herself, and she was now burning with impatience to turn her
-back on the shores of Britain and find a new home in India; and
-there, by staff or other employments and allowances, Lennard knew
-that he could gain more than the yearly sum his father so
-mortifyingly offered him.
-
-Flora wept much over it all, we say, and her appetite became
-impaired; but she did not--like the heroine of a three-volume
-novel--starve herself into a fright.
-
-But a short time before she had been a childish and simple
-maiden--one sorely tried, however, and crushed by evil fortune; but
-with Lennard Melfort now, 'the prince had come into her existence and
-awakened her soul, and she was a woman--innocent still--but yet a
-woman.'
-
-The scenery of the Mearns looked inexpressibly lovely in the purity
-and richness of its verdure and varied artistic views, for the woods
-were profusely tinted with gold, russet brown, and red, when Lennard
-Melfort turned his back upon it and his native home for ever!
-
-The birds were chirping blithly, and the voice of the corncraik, with
-
- 'The sweet strain that the corn-reapers sang,'
-
-came on the evening breeze together. The old kirk bell was tolling
-in the distance, and its familiar sound spoke to Lennard's heart of
-home like that of an old friend. The river was rolling under its
-great arch of some eighty feet in span, the downward reflection of
-the latter in the water making a complete circle like a giant O. The
-old castle of Halgreen, with its loopholed battlements of the
-fourteenth century, stood blackly and boldly upon its wave-beaten
-eminence, and the blue smoke of picturesque Gourdon, a fisher
-village, curled up on the ambient air, as the scenery faded out in
-the distance.
-
-Flora became marvellously cheerful when their journey fairly began,
-and laughingly she sung in Lennard's ear--
-
- 'The world goes up and the world goes down,
- But _yesterday's_ smile and _yesterday's_ frown
- Can never come back again, sweet friend--
- Can never come back again!'
-
-
-Means were not forgotten to support nurse Madelon in her native
-place, where we shall leave her till she reappears in our narrative
-again.
-
-So Lennard and his girl-wife sailed for India, full of love for each
-other and hope for their own lonely and unaided future, and both
-passed for ever out of the lives and apparently out of the memory of
-the family at Craigengowan.
-
-Times there were when he hoped to distinguish himself, so that the
-circle there--those who had renounced him--would be proud of him; but
-in seeking that distinction rashly, he might throw away his life, and
-thus leave his little Flora penniless on the mercy of a cold world
-and a proverbially ungrateful Government.
-
-But they could not forget home, and many a time and oft, where the
-sun-baked cantonments of Meerut seemed to vibrate under the fierce
-light of the Indian sun, where the temples of Hurdwar from their
-steep of marble steps look down upon the Ganges, or where the
-bungalows of Cawnpore or Etwah, garlanded with fragrant jasmine,
-stand by the rolling Jumna amid glorious oleanders and baubool trees,
-with their golden balls loading the air with perfume, while the giant
-heron stalked by the river's bed, the alligator basked in the ooze,
-and the Brahmin ducks floated overhead, Flora's sweet voice made
-Lennard's heart thrill as she sang to him the songs of the land they
-had resolved never to look upon again, even when that sound so
-stirring to the most sluggish Scottish breast when far away, the
-pipes of a Highland regiment, poured their notes on the hot sunny air.
-
-At home none seemed to care or think of the discarded son but the
-worthy lawyer Kenneth Kippilaw, who had loved him as a lad, and could
-not get his hard fate out of his mind.
-
-From time to time, inspired by kindness and curiosity, he watched his
-name among the captains in the military lists of that thick
-compendium which no Scottish business establishment is ever
-without--'Oliver and Boyd's Almanack.' Therein, after a while, the
-name of Lennard Melfort _disappeared_, but whether he was dead, had
-sold out, or 'gone to the bad,' the worthy Writer to the Signet could
-not discover, and he not unnaturally sighed over what he deemed a
-lost life.
-
-And here we end that which is a species of prologue to our story.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-REVELSTOKE COTTAGE.
-
-More than twenty years had elapsed after the episodes we have
-described, and Lennard and Flora had found a new home, and she, her
-_last one_, more than four hundred and fifty miles as the crow flies
-from where Craigengowan looks down on the German Sea. But none that
-looked on Lennard Melfort now would have recognised in the
-prematurely aged man the handsome young fellow who in ire and disgust
-had quitted his native land.
-
-In two years after he had gone eastward a dreadful fever, contracted
-in a place where he had volunteered on a certain duty to gain money
-for the support of his wife and her little Indian establishment--the
-Terrai of Nepaul, that miasmatic border of prairie which lies along
-the great forest of the Himalayas, and has an evil repute even among
-the natives of the country in the wet season when the leaves are
-falling.
-
-This fever broke Lennard's health completely, and so changed him that
-his rich brown hair and moustache were grey at six-and-twenty, and
-ere long he looked like a man of twice his age.
-
-'Can that fellow really be Lennard Melfort of the Fusiliers? Why, he
-is a veritable Knight of the Rueful Countenance!' exclaimed some old
-friends who saw him at 'The Rag,' when he came home to seek a place
-of quiet and seclusion in Devonshire, as it subsequently chanced to
-be.
-
-Amid the apple bowers of the land of cider, and near a beautiful
-little bay into which the waters of the British Channel rippled,
-stood the pretty and secluded cottage he occupied, as 'Major MacIan,'
-with his son and a nephew.
-
-The wooded hills around it were not all covered with orchards,
-however, and the little road that wound round the bay ran under
-eminences that, from their aspect, might make a tourist think he was
-skirting a Swiss lake. Others were heath-clad and fringed at the
-base by a margin of grey rocks.
-
-Into the bay flowed a stream, blue and transparent always. Here
-salmon trout were often found, and the young men spent hours at its
-estuary angling for rock fish.
-
-A Devonshire cottage is said by Mrs. Bray to be 'the sweetest object
-that the poet, the artist, or the lover of the romantic could desire
-to see,' and such a cottage was that of Major MacIan, the name now
-adopted by Lennard--that of Flora's father--in fulfilment of the vow
-he had made to renounce the name, title, and existence of his family.
-
-Around it, and in front sloping down to the bay, was a beautiful
-garden, teeming with the flowers and fruits of Devonshire. On three
-sides was a rustic verandah, the trellis work of which was covered by
-a woven clematis, sweetbriar, and Virginia creeper, which, in the
-first year of her residence there, Flora's pretty hands, cased in
-garden gloves, were never tired of tending; and now the Virginia
-creeper, with its luxuriant tendrils, emerald green in summer, russet
-and red in autumn, grew in heavy masses over the roof and around the
-chimney stalks, making it, as Flora was wont to say exultingly,
-'quite a love of a place!'
-
-On one hand lay the rolling waters of the Channel, foaming about the
-Mewstone Rock; on the other, a peep was given amid the coppice of the
-ancient church of Revelstoke, and here the married pair lived happily
-and alone for a brief time.
-
-Save for the advent of a ship passing in sight of the little bay, it
-was a sleepy place in which Lennard, now retired as a major, had
-'pitched his tent,' as he said--the Cottage of Revelstoke. Even in
-these railway times people thereabout were content with yesterday's
-news. There was no gas to spoil the complexions of the young, and no
-water rates to 'worrit' the old; and telegrams never came, in their
-orange-tinted envelopes, to startle the hearts of the feeble and the
-sickly.
-
-No monetary transactions having taken place, and no correspondence
-being necessary, between Lennard and his family or their legal agent,
-Mr. Kippilaw, for more than twenty years now, he had quite passed
-away from their knowledge, and almost from their memory; and many who
-knew them once cared not, perhaps, whether he or his wife were in the
-land of the living.
-
-A son, we have said, had been born to them, and Lennard named the
-child Florian, after his mother (here again ignoring his own family),
-whom that event cost dear, for the sweet and loving Flora never
-recovered her health or strength--injured, no doubt, in India--but
-fell into a decline, and, two years after, passed away in the arms of
-Lennard and her old nurse, Madelon.
-
-Lonely, lonely indeed, did the former feel now, though an orphan
-nephew of Flora--the son of her only sister--came to reside with
-him--Shafto Gyle by name--one who will figure largely in our story.
-
-Would Lennard ever forget the day of her departure, when she sank
-under that wasting illness with which no doctor could grapple? Ever
-and always he could recall the sweet but pallid face, the white,
-wasted hands, the fever-lighted dark eyes, which seemed so
-unnaturally large when, after one harrowing night of pain and
-delirium, she became gentle and quiet, and lovingly told him to take
-a little rest--for old-looking he was; old, worn, and wasted far
-beyond his years--and he obeyed her, saying he would take a little
-turn in the garden among the roses--the roses her hands would tend no
-more--sick at heart with the closeness of the sick-chamber and all it
-suggested, and maddened by the loud ticking of the watchful doctor's
-repeater as it lay on a table littered with useless phials; and how,
-ere he had been ten minutes in the sunny morning air, amid the
-perfume of the roses, he was wildly summoned by Madelon Galbraith
-with white cheeks and affrighted eyes, back to the chamber of death
-it proved to be; for it was on the brow of Death he pressed his
-passionate kisses, and to ears that could hear no more he uttered his
-heartrending entreaties that she would not leave him, or would give
-him one farewell word; and ever after would the perfume of roses be
-associated in his mind with that morning--the most terrible one of
-his life!
-
-Beside Revelstoke Church--old, picturesque, and rendered comely by a
-wealth of luxuriant ivy that Time has wreathed around its hoary walls
-to flutter in the sea breeze--she was laid, and the heart of Lennard
-seemed to be buried with her.
-
-It is a lonely old building, spotted with lichens, worn by storms,
-and perched upon the verge of a low, rocky cliff, up which the salt
-spray comes at times to the burial-ground. It is near the end of
-Mothcombe Bay, where the shore makes a turn to the southward.
-
-Not a house is near it, the solitary hills and waves encompass it,
-and it is said that its smouldering tombstones would furnish ample
-matter for the 'meditations' of a Hervey. So there Flora was laid,
-and there Lennard was to be laid by her side when the time came.
-
-Her death hardened his heart more than ever against his own family,
-and he began almost to forget that he ever bore any other name than
-hers--his adopted one.
-
-In the kindness of his heart the major, as the lads--his son and
-nephew--grew up together, introduced both to neighbours and strangers
-equally as his sons, but most unwisely, as we shall ere long have to
-record.
-
-Neither to Florian nor to Shafto Gyle did he reveal his real name, or
-the story of the quarrel with his family and their work; thus in and
-about Revelstoke all three passed under the name of MacIan now.
-
-Madelon Galbraith, who had attended her mistress on her death-bed,
-and nursed her baby into boyhood, had now gone back to her native
-glen in the wilds of Ross. She proved, Lennard found, somewhat
-unfitted for the locality of Revelstoke, as her ways and ideas were
-foreign to those of the folks thereabouts; but she will have a
-prominent place in our story in the future.
-
-But long, long Madelon wept over Florian, and pressed him often to
-her breast--'the baby of her bairn,' as she had called him--for as
-she had nursed him, so had she nursed his mother before him in the
-days when the victorious Ross-shire Buffs set up their tents at
-Khooshab, on the plains of Persia.
-
-'Gude-by, calf of my heart,' were her parting words; 'I'll see ye yet
-again, Florian. If it were na for hope, the heart wad break!'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-DULCIE.
-
-All trace of Lennard Melfort had been obliterated at Craigengowan, we
-have said. He was never mentioned there, and though his family tried
-to think of him as dead, they did not quite succeed; but the
-disappearance of his name from the Army List first excited a little
-speculation, but no inquiry, until a terrible event occurred.
-
-The eldest son, the Hon. Cosmo, married the daughter of Lady
-Drumshoddy, thus securing her thousands, and did his best to console
-Lord and Lady Fettercairn for 'the disgrace' brought upon them by
-Lennard, and they regarded him quite as a model son.
-
-He shone as Chairman at all kinds of county meetings; became M.P. for
-a cluster of northern burghs, and was a typical Scottish member,
-mightily interested when such grand Imperial matters as the
-gravelling of Park Lane, the ducks on the Serpentine, and the
-improvements at Hyde Park Corner were before the House, but was
-oblivious of all Scottish interests, or that such a place as Scotland
-existed. When she wanted--like other parts of the empire--but never
-got them--grants for necessary purposes, the Hon. Cosmo was mute as a
-fish, or if he spoke it was to record his vote against them.
-
-Lennard saw in a chance newspaper, and with natural grief and dismay,
-that Cosmo had come to an untimely end when deer-stalking near
-Glentilt. He had wounded a large stag, the captain of its herd, and
-approached rashly or incautiously when the infuriated animal was at
-bay. It broke its bay, attacked him in turn, and ere the great
-shaggy hounds could tear it down, Cosmo was trampled under foot and
-gored to death by its horns.
-
-As Lennard read, his sad mind went to the scene where that death must
-have happened, under mighty Ben-y-gloe, where the kestrel builds his
-nest and the great mountain eagle has his eyry, and the Tilt comes
-thundering down over its precipices of grey rock. Never again would
-his eyes rest on such glorious scenes as these.
-
-Cosmo had left a little daughter, Finella, who took up her abode with
-her grandparents at Craigengowan, but no son, and Lennard knew that
-by this tragedy he was now the heir to the peerage, but he only gave
-a bitter sigh as he thought of Flora in her grave and made no sign.
-
-'Poor Cosmo,' he muttered, and forgetting for a time much that had
-occurred, and how completely Cosmo had leagued with father and mother
-against him, his memory went back to the pleasant days of their happy
-boyhood, when they rode, fished, and shot together, shared the same
-bedroom in Craigengowan, and conned their tasks from the same books.
-
-'Well, well,' he added, 'all that is over and done with long, long
-ago.'
-
-He made no sign, we say, but let time pass by, not foreseeing the
-complications that were eventually to arise by his doing so.
-
-Florian, born two years after the adoption of Shafto Gyle in his
-infancy, always regarded and looked up to the latter as a species of
-elder brother and undoubted senior.
-
-In his twentieth year Florian was really a handsome fellow, and if,
-without absurdity, the term 'beautiful' could be applied to a young
-man, he was so, in his perfect manliness. Tall in figure, hard and
-well developed in muscle, regular in features, he had clear, dark,
-honest eyes, with lashes like a girl's, and a dark, silky moustache.
-
-Shafto's face was in some respects handsome too, but an evil one to
-look at, in one way. His fair eyebrows were heavy, and had a way of
-meeting in a dark frown when he was thinking. His pale grey eyes
-were shifty, and were given him, like his tongue, to conceal rather
-than express his thoughts, for they were sharp and cunning. His
-nostrils were delicate, and, like his thin lips, suggestive of
-cruelty, while his massive jaw and thick neck were equally so--we
-must say almost to brutality.
-
-They were rather a contrast, these two young men--a contrast no less
-great in their dispositions and minds than in their outward
-appearance. They were so dissimilar--one being dark and the other
-fair--that no one would have taken them for brothers, as they were
-generally supposed to be, so affectionate was the Major to both, and
-both bearing his name in the locality.
-
-As a schoolboy Shafto had won an unpleasant reputation for jockeying
-his companions, 'doing' them out of toys, sweetmeats, marbles, and
-money, and for skilfully shifting punishments on the wrong shoulders
-when opportunity offered, and not unfrequently on those of the
-unsuspecting Florian.
-
-From some of his proclivities, the Major thought Shafto would make a
-good attorney, and so had him duly installed in the office of
-Lewellen Carlyon, the nearest village lawyer, while for his own boy,
-Florian, he had higher hopes and aspirations, to make him, like
-himself, a soldier; but though far from idle, or lacking application,
-Florian failed, under the insane high-pressure system of 'cramming,'
-to pass, and not a few--Shafto particularly--laid it to the account
-of a certain damsel, Dulcie by name, who was supposed, with some
-truth, to occupy too much of his thoughts.
-
-Disgusted by the result of his last 'exam.,' Florian would at once
-have enlisted, like so many others, who rush as privates for
-commissions nowadays; but his father's fast-failing health, his love
-for Dulcie Carlyon, and the desperate but 'Micawber'-like hope that
-'something would turn up,' kept him hanging on day by day aimlessly
-at Revelstoke, without even the apparent future that had opened to
-Shafto when elevated to a high stool in Lawyer Carlyon's office.
-
-As time went on, Lennard Melfort (or MacIan as he called himself),
-though he had a high appreciation of Shafto's sense, turn for
-business to all appearance, cleverness, and strength of character,
-turned with greater pleasure to his own son Florian, whose clear open
-brow and honest manly eyes bore nature's unmistakable impress of a
-truer nobility than ever appertained to the truculent and
-anti-national lords of Fettercairn.
-
-Though to all appearance the best of friends before the world, the
-cousins were rivals; but as Florian was the successful lover, Shafto
-had a good basis for bitterness, if not secret hate.
-
-In common with the few neighbours who were in that sequestered
-quarter, the lawyer liked the Major--he was so gentle, suave,
-retiring in manner, and courteously polite. He liked Florian too,
-but deemed him idle, and there his liking ended.
-
-He took Shafto into his office at the Major's urgent request, as a
-species of apprentice, but he--after the aphorism of 'Dr. Fell'--did
-not much affect the young man, though he found him sharp enough--too
-sharp at times; and, like most of the neighbours, he never cared to
-inquire into the precise relationship of the Major and the two lads,
-both of whom from boyhood had called the latter 'Papa.'
-
-Dulcie Carlyon was the belle of the limited circle in which she
-moved, and a very limited circle it was; but she was pretty enough to
-have been the belle of a much larger orbit; for she was the very
-ideal of a sweet, bright English girl, now nearly in her eighteenth
-year, and the boy and girl romance in the lives of her and Florian
-had lasted since they were children and playmates together, and they
-seemed now to regard each other with 'the love that is given once in
-a lifetime.'
-
-'Could I but separate these two!' muttered Shafto, as with eyes full
-of envy and evil he watched one of their meetings, amid the bushes
-that fringed an old quarry not far from Revelstoke Church.
-
-From the summit where he lurked there was a magnificent view of the
-sea and the surrounding country. On one hand lay the lonely old
-church and all the solitary hills that overlook its wave-beaten
-promontory; on the other were the white-crested waves of the British
-Channel, rolling in sunshine; but Shafto saw only the face and figure
-of Dulcie Carlyon, who was clad just as he was fond of picturing her,
-in a jacket of navy blue, fastened with gilt buttons, and a skirt
-with clinging folds of the same--a costume which invests an English
-girl with an air equally nautical and coquettish. Dulcie's dresses
-always fitted her exquisitely, and her small head, with smart hat and
-feather, set gracefully on her shapely shoulders, had just a
-_soupçon_ of pride in its contour and bearing.
-
-Slender in figure, with that lovely flower-like complexion which is
-so peculiarly English, Dulcie had regular and delicate features, with
-eyes deeply and beautifully blue, reddish-golden hair, a laughing
-mouth that some thought too large for perfect beauty, but it was
-fully redeemed by its vivid colour and faultless teeth.
-
-'Could I but separate them!' muttered Shafto, through his clenched
-teeth, while their murmured words and mutual caresses maddened him.
-
-Dulcie was laughingly kissing a likeness in an open locket which
-Florian had just given her--a likeness, no doubt, of himself--and she
-did so repeatedly, and ever and anon held it admiringly at arm's
-length. Then she closed it, and Florian clasped the flat silver
-necklet to which it was attached round her slender white throat; and
-with a bright fond smile she concealed it among the lace frilling of
-her collarette, and let the locket, for security, drop into the cleft
-of her bosom, little foreseeing the part it was yet to play in her
-life.
-
-Shafto's face would not have been pleasant to look upon as he saw
-this episode, and his shifty grey eyes grew pea-green in hue as he
-watched it.
-
-'Oh, Dulcie!' exclaimed Florian, with a kind of boyish rapture, as he
-placed a hand on each of her shoulders and gazed into her eyes, 'I am
-most terribly in love with you.'
-
-'Why should there be any terror in it?' asked Dulcie, with a sweet
-silvery laugh.
-
-'Well, I feel so full of joy in having your love, and being always
-with you, that--that a fear comes over me lest we should be some day
-parted.'
-
-'Who can part us but ourselves?' said she with a pretty pout, while
-her long lashes drooped.
-
-'Dulcie,' said he, after a little pause, 'have you ever had an
-emotion that comes uncalled for--that which people call a
-presentiment?'
-
-'Yes; often.'
-
-'Has it ever come true?'
-
-'Sometimes.'
-
-'Well--I have a presentiment this evening which tells me that
-something is about to happen to me--to us--and very soon too!'
-
-'What can happen to us--we are so happy?' said Dulcie, her blue eyes
-dilating.
-
-Did the vicinity of Shafto, though unknown to Florian, mysteriously
-prompt this thought--this boding fear. Shafto heard the words, and a
-strange smile spread over his face as he shook his clenched hand at
-the absorbed pair, and stole away from his hiding-place, leaving two
-foolish hearts full of a foolish dream from which they might be
-roughly awakened--leaving the happy Florian, with that sweet and
-winsome Dulcie whom he loved, and with whom he had played even as a
-child; with whom he had shared many a pot of clotted cream; with whom
-he had fished for trout in the Erme and Yealm; explored with fearful
-steps and awe-stricken heart the cavern there, where lie thick the
-fossil bones of the elephant, hyæna, and wolf; and wandered for hours
-by the moors, among mossy rocks and mossy trees, and in woody
-labyrinthine lanes, and many a time and oft by the sea shore, where
-the cliffs are upheaved and contorted in a manner beyond description,
-but so loosely bound together that waves rend them asunder, and shape
-them into forms like ruined castles and stranded ships; till, as
-years went on, heart had spoken to heart; boy and girl life had been
-left behind; and that dream-time came in which they seemed to live
-for years.
-
-No one could accuse Dulcie Carlyon of coquetry, her nature was too
-truthful and open for that; thus she had never for a moment wavered
-in her preference between Florian and Shafto, and spent with the
-former those bright and hopeful hours that seldom come again with the
-same keen intensity in a lifetime, though often clouded by vague
-doubts.
-
-As yet they had led a kind of Paul and Virginia life, without very
-defined ideas of their future; in fact, perhaps scarcely considering
-what that future might be.
-
-They only knew, like the impassioned boy and girl in the beautiful
-story of Bernardin St. Pierre, that they loved each other very
-dearly, and for the sweet present that sufficed; while cunning Shafto
-Gyle looked darkly, gloomily, and enviously on them.
-
-Perhaps it was his fast failing health that prevented Lennard Melfort
-from looking more closely into this matter, or it may be that he
-remembered the youthful love of his own heart; for he could never
-forget her whom he was so soon to join now, and who, 'after life's
-fitful fever,' slept by the grey wall of Revelstoke, within sound of
-the restless sea.
-
-Dulcie's father, Lawyer Carlyon, heard rumours of these meetings and
-rambles, and probably liked them as little as the Major did; but he
-was a busy man absorbed in his work, and had been used to seeing the
-pair together since they were toddling children. Lennard, perhaps,
-thought it was as well to let them alone, as nothing would come of
-it, while the lawyer treated it surlily as a kind of joke.
-
-'Why, Dulcie, my girl,' said he one day, 'what is to be the end of
-all this philandering but spoiling your own market, perhaps? Do you
-expect a young fellow to marry you who has no money, no prospects, no
-position in the world?'
-
-'Position he has,' said poor Dulcie, blushing painfully, for though
-an only and motherless child she stood in awe of her father.
-
-'Position--a deuced bad one, I think!'
-
-'The other two items will come in time, papa,' said Dulcie, laughing
-now.
-
-'When?'
-
-Dulcie was silent, and--for the first time in her life--thought
-sadly, 'Yes, when!' But she pressed a pretty white hand upon the
-silver locket in her bosom, as if to draw courage therefrom as from
-an amulet.
-
-'Why, lass, he can't keep even the roof of a _cob_ cottage over your
-head.'
-
-'Well, papa, remember our hopeful Devonshire proverb--a good cob, a
-good hat and shoes, and a good heart last for ever.'
-
-'Right, lass, and a good heart have you, my darling,' said Mr.
-Carlyon, kissing her peach-like cheek, for he was a kind and
-good-hearted man, though somewhat rough in his exterior, and more
-like a grazier than a lawyer. 'You are both too young to know what
-you are talking about. He'll be going away, however--can't live
-always on his father, and _he_, poor fellow, won't last long. The
-fancy of you both will wear itself out, like any other summer
-flirtation--I had many such in my time,' he added, with a chuckle,
-'and got safely over them all. So will you, lass, and marry into
-some good family, getting a husband that will give you a comfortable
-home--for instance, Job Holbeton, with his pits of Bovey coal.'
-
-Poor little Dulcie shivered, and could scarcely restrain her tears at
-the hard, practical suggestions of her father. Hard-featured, stout,
-and grizzled Joe Holbeton versus her handsome Florian!
-
-Her father spoke, too, of his probable 'going away.' Was this the
-presentiment to which her lover had referred? It almost seemed so.
-
-In the sunset she went forth into the garden to work with her wools,
-and even to have a 'good cry' over what her father had said; but in
-this she was prevented by suddenly finding Shafto stretched on the
-grass at her feet under a pine chestnut-tree--Shafto, whom she could
-only tolerate for Florian's sake.
-
-'Why do you stare at me so hard, Shafto,' she asked, with unconcealed
-annoyance.
-
-'Staring, was I?'
-
-'Yes, like an owl.'
-
-'I always like to see girls working.'
-
-'Indeed!'
-
-'And the work, what do you call it?'
-
-'Crewel work. And you like to see us busy?'
-
-'Yes, especially when the work is done by hands so pretty and white.'
-
-'As mine, you mean, of course?'
-
-'Yes, Dulcie. How you do bewilder a fellow!'
-
-'Don't begin as usual to pay me clumsy compliments, Shafto, or I
-shall quit the garden,' said Dulcie, her blue eyes looking with a
-half-frightened, half-defiant expression into the keen, shifty, and
-pale grey ones of Shafto, who was somewhat given to persecuting her.
-
-He could see the outline of the locket with every respiration of her
-bosom. Could he but possess himself of it, thought he, as he
-proceeded to fill his meerschaum pipe.
-
-'I thought gentlemen did not smoke in ladies' society unless with
-permission,' said Dulcie.
-
-'Never bother about that, little one, please. But may I smoke?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Thanks; this is jolly,' said he, looking up at her with eyes full of
-admiration. 'I feel like Hercules at the feet of Omphale.'
-
-'I don't know who he was, or what you feel, but do you know what you
-look like?'
-
-'No.'
-
-'Shall I tell you?' asked Dulcie, her eyes sparkling with mischief.
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Well, like the Athenian weaver, Bottom, with his ass's head, at the
-feet of Titania. "Dost like the picture?"'
-
-Shafto eyed her spitefully, all the more so that Dulcie laughed
-merrily, showing all her pearly teeth at her reply.
-
-'Oho, this comes of rambling in quarries,' said he, bluntly and
-coarsely; 'doing the Huguenot business, the _pose_ of Millais'
-picture. Bosh! What can you and he mean?'
-
-'Millais and I?'
-
-'No; you and Florian!'
-
-'Mean!' exclaimed Dulcie, her sweet face growing very pale in spite
-of herself at the bluntness of Shafto, and the unmistakable anger of
-his tone and bearing.
-
-'Yes--with your tomfoolery.'
-
-'How?--why?'
-
-'Penniless as you are--he at least.'
-
-'Good evening, Shafto; you are very unpleasant, to say the least of
-it,' said Dulcie, as she gathered up her wools and sailed into the
-house, while his eyes followed her with a menacing and very ugly
-expression indeed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE SECRET PACKET.
-
-The broken health brought by Lennard from the miasmatic Terai of
-Nepaul was rapidly becoming more broken than ever, and, though not
-yet fifty, he was a premature old man, and it seemed as if the first
-part of Florian's presentiment or prevision of coming sorrow would
-soon be fulfilled.
-
-His steps became very feeble, and he could only get about, in the
-autumn sunshine, with the aid of a stick and Florian's arm; and the
-latter watched him with grief and pain, tottering like the aged,
-panting and leaning heavily on his cane, as ever and anon he insisted
-on being led up a steep slope from which he could clearly see the old
-church of Revelstoke on its wave-beaten promontory, overlooked by sad
-and solitary hills, and his hollow eyes glistened as he gazed on it,
-with a kind of yearning expression, as if he longed to be at peace,
-and by the side of her he had laid there, it seemed long years ago--a
-lifetime ago.
-
-Poor Lennard was certainly near his tomb, and all who looked upon him
-thought so; yet his calm eye, ever looking upward, betrayed no fear.
-
-One day when Florian was absent--no doubt sketching, boating with
-Dulcie on the Yealm, or idling with her on the moors--Lennard
-besought Shafto to stay beside him as he sat feeble and languid in
-his easy chair, sinking with the wasting and internal fever, with
-which the country practitioners were totally incapable of grappling;
-and on this day, for the first time, he began to speak to him of
-Scotland and the home he once had there; and he was listened to with
-the keenest interest by Shafto, who had ever--even as a child--been
-cunning, selfish, and avaricious, yet wonderfully clever and
-complaisant in his uncle's prejudiced eyes, as he remembered only
-Flora's dead and devoted sister.
-
-'I have been thinking over old times and other days, Shafto,' said
-he, with his attenuated hands crossed on the head of his bamboo cane;
-'and, all things considered, it seems an occupation I had better
-avoid did the memory concern myself alone: but I must think of others
-and their interests--of Florian and of you--so I can't help it, boy,
-in my present state of health, or rather want of health,' he added,
-as a violent fit of spasmodic coughing came upon him.
-
-After a pause he spoke again.
-
-'You, Shafto, are a couple of years older than Florian, and are, in
-many ways, several years older in thought and experience by the short
-training you have received in Carlyon's office.'
-
-The Major paused again, leaving Shafto full of wonder and curiosity
-as to what this preamble was leading up to.
-
-The former had begun to see things more clearly and temperately with
-regard to the sudden death of Cosmo, and to feel that, though he had
-renounced all family ties, name, and wealth, so far as concerned
-himself, to die, with the secret of all untold, would be to inflict a
-cruel wrong on Florian. At one time Lennard thought of putting his
-papers and the whole matter in the hands of Mr. Lewellen Carlyon, and
-it was a pity he did not do so instead of choosing to entrust them to
-his long-headed nephew.
-
-'Hand here my desk, and unlock it for me--my hands are so tremulous,'
-said he.
-
-When this was done he selected a packet from a private drawer, and
-briefly and rapidly told the story of his life, his proper name, and
-rank to Shafto, who listened with open-eyed amazement.
-
-When the latter had thoroughly digested the whole information, he
-said, after a long pause:
-
-'This must be told to Florian!'
-
-And with Florian came the thought of Dulcie, and how this sudden
-accession of her lover to fortune and position would affect her.
-
-'Nay, Shafto--not yet--not till I am gone--a short time now. I can
-trust you, with your sharpness and legal acumen, with the handling of
-this matter entirely. When I am gone, and laid beside your aunt
-Flora, by the wall of the old church yonder,' he continued with a
-very broken voice--one almost a childish treble, 'you will seek the
-person to whom this packet is addressed, Kenneth Kippilaw, a Writer
-to the Signet in Edinburgh--he is alive still; place these in his
-hands, and he will do all that is required; but treasure them,
-Shafto--be careful of them as you would of your soul's salvation--for
-my sake, and more than all for the sake of Florian! Now, my good
-lad, give me the composing draught--I feel sleepy and so weary with
-all this talking, and the thoughts that have come unbidden--unbidden,
-sad, bitter, and angry thoughts--to memory.'
-
-Shafto locked the desk, put it aside, and, giving his uncle the
-draught, stole softly away to his own room with the papers, to con
-them over and to--think!
-
-He had not sat at a desk for three years in Lawyer Carlyon's office
-without having his wits sharpened. He paused as he put the documents
-away.
-
-'Stop--stop--let me think, let me consider!' he exclaimed to himself,
-and he certainly did consider to some purpose. He was cold and
-calculating; he was never unusually agitated or flustered, but he
-became both with the thoughts that occurred to him now.
-
-Among the papers and letters entrusted to him were the certificates
-of the marriage of Lennard and Flora, and another which ran thus:
-
-'Certificate of entry of birth, under section 37 of 17 and 18 Vict.,
-cap. 80.' It authenticated the birth of their child Florian at
-Revelstoke, with the date thereof to a minute.
-
-These documents were enclosed in a letter written in a tremulous and
-uncertain hand by Lennard Melfort to Mr. Kenneth Kippilaw, part of
-which was in these terms:
-
-The child was baptized by a neighbouring clergyman--the Rev. Paul
-Pentreath--who has faithfully kept the promise of secrecy he gave me,
-and, dying as I now feel myself to be, I pray earnestly that my
-father and mother will be kind to my orphan son. Let them not--as
-they one day hope for mercy at that dread throne before which I am
-soon to appear--visit upon his innocent head my supposed and most
-heavily punished offence. Let him succeed in poor Cosmo's place to
-that which is his due; let him succeed to all I renounced in
-anger--an anger that has passed away, for now, my dear old friend, I
-am aged beyond my years, and my hair is now white as snow through
-ill-health contracted in India, where, to procure money necessary for
-my poor Flora, I volunteered on desperate service, and in seasons
-destructive to existence. In your hands I leave the matter with
-perfect hope and confidence. The bearer will tell you all more that
-may be necessary.'
-
-After having read, reread, and made himself thoroughly master of the
-contents of this to him certainly most astounding packet, he
-requested the Major to re-address it in his own tremulous and all but
-illegible handwriting, and seal it up with his long-disused signet
-ring, which bore the arms of Fettercairn.
-
-Prior to having all this done, Shafto had operated on one of the
-documents most dexterously and destructively with his pen-knife!
-
-'A peerage! a peerage!--rank, wealth, money, mine--all mine!' he
-muttered under his breath, as he stored the packet away in a sure and
-secret place, and while whistling softly to himself, a way he had
-when brooding (as he often did) over mischief, he recalled the lines
-of Robert Herrick:
-
- 'Our life is like a narrow raft,
- Afloat upon the hungry sea;
- Hereon is but a little space,
- And all men, eager for a place,
- Do thrust each other in the sea.'
-
-'So why should I not thrust him into the hungry briny? If life is a
-raft--and, by Jove, I find it so!--why should one not grasp at all
-one can, and make the best of life for one's self, by making the
-worst of it for other folks? Does such a chance of winning rank and
-wealth come often to any one's hands? No! and I should be the
-biggest of fools--the most enormous of idiots--not to avail myself to
-the fullest extent. I see my little game clearly, but must play
-warily. "Eat, drink, and be merry," says Isaiah, "for to-morrow we
-die." They say the devil can quote Scripture, and so can Shafto
-Gyle. But I don't mean to die to-morrow, but to have a jolly good
-spell for many a year to come!'
-
-And in the wild exuberance of his spirits he tossed his hat again and
-again to the ceiling.
-
-From that day forward the health of Lennard Melfort seemed to decline
-more rapidly, and erelong he was compelled by the chill winds of the
-season to remain in bed, quite unable to take his place at table or
-move about, save when wheeled in a chair to the window, where he
-loved to watch the setting sun.
-
-Then came one evening when, for the last time, he begged to be
-propped up there in his pillowed chair. The sun was setting over
-Revelstoke Church, and throwing its picturesque outline strongly
-forward, in a dark indigo tint, against the golden and crimson flush
-of the west, and all the waves around the promontory were glittering
-in light.
-
-But Lennard saw nothing of all this, though he felt the feeble warmth
-of the wintry sun as he stretched his thin, worn hands towards it;
-his eyesight was gone, and would never come again! There was
-something very pathetic in the withered face and sightless eyes, and
-the drooping white moustache that had once been a rich dark-brown,
-and waxed _à l'Empereur_.
-
-His dream of life was over, and his last mutterings were a prayer for
-Florian, on whose breast his head lay as he breathed his last.
-
-The two lads looked at each other in that supreme moment--but with
-very different thoughts in their hearts. Florian felt only
-desolation, blank and utter, and even Shafto, in the awful presence
-of Death, felt alone in the world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-A FAREWELL.
-
-As he lay dead, that old-looking, wasted, and attenuated man, whose
-hair was like the thistledown, none would have recognised in him the
-dark-haired, bronzed, and joyous young subaltern who only twenty-four
-years before had led his company at the storming of the Redan, who
-had planted the scaling-ladder against the scarp, and shouted in a
-voice heard even amid the roar of the adverse musketry:
-
-'Come on, men! ladders to the front, eight men per ladder; up and at
-them, lads, with the bayonet,' and fought his way into an embrasure,
-while round-shot tore up the earth beneath his feet, and men were
-swept away in sections of twenty; or the hardy soldier who faced
-fever and foes alike in the Terai of Nepaul.
-
-How still and peaceful he lay now as the coffin-lid was closed over
-him.
-
-Snow-flakes, light and feathery, fell on the hard ground, and the
-waves seemed to leap and sob heavily round the old church of
-Revelstoke, when Lennard Melfort was laid beside the now old and
-flattened grave of Flora, and keen and sharp the frosty wind lifted
-the silver hair of the Rev. Paul Pentreath, whistled among the ivy or
-on the buttresses, and fluttered the black ribbon of the pall held by
-Florian, who felt as one in a dreadful dream--amid a dread and unreal
-phantasmagoria; and the same wind seemed to twitch angrily the
-pall-ribbon from the hand of Shafto, nor could he by any effort
-recover it, as more than one present, with their Devonian
-superstition, remarked, and remembered when other things came to pass.
-
-At last all was over; the mourners departed, and Lennard Melfort was
-left alone--alone with the dead of yesterday and of ages; and
-Florian, while Dulcie was by his side and pressed his hand, strove to
-commit to memory the curate's words from the Book of Revelation,
-'There shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor sighing; for God
-shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.'
-
-Shafto now let little time pass before he proceeded to inform Florian
-of what he called their 'relative position,' and of their journey
-into Scotland to search out Mr. Kippilaw.
-
-It has been said that in life we have sometimes moments so full of
-emotion that they seem to mark a turn in it we can never reach again;
-and this sharp turn, young and startled Florian seemed to pass, when
-he learned that since infancy he had been misled, and that the man,
-so tender and so loving, whom he had deemed his father was but his
-uncle!
-
-How came it all to pass now? Yet the old Major had ever been so kind
-and affectionate to him--to both, in fact, equally so, treating them
-as his sons--that he felt only a stunning surprise, a crushing grief
-and bitter mortification, but not a vestige of anger; his love for
-the dead was too keen and deep for that.
-
-The packet, sealed and addressed to Mr. Kippilaw, though its contents
-were as yet unknown to him, seemed to corroborate the strange
-intelligence of Shafto; but the question naturally occurred to
-Florian, 'For what end or purpose had this lifelong mystery and
-change in their positions been brought about?'
-
-He asked this of Shafto again and again.
-
-'It seems we have been very curiously deluded,' said that personage,
-not daring to look the sorrowful Florian straight in the face, and
-pretended to be intent on stuffing his pipe.
-
-'Deluded--how?'
-
-'How often am I to tell you,' exclaimed Shafto, with petulance and
-assumed irritation, 'that the contents of this packet prove that _I_
-am the only son of Major Melfort (not MacIan at all), and that
-you--you----'
-
-'What?'
-
-'Are Florian Gyle, the nephew--adopted as a son. Mr. Kippilaw will
-tell you all about it.'
-
-'And you, Shafto?' queried Florian, scarcely knowing, in his
-bewilderment, what he said.
-
-'Mean to go in for my proper position--my title, and all that sort of
-thing, don't you see?'
-
-'And act--how!'
-
-'Not the proverbial beggar on horseback, I hope. I'll do something
-handsome for you, of course.'
-
-'I want nothing done for me while I have two hands, Shafto.'
-
-'As you please,' replied the latter, puffing vigorously at his pipe.
-'I have had enough of hopeless drudgery for a quarterly pittance in
-the dingy office of old Carlyon,' said he, after a long pause; 'and,
-by all the devils, I'll have no more of it now that I am going to be
-rich.'
-
-Indeed, from the day of Lennard Melfort entrusting him with the
-packet, Shafto had done little else at the office but study the laws
-of succession in Scotland and England.
-
-'How much you love money, Shafto!' said Florian, eying him wistfully.
-
-'Do I? Well, I suppose that comes from having had so precious little
-of it in my time. I am a poor devil just now, but,' thought he
-exultantly, 'this "plant" achieved successfully, how many matrons
-with daughters unmarried will all be anxious to be mother to me! And
-Dulcie Carlyon I might have for asking; but I'll fly at higher game
-now, by Jove!'
-
-As further credentials, Shafto now possessed himself of Major
-Melfort's sword, commissions, and medals, while Florian looked in
-blank dismay and growing mortification--puzzled by the new position
-in which he found himself, of being no longer his father's son--a
-source of unfathomable mystery.
-
-Shafto was in great haste to be gone, to leave Revelstoke and its
-vicinity behind him. It was too late for regrets or repentance now.
-Not that he felt either, we suppose; and what he had done he would do
-again if there was no chance of being found out. In the growing
-exuberance of his spirits, he could not help, a day or two after,
-taunting Florian about Dulcie till they were on the verge of a
-quarrel, and wound up by saying, with a scornful laugh:
-
-'You can't marry her--a fellow without a shilling in the world; and I
-wouldn't now, if she would have me, which I don't doubt.'
-
-Poor Dulcie! She heard with undisguised grief and astonishment of
-these events, and of the approaching departure of the cousins.
-
-The cottage home was being broken up; the dear old Major was in his
-grave; and Florian, the playmate of her infancy, the lover of her
-girlhood, was going away--she scarcely knew to where. They might be
-permitted to correspond by letter, but when, thought Dulcie--oh, when
-should they meet again?
-
-The sun was shedding its light and warmth around her as usual, on
-woodland and hill, on wave and rock; but both seemed to fade out, the
-perfume to pass from the early spring flowers, the glory from land
-and sea, and a dim mist of passionate tears clouded the sweet and
-tender blue eyes of the affectionate girl.
-
-He would return, he said, as he strove to console her; but how and
-when, and to what end? thought both so despairingly. Their future
-seemed such a vague, a blank one!
-
-'I am penniless, Dulcie--a beggar on the face of the earth--twice
-beggared now, I think!' exclaimed Florian, in sorrowful bitterness.
-
-'Don't speak thus,' said she imploringly, with piteous lips that were
-tremulous as his own, and her eyes drowned in tears.
-
-They had left the road now, and wandered among the trees in a
-thicket, and seated themselves on a fallen trunk, a seat and place
-endeared to them and familiar enough in past time.
-
-He gazed into her eyes of deep pansy-blue, as if his own were
-striving to take away a memory of her face--a memory that would last
-for eternity.
-
-'And you really go to-night?' she asked, in piteous and broken
-accents.
-
-'Yes--with Shafto. I am in a fever, darling, to seek out a position
-for myself. Surely Shafto may assist me in that--though I shrink
-from asking him.'
-
-'Your own cousin?'
-
-'Yes--but sometimes he looks like a supplanter now, and his bearing
-has been so unpleasant to me, especially of late,' said Florian.
-'But you will wait for me, Dulcie, and not be persuaded to marry
-anyone else?' he added imploringly, as he clasped each of her hands
-in his.
-
-'I shall wait for you, Florian, if it should be for twenty years!'
-exclaimed the girl, in a low and emphatic voice, scarcely considering
-the magnitude and peril of such a promise.
-
-'Thank you, darling Dulcie!' said he bending down and kissing her
-lips with ardour, and, though on the eve of parting, they felt almost
-happy in the confidence of the blissful present.
-
-'How often shall I recall this last meeting by the fallen tree, when
-you are far, far away from Revelstoke and--me,' said Dulcie.
-
-'You will often come here to be reminded of me?'
-
-'Do you think, Florian, I will require to be reminded of you?' asked
-the girl, with a little tone of pain in her sweet voice, as she
-kissed the silver locket containing his likeness, and all the sweet
-iteration of lover-talk, promises, and pledges went on for a time,
-and new hopes began to render this last interview more bearable to
-the young pair who were on the eve of separation, without any very
-distinct arrangement about correspondence in the interval of it.
-
-The sun was setting now redly, and amid dun winter clouds, beaming on
-each chimney-head, on Revelstoke Church, and the leafless tree-tops
-his farewell radiance.
-
-Florian took a long, long kiss from Dulcie, and with the emotion of a
-wrench in his heart, was gone, and she was alone.
-
-A photo and a lock of red-golden hair were all that remained to him
-of her--both to be looked upon again and again, till his eyes ached,
-but never grew weary.
-
-Dulcie's were very red with weeping, and the memory of that parting
-kiss was still hovering on her quivering lips when, in a lonely lane
-not far from her home, she found herself suddenly face to face with
-Shafto.
-
-She had known him from his boyhood, ever since he came an orphan to
-Lennard Melfort's cottage; and although she always distrusted and
-never liked him, his face was a familiar one she might never see
-more; thus she resolved to part with him as with the best of friends,
-and to remember that he was the only kinsman of Florian, whose
-companion and fellow-traveller he was to be on a journey the end of
-which she scarcely understood. So, frankly and sweetly, with a sad
-smile in her eyes, she proffered her pretty hand, which Shafto
-grasped and retained promptly enough.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE SILVER LOCKET.
-
-Shafto had just been with her father. How contemptuously he had eyed
-the corner and the high old stool on which he had sat in the latter's
-legal establishment, and all its surroundings; the fly-blown county
-maps of Devon and Cornwall; advertisements of sales--property,
-mangold wurzel, oats and hay, Thorley's food for cattle, and so
-forth; the tin boxes of most legal aspect; dockets of papers in red
-tape; the well-thumbed ledgers; day and letter books, and all the
-paraphernalia of a country solicitor's office.
-
-Ugh! How well he knew and loathed them all. Now it was all over and
-done with.
-
-The three poor lads in the office, whose cheap cigars and beer he had
-often shared at the Ashburton Arms, he barely condescended to notice,
-while they regarded him with something akin to awe, as he gave Lawyer
-Carlyon his final 'instructions' concerning the disposal of the lease
-of the Major's pretty cottage, and of all the goods and chattels that
-were therein.
-
-Had Florian been present he would have felt only shame and abasement
-at the tone and manner Shafto adopted on this occasion; but worthy
-Lawyer Carlyon, who did not believe a bit in the rumoured accession
-of Shafto to family rank and wealth, laughed softly to himself, and
-thought his 'pride would have a sore fall one of these fine days.'
-
-And even now, when face to face with Dulcie, his general bearing, his
-coolness and insouciance, rendered her, amid all her grief, indignant
-and defiant ultimately.
-
-How piquant, compact, and perfect the girl looked, from the smart
-scarlet feather in her little hat to her tiny Balmoral boots. Her
-veil was tightly tied across her face, showing only the tip of her
-nose, her ripe red lips, and pretty white chin--its point, like her
-cheeks, reddened somewhat by the winter breeze from the Channel. Her
-gloved hands were in her small muff, and the collar of her sealskin
-jacket was encircled by the necklet at which her silver locket
-hung--the locket Shafto had seen her kiss when Florian had bestowed
-it on her, while he looked close by, with his heart full of envy,
-jealousy, and hatred, and now it was the first thing that attracted
-his eye.
-
-'And you actually leave us to-night, Shafto?' she said softly.
-
-'Yes, Dulcie, by the train for Worcester and the north. My estates,
-you know, are in Scotland.'
-
-'These changes are all strange and most startling,' said she, with a
-sob in her slender throat.
-
-'We live in whirligig times, Dulcie; but I suppose it is the result
-of progress,' he added sententiously. 'I wonder how our grandfathers
-and grandmothers contrived to mope over and yawn out their dull and
-emotionless existence till they reached threescore and ten years.'
-
-'I shall never see that age, Shafto.'
-
-'Who knows; though life, however sweet now, won't be worth living for
-then, I fancy.'
-
-Dulcie sighed, and he regarded her in admiring silence, for he had a
-high appreciation of her bright and delicate beauty, and loved
-her--if we may degrade the phrase--in his own selfish and peculiar
-way, though now resolved--as he had often thought vainly--to 'fly at
-higher game;' and so, full of ideas, hopes, and ambitions of his own,
-if he had ceased to think of Dulcie, he had, at least, ceased for a
-space to trouble her.
-
-'Florian will be writing to you, of course?' said he, after a pause.
-
-'Alas! no, we have made no arrangement; and then, you know, papa----'
-
-'Wouldn't approve, of course. My farewell advice to you, Dulcie,
-is--Don't put off your time thinking of Florian--his ship will never
-come home.'
-
-'Nor yours either, perhaps,' said Dulcie, angrily.
-
-'You think so--but you are wrong.'
-
-'Ah! I know these waited for ships rarely do.'
-
-'I have read somewhere that ships of the kind rarely do come home in
-this prosaic and disappointing world; that some get wrecked almost
-within sight of land; others go down without the flapping of a sail,
-and sometimes after long and firm battling with adverse winds and
-tides; but _my ship_ is a sure craft, Dulcie,' he added, as he
-thought of the packet in his possession--that precious packet on
-which all his hopes rested and his daring ambition was founded.
-
-Dulcie looked at him wistfully and distrustfully, and thought--
-
-'Why is he so sure? But his ideas were always selfish and evil.
-Tide what may,' she added aloud, 'I shall wait twenty years and more
-for Florian.'
-
-'The more fool you, then! And so die an old maid?'
-
-'I am, perhaps, cut out for an old maid.'
-
-'And if he never can marry you--or marries some one else when he
-can?' asked Shafto viciously.
-
-'Oh, then I'll take to æstheticism, or women's rights, and all that
-sort of thing,' said the poor girl, with a ghastly and defiant
-attempt at a jest, which ended in tears, while Shafto eyed her
-angrily.
-
-'How fond you are of that silver locket--you never wear any other!'
-
-'I have so few ornaments, Shafto.'
-
-'And none you prize so much?'
-
-'None!' said Dulcie, with a sweet, sad smile.
-
-'Is that the reason you wear it with all kinds of dresses? What is
-in it--anything?'
-
-'That is my secret,' replied Dulcie, putting her right hand on it and
-instinctively drawing back a pace, for there was a menacing
-expression in the cold grey eyes of Shafto.
-
-'Allow me to open it,' said he, taking her hand in his.
-
-'No.'
-
-'You shall!'
-
-'Never!' exclaimed Dulcie, her eyes sparkling now as his grasp upon
-her hand tightened.
-
-An imprecation escaped Shafto, and with his eyes aflame and his
-cheeks pale with jealousy and rage he tore her hand aside and
-wrenched by brutal force the locket from her, breaking the silver
-necklet as he did so.
-
-'Coward!' exclaimed Dulcie; 'coward and thief--how dare you?
-Surrender that locket instantly!'
-
-'Not if I know it,' said he, mockingly, holding the prized trinket
-before her at arm's length.
-
-'But for Florian's sake, I would at once apply to the police.'
-
-'A vulgar resort--no, my pretty Dulcie, you wouldn't.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'Not for Florian's sake?'
-
-'Whose, then?'
-
-'Your own, for you wouldn't like to have your old pump of a father
-down on you; and so you dare not make a row about it, my pretty
-little fury.'
-
-'Shafto, I entreat you, give me back that photo,' said Dulcie, her
-tears welling forth.
-
-'No; I won't.'
-
-'Of what interest or use can it be to you?'
-
-'More than you imagine,' said Shafto, to whom a villainous idea just
-then occurred.
-
-'I entreat you,' said Dulcie, letting her muff drop and clasping her
-slim little hands.
-
-'Entreat away! I feel deucedly inclined to put my heel upon it--but
-I won't.'
-
-'This robbery is cruel and infamous!' exclaimed Dulcie, trembling
-with grief and just indignation; but Shafto only laughed in anger and
-bitterness--and a very hyena-like laugh it was, and as some one was
-coming down the secluded lane, he turned away and left her in the
-twilight.
-
-He felt himself safe from opprobrium and punishment, as he knew well
-she was loth to make any complaint to her father on the subject; and
-just then she knew not how to communicate with Florian, as the
-darkness was falling fast, and the hour of his departure was close at
-hand. She thought it not improbable that Shafto would relent and
-return the locket to her; but the night was far advanced ere that
-hope was dissipated, and she attained some outward appearance of
-composure, though her father's sharp and affectionate eyes detected
-that she had been suffering.
-
-He had heard from her some confused and rambling story about the
-family secret, the packet, and the peerage, a story of which he could
-make nothing, though Shafto's bearing to himself that evening seemed
-to confirm the idea that 'there was something in it.' Anyway, Mr.
-Carlyon was not indisposed to turn the event to account in one sense.
-
-'Likely--likely enough, Dulcie lass,' said he; 'and so you'll hear no
-more of these two lads, if they are likely to become great folks, and
-belong to what is called the upper ten; they'll never think again of
-a poor village belle like you, though there is not a prettier face in
-all Devonshire than my Dulcie's from Lyme Regis to Cawsand Bay.'
-
-He meant this kindly, and spoke with a purpose; and his words and the
-warning they conveyed sank bitterly into the tender heart of poor
-Dulcie.
-
-By this time the cousins were sweeping through the darkness in the
-express train by Exeter, Taunton, and so forth; both were very
-silent, and each was full of his own thoughts, and what these were
-the reader may very well imagine.
-
-Heedless of the covert and sneering smiles of Shafto, Florian, from
-time to time, drew forth the photo of Dulcie, and her shining lock of
-red-golden hair, his sole links between the past and the present; and
-already he felt as if a score of years had lapsed since they sat side
-by side upon the fallen tree.
-
-Then, that he might give his whole thoughts to Dulcie, he affected to
-sleep; but Shafto did not sleep for hours. He sat quietly enough
-with his face in shadow, his travelling-cap of tweed-check pulled
-well down over his watchful and shifty grey-green eyes, the lamp
-overhead giving a miserable glimmer suited to the concealment of
-expression and thought; and as the swift train sped northward, the
-cousins addressed not a word to each other concerning those they had
-left behind, what was before them, or anything else.
-
-After a time, Shafto really slept--slept the slumber which is
-supposed to be the reward of the just and conscientious, but which is
-much more often enjoyed by those who have no conscience at all.
-
-Dulcie contrived to despatch a letter to Florian detailing the
-outrage to which she had been subjected by Shafto; but time passed
-on, and, for a reason we shall give in its place, the letter never
-reached him.
-
-Again and again she recalled and rehearsed her farewell with Florian,
-and thought regretfully of his passionate pride, and desperate
-poverty too probably, if he quarrelled with Shafto; and she still
-seemed to see his beautiful dark eyes, dim with unshed tears, while
-her own welled freely and bitterly.
-
-When could they meet again, if ever, and where and how? Her heart
-and brain ached with these questions.
-
-Dulcie did not bemoan her fate, though her cheek paled a little, and
-she felt--even at her early years--as if life seemed over and done
-with, and in her passionate love for the absent, that existence alone
-was left to her, and so forth.
-
-And as she was her father's housekeeper now, kept the keys and paid
-all the servants, paid all accounts and made the preserves, he was in
-no way sorry that the young men were gone; that the 'aimless
-philandering,' as he deemed it, had come to an end; and that much
-would be attended to in his cosy little household which he
-suspected--but unjustly--had been neglected hitherto.
-
-To Dulcie, the whole locality of her native place, the breezy moors,
-the solitary hills, the mysterious Druid pillars and logan stones,
-the rocky shore, and the pretty estuary of the Yealm, where they had
-been wont to boat and fish for pilchards in summer and autumn, were
-all full of the haunting presence of the absent--the poor but proud
-and handsome lad who from boyhood, yea from infancy, had loved her,
-and who now seemed to have slipped out of her existence.
-
-Spring melted into summer; golden sunshine flooded hill and dale, and
-lit up the waters of the Erm, the Yealm, and the far-stretching
-Channel, tinting with wondrous gleams and hues the waves that rolled
-upon the shore, or boiled about the Mewstorre Rock, and the
-sea-beaten promontory of Revelstoke; but to Dulcie the glory was gone
-from land and water: she heard no more, by letter or otherwise, of
-the love of her youth; he seemed to have dropped utterly out of her
-sphere; and though mechanically she gathered the fragrant leaves of
-the bursting June roses--the Marshal Neil and Gloire de Dijon--and
-treasured them carefully in rare old china jars and vases, a task in
-which she had often been assisted by Florian, she felt and
-thought--'Ichabod! Ichabod! the glory has departed!'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-MR. KIPPILAW, W.S.
-
-Shafto found himself a little nervous when he and Florian were
-actually in Edinburgh, a city in its beauty, boldness and grandeur of
-rock and mountain, fortress, terrace, and temple, so foreign-looking
-to English eyes, and so utterly unlike everything they had ever seen
-or conceived before.
-
-Florian's thoughts were peculiarly his own. His father's
-death--though called an uncle now, but Florian always felt for and
-thought of him as a parent--the loss of Dulcie, their abrupt
-departure from Devonshire, and rough uprootal of all early
-associations, had made a kind of hiatus in the young fellow's life,
-and it was only now when he found himself amid the strange streets
-and picturesque splendour of Edinburgh that he began--like one
-recovering consciousness after a long illness--to gather up again the
-ravelled threads of thought, but with curious want of concern and
-energy; while Shafto felt that he personally had both, and that now
-he required to have all his wits about him.
-
-Florian stood for a time that night at the door of their hotel in
-Princes Street looking at the wonderful lights of the Old Town
-sparkling in mid air, and some that were in the Castle must, he
-thought, be stars, they were so high above the earth. Scores of cabs
-and carriages went by, eastward and westward, but no carts or wains
-or lorries, such as one sees in London or Glasgow--vehicles with
-bright lamps and well muffled occupants, gentlemen in evening suits,
-and ladies in ball or dinner dresses, and crowds of pedestrians,
-under the brilliant gas lights and long boulevard-like lines of
-trees--the ever-changing human panorama of a great city street before
-midnight.
-
-How odd, how strange and lonely poor Florian felt; he seemed to
-belong to no one, and, like the Miller o' Dee, nobody cared for him;
-and ever and anon his eyes rested on the mighty castled rock that
-towers above streets, monuments, and gardens, with a wonderous
-history all its own, 'where treasured lie the monarchy's last gems,'
-and with them the only ancient crown in the British Isles. 'Brave
-kings and the fairest of crowned women have slept and been cradled in
-that eyrie,' says an enthusiastic English writer; 'heroes have fought
-upon its slopes; English armies have stormed it; dukes, earls, and
-barons have been immured in its strong dungeons; a sainted Queen
-prayed and yielded up her last breath there eight centuries ago. It
-is an imperishable relic--a monument that needs no carving to tell
-its tale, and it has the nation's worship; and the different church
-sects cling round its base as if they would fight again for the
-guardianship of a venerable mother..... And if Scotland has no
-longer a king and Parliament all to herself, her imperial crown is at
-least safely kept up there amid strong iron stanchions, as a sacred
-memorial of her inextinguishable independence, and, if need were, for
-future use.'
-
-Florian was a reader and a thinker, and he felt a keen interest in
-all that now surrounded him; but Shafto lurked in a corner of the
-smoke-room, turning in his mind the task of the morrow, and unwisely
-seeking to fortify himself by imbibing more brandy and soda than
-Florian had ever seen him take before.
-
-After a sound night's rest and a substantial Scottish breakfast had
-fitted Shafto, as he thought, for facing anything, a cab deposited
-him and Florian (who was now beginning to marvel why he had travelled
-so far in a matter that concerned him not, in reality) at the
-residence of Mr. Kenneth Kippilaw, W.S., in Charlotte Square--a noble
-specimen of Adams Street architecture, having four stately
-symmetrical corresponding façades, overlooked by the dome of St.
-George's Church.
-
-'Lawyers evidently thrive in Scotland,' said Shafto, as he looked at
-the mansion of Mr. Kippilaw, and mentally recalled the modest
-establishment of Lawyer Carlyon; 'but foxes will flourish as long as
-there are geese to be plucked.'
-
-Mr. Kippilaw was at home--indeed he was just finishing breakfast,
-before going to the Parliament House--as they were informed by the
-liveried valet, who led them through a pillared and marble-floored
-vestibule, and ushered them into what seemed a library, as the walls
-from floor to ceiling were lined with handsome books; but every
-professional man's private office has generally this aspect in
-Scotland.
-
-In a few minutes Mr. Kippilaw appeared with a puzzled and perplexed
-expression in his face, as he alternatively looked at his two
-visitors, and at Shafto's card in his hand.
-
-Mr. Kippilaw was now in his sixtieth year; his long since grizzled
-hair had now become white, and had shrunk to two patches far apart,
-one over each ear, and brushed stiffly up. His eyebrows were also
-white, shaggy, and under them his keen eyes peered sharply through
-the rims of a gold pince-nez balanced on the bridge of his long
-aquiline nose.
-
-Shafto felt just then a strange and unpleasant dryness about his
-tongue and lips.
-
-'_Mr. Shafto Melfort?_' said Mr. Kippilaw inquiringly, and referring
-to the card again. 'I was not aware that there was a Mr. Shafto
-Melfort--any relation of Lord Fettercairn?'
-
-'His grandson,' said Shafto unblushingly.
-
-'This gentleman with the dark eyes?' asked Mr. Kippilaw, turning to
-the silent Florian.
-
-'No--myself,' said Shafto sharply and firmly.
-
-'You are most unlike the family, who have always been remarkable for
-regularity of features. Then you are the son--of--of--'
-
-'The late Major Lennard Melfort who died a few weeks ago----'
-
-'Good Heavens, where?'
-
-'On the west coast of Devonshire, near Revelstoke, where he had long
-resided under the assumed name of MacIan.'
-
-'That of his wife?'
-
-'Precisely so--my mother.'
-
-'And this young gentleman, whose face and features seem curiously
-familiar to me, though I never saw him before, he is your brother of
-course.'
-
-'No, my cousin, the son of my aunt Mrs. Gyle. I am an only son, but
-the Major ever treated us as if he had been the father of both, so
-great and good was his kindness of heart.'
-
-'Be seated, please,' said the lawyer in a breathless voice, as he
-seated himself in an ample leathern elbow chair at his writing-table,
-which was covered with documents and letters all arranged by his
-junior clerk in the most orderly manner.
-
-'This is very sudden and most unexpected intelligence,' said he,
-carefully wiping his glasses, and subjecting Shafto's visage to a
-closer scrutiny again. 'Have you known all these years past the real
-name and position of your father, and that he left Kincardineshire
-more than twenty years ago after a very grave quarrel with his
-parents at Craigengowan?'
-
-'No--I only learned who he was, and who we really were, when he was
-almost on his deathbed. He confided it to me alone, as his only son,
-and because I had been bred to the law; and on that melancholy
-occasion he entrusted me with this important packet addressed to
-_you_.'
-
-With an expression of the deepest interest pervading his well-lined
-face, Mr. Kippilaw took the packet and carefully examined the seal
-and the superscription, penned in a shaky handwriting, with both of
-which he was familiar enough, though he had seen neither for fully
-twenty years, and finally he examined the envelope, which looked old
-and yellow.
-
-'If all be true and correct, these tidings will make some stir at
-Craigengowan,' he muttered as if to himself, and cut round the seal
-with a penknife.
-
-'You will find ample proofs, sir, of all I have alleged,' said
-Shafto, who now felt that the crisis was at hand.
-
-Mr. Kippilaw, with growing interest and wonder, drew forth the
-documents and read and re-read them slowly and carefully, holding the
-papers, but not offensively, between him and the light to see if the
-dates and water-marks tallied.
-
-'The slow way this old devil goes on would exasperate an oyster!'
-thought Shafto, whose apparently perfect coolness and self-possession
-rather surprised and repelled the lawyer.
-
-There were the certificate of Lennard's marriage with Flora MacIan,
-which Mr. Kippilaw could remember he had seen of old; the
-'certificate of entry of birth of their son, born at Revelstoke at 6
-h. 50 m. on the 28th October P.M., 18--,' signed by the Registrar,
-and the Major's farewell letter to his old friend, entrusting his son
-and his son's interests to his care.
-
-'But, hallo!' exclaimed Mr. Kippilaw, after he had read for the
-second time, and saw that the letter of Lennard Melfort was
-undoubtedly authentic, 'how comes it that the whole of your Christian
-name is _torn out_ of the birth certificate, and the surname
-_Melfort_ alone remains?'
-
-'Torn out!' exclaimed Shafto, apparently startled in turn.
-
-'There is a rough little hole in the document where the name _should
-be_. Do you know the date of your birth?' asked Mr. Kippilaw, partly
-covering the document with his hand, unconsciously as it were.
-
-'Yes--28th October.'
-
-'And the year?'
-
-Shafto gave it from memory.
-
-'Quite correct--as given here,' said Mr. Kippilaw; 'but you look old
-for the date of this certificate.'
-
-'I always looked older than my years,' replied Shafto.
-
-Florian, who might have claimed the date as that of his own birth,
-was--luckily for Shafto--away at a window, gazing intently on a party
-of soldiers marching past, with a piper playing before them.
-
-'Another certificate can be got if necessary,' said Mr. Kippilaw, as
-he glanced at the Registrar's signature, a suggestion which made
-Shafto's heart quake. 'It must have come from the Major in this
-mutilated state,' he added, re-examining with legal care and
-suspicion the address on the envelope and the seal, which, as we have
-said, he had cut round; 'but it is strange that he has made no
-mention of it being so in his letter to me. Poor fellow! he was more
-of a soldier than a man of business, however. Allow me to
-congratulate you, Mr. Melfort, on your new prospects. Rank and a
-very fine estate are before you.'
-
-He warmly shook the hand of Shafto, who began to be more reassured;
-and saying, 'I must carefully preserve the documents for the
-inspection of Lord Fettercairn,' he locked them fast in a drawer of
-his writing-table, and spreading out his coat-tails before the fire,
-while warming his person in the fashion peculiar to the genuine
-'Britisher,' he eyed Shafto benignantly, and made a few pleasant
-remarks on the Fettercairn family, the fertility and beauty of
-Craigengowan, the stables, kennels, the shootings, and so forth, and
-the many fine qualities of 'Leonard'--as he called him--and about
-whom he asked innumerable questions, all of which Shafto could answer
-truly and with a clear conscience enough, as he was master of all
-that.
-
-The latter was asked 'what he thought of Edinburgh--if he had ever
-been there before,' and so forth. Shafto remembered a little 'Guide
-Book' into which he had certainly dipped, so as to be ready for
-anything, and spoke so warmly of the picturesque beauties and
-historical associations of the Modern Athens that the worthy lawyer's
-heart began to warm to so intelligent a young man, while of the
-silent Florian, staring out into the sun-lit square and its beautiful
-garden and statues, he took little notice, beyond wondering _where_
-he had seen his eyes and features before!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-ALONE IN THE WORLD.
-
-'And you were bred to the law, you say, Mr. Melfort?' remarked the
-old Writer to the Signet after a pause.
-
-'Yes, in Lawyer Carlyon's office.'
-
-'Very good--very good indeed; that is well! We generally think in
-Scotland that a little knowledge of the law is useful, as it teaches
-the laird to haud his ain; but I forgot that you are southland bred,
-and born too--the more is the pity--and can't understand me.'
-
-Shafto did not understand him, but thought that his time spent in
-Lawyer Carlyon's office had not been thrown away now; experience
-there had 'put him up to a trick or two.'
-
-'I shall write to Craigengowan by the first post,' said Mr. Kippilaw
-after another of those thoughtful pauses during which he attentively
-eyed his visitor. 'Lord and Lady Fettercairn--like myself now
-creeping up the vale of years--(Hope they may soon see the end of it!
-thought Shafto) will, I have no doubt, be perfectly satisfied by the
-sequence and tenor of the documents you have brought me that you are
-their grandson--the son of the expatriated Lennard--and when I hear
-from them I shall let you know the result without delay. You are
-putting up at--what hotel?'
-
-'At the Duke of Rothesay, in Princes Street.'
-
-'Ah! very well.'
-
-'Thanks; I shall be very impatient to hear.'
-
-'And your cousin--he will, of course, go with you to Craigengowan?'
-
-Shafto hesitated, and actually coloured, as Florian could detect.
-
-'What are your intentions or views?' Mr. Kippilaw asked the latter.
-
-'He failed to pass for the army,' said Shafto bluntly and glibly, 'so
-I don't know what he means to do _now_. I believe that he scarcely
-knows himself.'
-
-'Have you no friends on your mother's side, Mr. Florian?'
-
-'None!' said Florian, with a sad inflection of voice.
-
-'Indeed! and what do you mean to do?'
-
-'Follow the drum, most probably,' replied Florian bitterly and a
-little defiantly, as Shafto's coldness, amid his own great and good
-fortune, roused his pride and galled his heart, which sank as he
-thought of Dulcie Carlyon, sweet, golden-haired English Dulcie, so
-far away.
-
-Mr. Kippilaw shook his bald head at the young man's answer.
-
-'I have some little influence in many ways, and if I can assist your
-future views you may command me, Mr. Florian,' said he with fatherly
-kindness, for he had reared--yea and lost--more than one fine lad of
-his own.
-
-It has been said that one must know mankind very well before having
-the courage to be solely and simply oneself; thus, as Shafto's
-knowledge of mankind was somewhat limited, he felt his eye quail more
-than once under the steady gaze of Mr. Kippilaw.
-
-'It is a very strange thing,' said the latter, 'that after the death
-of Mr. Cosmo in Glentilt, when Lord and Lady Fettercairn were so
-anxious to discover and recall his younger brother as the next and
-only heir to the title and estates, we totally failed to trace him.
-We applied to the War Office for the whereabouts of Major Lennard
-Melfort, but the authorities there, acting upon a certain principle,
-declined to afford any information. Advertisements, some plainly
-distinct, others somewhat enigmatical, were often inserted in the
-_Scotsman_ and _Times_, but without the least avail.
-
-'As for the _Scotsman_,' said Shafto, 'the Major----'
-
-'Your father, you mean?'
-
-'Yes,' said he, reddening, 'was no more likely to see such a
-provincial print in Devonshire than the Roman _Diritto_ or the
-Prussian _Kreuz Zeitung_; and the _Times_, if he saw it--which I
-doubt--he must have ignored. Till the time of his death drew near,
-his feelings were bitter, his hostility to his family great.'
-
-'I can well understand that, poor fellow!' said Mr. Kippilaw,
-glancing at his watch, as he added--'You must excuse me till
-to-morrow: I am already overdue at the Parliament House.'
-
-He bowed his visitors out into the sun-lit square.
-
-'You seem to have lost your tongue, Florian, and to have a
-disappointed look,' said Shafto snappishly, as they walked slowly
-towards the hotel together.
-
-'Disappointed I am in one sense, perhaps, but I have no reason to
-repine or complain save at our change of relative positions, but
-certainly not at your unexpected good fortune, Shafto. It is only
-right and just that your father's only son should inherit all that is
-legally and justly his.'
-
-Even at these words Shafto never winced or wavered in plans or
-purpose.
-
-It was apparent, however, to Florian, that he had for some time past
-looked restless and uneasy, that he started and grew pale at any
-unusual sound, while a shadow rested on his not usually very open
-countenance.
-
-Betimes next morning a note came to him at the Duke of Rothesay Hotel
-from Mr. Kippilaw, requesting a visit as early as possible, and on
-this errand he departed alone.
-
-He found the old lawyer radiant, with a letter in his hand from Lord
-Fettercairn (in answer to his own) expressive of astonishment and joy
-at the sudden appearance of this hitherto unknown grandson, whom he
-was full of ardour and anxiety to see.
-
-'You will lose no time in starting for Craigengowan,' said Mr.
-Kippilaw. 'You take the train at the Waverley Station and go _viâ_
-Burntisland, Arbroath, and Marykirk--or stay, I think we shall
-proceed together, taking your papers with us.'
-
-'Thanks,' said Shafto, feeling somehow that the presence of Mr.
-Kippilaw at the coming interview would take some of the
-responsibility off his own shoulders.
-
-'Craigengowan, your grandfather says, will put on its brightest smile
-to welcome you.'
-
-'Very kind of Craigengowan,' said Shafto, who felt but ill at ease in
-his new role of adventurer, and unwisely adopted a free-and-easy
-audacity of manner.
-
-'A cheque on the Bank of Scotland for present emergencies,' said Mr.
-Kippilaw, opening his cheque-book, 'and in two hours we shall meet at
-the station.'
-
-'Thanks again. How kind you are, my dear sir.'
-
-'I would do much for your father's son, Mr. Shafto,' said the lawyer,
-emphatically.
-
-'And what about Florian?'
-
-'The letter ignores him--a curious omission. In their joy, perhaps
-Lord and Lady Fettercairn forgot. But, by the way, here is a letter
-for him that came by the London mail.'
-
-'A letter for him!' said Shafto, faintly, while his heart grew sick
-with apprehension, he knew not of what.
-
-'Mr. Florian's face is strangely familiar to me,' said Mr. Kippilaw
-aloud; but to himself, 'Dear me, dear me, where can I have seen
-features like his before? He reminds me curiously of Lennard
-Melfort.'
-
-Shafto gave a nervous start.
-
-The letter was a bulky one, and bore the Wembury and other
-post-marks, and to Shafto's infinite relief was addressed in the
-familiar handwriting of Dulcie Carlyon.
-
-He chuckled, and a great thought worthy of himself occurred to him.
-
-In the solitude of his own room at the hotel, he moistened and opened
-the gummed envelope, and drew forth four closely written sheets of
-paper full of the outpourings of the girl's passionate heart, of her
-wrath at the theft of her locket by Shafto, and mentioning that she
-had incidentally got the address of Mr. Kippilaw from her father, and
-desiring him to write to her, and she would watch for and intercept
-the postman by the sea-shore.
-
-'Bosh,' muttered Shafto, as he tore up and cast into the fire
-Dulcie's letter, all save a postscript, written on a separate scrap
-of paper, and which ran thus:--
-
-'You have all the love of my heart, Florian; but, as I feel and fear
-we may never meet again, I send you this, which I have worn next my
-heart, to keep.'
-
-_This_ was a tiny tuft of forget-me-nots.
-
-'Three stamps on all this raggabash!' exclaimed Shafto, whom the
-girl's terms of endearment to Florian filled with a tempest of
-jealous rage. He rolled the locket he had wrenched from Dulcie's
-neck in soft paper, and placed it with the postscript in the
-envelope, which he carefully closed and re-gummed, placed near the
-fire, and the moment it was perfectly dry he gave it to Florian.
-
-If the latter was surprised to see a letter to himself, addressed in
-Dulcie's large, clear, and pretty handwriting, to the care of 'Lawyer
-Kippilaw,' as she called him, he was also struck dumb when he found
-in the envelope the locket, the likeness, and the apparently curt
-farewell contained in one brief sentence!
-
-For a time he stood like one petrified. Could it all be real? Alas!
-there was no doubting the postal marks and stamps upon this most
-fatal cover; and while he was examining it and passing his hand
-wildly more than once across his eyes and forehead, Shafto was
-smoking quietly at a window, and to all appearance intent on watching
-the towering rock and batteries of the Castle, bathed in morning
-sunshine--batteries whereon steel morions and Scottish spears had
-often gleamed of old.
-
-Though his soul shrank from doing so, Florian could not resist taking
-Shafto into his confidence about this unexplainable event; and the
-latter acted astonishment to the life!
-
-Was the locket thus returned through the post in obedience to her
-father's orders, after he had probably discovered the contents of it?
-
-But Shafto demolished this hope by drawing his attention to the tenor
-of the pithy scrap of paper, which precluded the idea that it had
-been done under any other influence than her own change of mind.
-
-'Poor Florian!' sneered Shafto, as he prepared to take his departure
-for Craigengowan; 'now you had better proceed at once to cultivate
-the wear-the-willow state of mind.'
-
-Florian made no reply. His ideas of faith and truth and of true
-women were suddenly and cruelly shattered now!
-
-'She has killed all that was good in me, and the mischief of the
-future will be at her door!' he exclaimed, in a low and husky voice.
-
-'Oh, Florian, don't say that,' said Shafto, who actually did feel a
-little for him; and just then, when they were on the eve of
-separation, even his false and artful heart did feel a pang, with the
-sting of fear, at the career of falsehood to which he had committed
-himself; but his ambition, innate greed, selfishness, and pride urged
-him on that career steadily and without an idea of flinching.
-
-After Mr. Kippilaw's remarks concerning how the face of Florian
-interested him, and actually that he bore a likeness to the dead
-Major--to his own father, in fact--Shafto became more than desirous
-to be rid of him in any way. He thought with dread of the discovery
-and fate of 'the Claimant,' and of the fierce light thrown by the law
-on that gigantic imposture; but genuine compunction he had none!
-
-'Well,' he muttered, as he drove away from the hotel with his
-portmanteau, 'I must keep up this game at all hazards now. I have
-stolen--not only Florian's name--but his place, so let him paddle his
-own canoe!'
-
-'I'll write you from Craigengowan,' were his parting words--a promise
-which he never fulfilled. Shafto, who generally held their mutual
-purse now, might have offered to supply the well-nigh penniless lad
-with money, but he did not. He only longed to be rid of him--to hear
-of him no more. He had a dread of his presence, of his society, of
-his very existence, and now had but one hope, wish, and desire--that
-Florian Melfort should cross his path never again. And now that he
-had achieved a separation between him and Dulcie, he conceived that
-Florian would never again go near Revelstoke, of which
-he--Shafto--had for many reasons a nervous dread!
-
-Full of Dulcie and her apparently cruel desertion of him, which he
-considered due to calm consideration of his change of fortune--or
-rather total want of it--Florian felt numbly indifferent to the
-matter Shafto had in hand and all about himself.
-
-While very nearly moved to girlish tears at parting from one with
-whom he had lived since infancy--with whom he had shared the same
-sleeping-room, shared in the same sports and studies--with whom he
-had read the same books to some extent, and had ever viewed as a
-brother--Florian was rather surprised, even shocked, by the
-impatience of that kinsman, the only one he had in all the wide
-world, to part from him and begone, and to see he was calm and hard
-as flint or steel.
-
-'Different natures have different ways of showing grief, I suppose,'
-thought the simple Florian; 'or can it be that he still has a grudge
-at me because of the false but winsome Dulcie? If affection for me
-is hidden in his heart, it is hidden most skilfully.' No letter ever
-came from Craigengowan. The pride of Florian was justly roused, and
-he resolved that he would not take the initiative, and attempt to
-open a correspondence with one who seemed to ignore him, and whose
-manner at departing he seemed to see more clearly and vividly now.
-
-The fact soon became grimly apparent. He could not remain idling in
-such a fashionable hotel as the Duke of Rothesay, so he settled his
-bill there, and took his portmanteau in his hand, and issued into the
-streets--into the world, in fact.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-SHAFTO IN CLOVER.
-
-About six months had elapsed since Shafto and Florian parted, as we
-have described, at Edinburgh.
-
-It was June now. The luxurious woods around Craigengowan were in all
-their leafy beauty, and under their shadows the dun deer panted in
-the heat as they made their lair among the feathery braken; the
-emerald green lawn was mowed and rolled till it was smooth as a
-billiard-table and soft as three-pile velvet.
-
-The air was laden with the wafted fragrance of roses and innumerable
-other flowers; and the picturesque old house, with its multitude of
-conical turrets furnished with glittering vanes, its crow-stepped
-gables and massive chimneys, stood boldly up against the deep blue
-sky of summer; and how sweetly peaceful looked the pretty village,
-seen in middle distance, through a foliated vista in the woodlands,
-with the white smoke ascending from its humble hearths, the only
-thing that seemed to be stirring there; and how beautiful were the
-colours some of its thatched roofs presented--greenest moss, brown
-lichen, and stonecrop, now all a blaze of gold, while the murmur of a
-rivulet (a tributary of the Esk), that gurgled under its tiny arch,
-'the auld brig-stane' of Lennard's boyhood, would be heard at times,
-amid the pleasant voices of some merrymakers on the lawn, amid the
-glorious shrubberies, and belts of flowers below the stately terrace,
-that had long since replaced the moat that encircled the old
-fortified mansion, from whence its last Jacobite lord had ridden
-forth to fight and die for James VIII., on the field of
-Sheriffmuir--King of Scotland, England, France, and Ireland, as the
-unflinching Jacobites had it.
-
-A gay and picturesquely dressed lawn-tennis party was busy tossing
-the balls from side to side among several courts; but apart from all,
-and almost conspicuously so--a young fellow, in a handsome light
-tennis suit of coloured flannels, and a beautiful girl were carrying
-on a very palpable flirtation.
-
-The gentleman was Shafto, and his companion was Finella Melfort,
-Cosmo's orphan daughter (an heiress through her mother), who had
-returned a month before from a protracted visit in Tyburnia. They
-seemed to be on excellent terms with each other, and doubtless the
-natural gaiety of the girl's disposition, her vivacity of manner, and
-their supposed mutual relationship, had opened the way to speedy
-familiarity.
-
-She was a dark-haired and dark-eyed, but very white-skinned little
-beauty, with a perfect _mignonne_ face, a petite but round and
-compact figure, gracefully formed, and very coquettish and
-_spirituelle_ in all her ways.
-
-She had received her peculiar Christian name at the special request
-of her grandfather, that silly peer being desirous that her name
-might go down in the peerage in connection with that of the famous
-Finella of Fettercairn.
-
-'A winsome pair they would make,' was the smiling remark of Mr.
-Kenneth Kippilaw, who was of the party (with three romping daughters
-from Edinburgh), to Lord Fettercairn, who smirked a grim assent, as
-if it was a matter of indifference to him, which it was not, as his
-legal adviser very well knew; and my Lady Drumshoddy, who heard the
-remark, bestowed upon him a bright and approving smile in return for
-a knowing glance through the glasses of his gold _pince-nez_.
-
-In Craigengowan the adventurous Shafto Gyle had found his veritable
-Capua--he was literally 'in clover.' Yet he never heard himself
-addressed by his assumed name without experiencing a strange sinking
-and fluttering of the heart.
-
-The once-despised Lennard Melfort's sword, his commission, and his
-hard-won medals earned in Central India and the Terai of Nepaul were
-now looked upon as precious relics in his mother's luxurious boudoir
-at Craigengowan, and reclaimed from the lumber-attic, his portrait,
-taken in early life, was again hung in a place of honour in the
-dining-hall.
-
-'What a fool my old uncle was to lose his claim on such a place as
-this, and all for the face of a girl!' was the exclamation of Shafto
-to himself when first he came to Craigengowan, and then he looked
-fearfully around him lest the word _uncle_ might have been overheard
-by some one; and he thought--'If rascally the trick I have played my
-simple and love-stricken cousin--and rascally it was and is--surely
-it was worth while to be the heir of this place, Craigengowan. To
-reckon as mine in future all this grand panorama of heath-clad hills,
-of green and golden fields, of purple muirland, and stately woods of
-oak and pine where the deer rove in herds; as mine the trout-streams
-that flow towards the Bervie; the cascades that roar down the cliffs;
-the beautiful old house, with its stables, kennels, and terrace; its
-cellars, pictures, plate, and jewellery, old china and vases of
-marble and jasper, china and Japanese work; and I possess all that
-rank and wealth can give!' and so thought this avaricious rascal,
-with a capacity for evil actions far beyond his years.
-
-To the fair inheritance he had come to steal he could not, however,
-add as his the blue sky above it, or the waves of the German Sea,
-which the North Esk flowed to join; but he was not without sense
-appreciative enough to enjoy the fragrance of the teeming earth, of
-the pine forests where the brown squirrels leaped from branch to
-branch, and on the mountain side the perfume of the golden whin and
-gorse.
-
-Appraising everything, these ideas were ever recurring to his mind,
-and it was full of them now as he looked around him, and at times,
-like one in a dream, heard the pretty babble of the high-bred,
-coquettish girl, who, to amuse herself, made _œillades_ at him;
-who called him so sweetly 'Cousin Shafto,' and who, with her splendid
-fortune, he was now beginning to include among the many goods and
-chattels which must one day accrue to him.
-
-Lord and Lady Fettercairn were, of course, fully twenty years older
-than when we saw them last, full of wrath and indignation at Lennard
-for his so-called _mésalliance_. Both were cold in heart and
-self-absorbed in nature as ever. The latter was determined to be a
-beauty still, though now upon the confines of that decade 'when the
-cunning of cosmetics can no longer dissemble the retribution of Time
-the avenger.' The former was bald now, and the remains of his once
-sandy-coloured hair had become grizzled, and a multitude of puckers
-were about his cold, grey eyes, while there was a perceptible stoop
-in his whilom flat, square shoulders.
-
-He was as full of family pride as ever, and the discovery of an
-unexpected and authentic heir and grandson to his title, that had
-never been won in the field or cabinet, but was simply the reward of
-bribery and corruption, and for which not one patriotic act had been
-performed by four generations, had given him intense satisfaction,
-and caused much blazing of bonfires and consumption of alcohol about
-the country-side; and smiles that were bright and genuine frequently
-wreathed the usually pale and immobile face of Lady Fettercairn when
-they rested on Shafto.
-
-We all know how the weak and easy adoption of a pretender by a titled
-mother in a famous and most protracted case not many years ago caused
-the most peculiar complications; thus Lady Fettercairn was more
-pardonable, posted up as she was with documentary evidence, in
-accepting Shafto Gyle as her grandson.
-
-We have described her as being singularly, perhaps aristocratically,
-cold. As a mother, she had never been given to kissing, caressing,
-or fondling her two sons (as she did a succession of odious pugs and
-lap-dogs), but, throwing their little hearts back upon themselves,
-left nurses and maids to 'do all that sort of tiresome thing.'
-
-So Finella, though an heiress, came in for very little of it either,
-with all her sweetness, beauty, and pretty winning ways, even from
-Lord Fettercairn. In truth, the man who cared so little for his own
-country and her local and vital interests was little likely to care
-much for any flesh and blood that did not stand in his own boots.
-
-Lady Fettercairn heard from her 'grand-son' from time to time
-with--for her--deep apparent sympathy, and much genuine aristocratic
-regret and indignation, much of the obscure story of his boyhood and
-past life, at least so much as he chose to tell her; and she bitterly
-resented that Lennard Melfort should have sought to put the 'nephew
-of that woman, Flora MacIan,' into the army, while placing 'his own
-son' Shafto into the office of a miserable village lawyer, and so
-forth--and so forth!
-
-Fortunate it was, she thought, that all this happened in an obscure
-village in Devonshire, and far away from Craigengowan and all its
-aristocratic surroundings.
-
-She also thought it strange that Shafto--('Whence came that name?'
-she would mutter angrily)--should be so unlike her dark and handsome
-Lennard. His eyebrows were fair and heavy; his eyes were a pale,
-watery grey; his lips were thin, his neck thick, and his hair
-somewhat sandy in hue. Thus, she thought, he was not unlike what her
-husband, the present Lord Fettercairn, must have been at the same age.
-
-As for the Peer himself, he was only too thankful that an heir had
-turned up for his ill-gotten coronet, and that now--so far as one
-life was concerned--Sir Bernard Burke would not rate it among the
-dormant and attainted titles--those of the best and bravest men that
-Scotland ever knew.
-
-As for their mutual scheme concerning Shafto and their granddaughter
-Finella, with her beauty and many attractive parts, the former was
-craftily most desirous of furthering it, knowing well that, _happen
-what might_ in the future, she was an heiress; that marriage with her
-would give him a firm hold on the Fettercairn family, though the
-money of her mother was wisely settled on the young lady herself.
-
-Indeed, Finella had not been many weeks home from London, at
-Craigengowan, before Lady Fettercairn opened the trenches, and spoke
-pretty plainly to him on the subject.
-
-Waving her large fan slowly to and fro, and eyeing Shafto closely
-over the top of it, she said:
-
-'I hope, my dearest boy, that you will find your cousin Finella--the
-daughter of my dead darling Cosmo--a lovable kind of girl. But even
-were she not so--and all say she is--you must not feel a prejudice
-against her, because--because----'
-
-'What, grandmother?'
-
-'Because it is our warmest desire that you may marry her.'
-
-'Why, haven't I money enough?' asked Shafto, with one of his
-dissembling smiles.
-
-'Of course, as the heir of Fettercairn; but one is always the better
-to have more, and you must not feel----'
-
-'What?' asked Shafto, with affected impatience.
-
-'Please not to interrupt me thus. I mean that you must not be
-prejudiced against her as an expected_ parti_.'
-
-'Why should I?'
-
-'One hears and reads so much of such things.'
-
-'In novels, I suppose; but as she is so pretty and eligible, why the
-dickens----'
-
-'Shafto!'
-
-'What now?' he asked, with some irritability, as she often took him
-to task for his solecisms.
-
-'Dickens is not a phrase to use. Exclamations that were suited to
-the atmosphere of Mr. Carlyon's office in Devonshire will not do in
-Craigengowan!'
-
-'Well--she won't look at me with your eyes, grandmother.'
-
-'How--her eyes----'
-
-'They will never seem so bright and beautiful.'
-
-'Oh, you flattering pet!' exclaimed my Lady Fettercairn, with a smile
-and pleased flush on her old wrinkled face, for her 'pet' had soon
-discovered that she was far from insensible to adulation.
-
-Shafto certainly availed himself of the opportunities afforded by
-'cousinship,' propinquity, and residence together in a country house,
-and sought to gain a place in the good graces or heart of Finella;
-but with all his cunning and earnest wishes in the matter--apart from
-the wonderful beauty of the girl--he feared that he made no more
-progress with her than he had done with Dulcie Carlyon.
-
-She talked, played, danced, and even romped with him; they rambled
-and read together, and were as much companions as any two lovers
-would be; but he felt nearly certain that though she flirted with
-him, because it was partly her habit to appear to do so with most
-men, whenever he attempted to become tender she openly laughed at him
-or changed the subject skilfully; and also that if he essayed to
-touch or take her hand it was very deliberately withdrawn from his
-reach, and never did she make him more sensible of all this than when
-he contrived to draw her aside to the terrace on the afternoon of the
-lawn-tennis party.
-
-She had long ere this been made perfectly aware that love and
-marriage were objects of all his attention, yet she amused herself
-with him by her coquettish _œillades_ and waggish speeches.
-
-'Finella,' said he, in a low and hesitating voice, as he stooped over
-her, 'I hope that with all your flouting, and pretty, flippant mode
-of treating me, you will see your way to carry out the fondest desire
-of my heart and that of our grandparents.'
-
-'Such a fearfully elaborate speech! And the object to which I am to
-see my way is to marry you, cousin Shafto?'
-
-'Yes,' said he, bending nearer to her half-averted ear.
-
-'Thanks very much, dear Shafto; but I couldn't think of such a thing.'
-
-'Why? Am I so distasteful to you?'
-
-'Not at all; but for cogent reasons of my own.'
-
-'And these are?'
-
-'Firstly, people should marry to please themselves, not others.
-Grandpapa and grandmamma did, and so shall I; and I am quite
-independent enough to do as I please and choose.'
-
-'In short, you will not or cannot love me?'
-
-'I have not said so, you tiresome Shafto!' said she, looking upward
-at him with one of her sweetest and most bewitching smiles.
-
-'Then I have some hope, dear Finella?'
-
-'I have not said that either.'
-
-'You may yet love me, then?'
-
-'No; not as you wish it.'
-
-'But why?'
-
-'You have no right to ask me.'
-
-His fair beetling eyebrows knit, and a gleam came into his cold, grey
-eyes as he asked, after a pause:
-
-'Is there anyone else you prefer?'
-
-'You have no right to inquire,' replied she, and a keener observer
-might have detected that his question brought a tiny blush to her
-cheek and a fond smile to her curved lips; 'so please to let this
-matter drop, once and for ever, dear Shafto, and we can be such
-delightful friends--such jolly cousins.'
-
-And so ended one of many such conversations on this
-topic--conversations that developed indifference, if not quite
-aversion, on the part of Finella, the clue to which Shafto was fated
-to find in a few weeks after.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-VIVIAN HAMMERSLEY.
-
-The persistent attentions of Shafto were alternately a source of
-amusement and worry to Finella Melfort; and when she found them
-become the latter, she had more than once retreated to the residence
-of her maternal grandmother, Lady Drumshoddy, though she infinitely
-preferred being at Craigengowan, where the general circle was more
-refined and of a much better style; for Lady Drumshoddy--natheless
-her title--was not quite one of the 'upper ten,' being only the widow
-of an advocate, who, having done without scruple the usual amount of
-work to please his party and the Lord Advocate, had been rewarded
-therefor by an appointment (and knighthood) in Bengal, where he had
-gone, at a lucky time, with the old advice and idea--
-
- 'They bade me from the Rupee Tree
- Pluck India's endless riches,
- And then I swore that time should see
- Huge pockets in my breeches.'
-
-Thus Sir Duncan Drumshoddy's pockets were so well filled that when he
-came home to die, his daughter was heiress enough to be deemed a
-'great catch' by the Fettercairn family, though her grandfather had
-been--no one knew precisely what.
-
-And now Finella, by education, careful training, and by her own habit
-of thought, was naturally so refined that, with all her waggery and
-disposition to laughter and merriment, Shafto's clumsy love-speeches
-occasionally irritated her.
-
-'I have somewhere read,' said he, 'that a man may get the love of the
-girl he wants, even if she cares little for him, if he only asks her
-at the right time; but, so far as you are concerned, Finella, the
-right moment has not come for me, I suppose.'
-
-'Nor ever will come, I fear, cousin Shafto,' she replied, fanning
-herself, and eyeing him with mingled fun and defiance sparkling in
-her dark eyes.
-
-Ere Shafto could resume on this occasion Lord Fettercairn came
-hurriedly to him, saying,
-
-'Oh, by-the-bye, young Hammersley, from London, will arrive here
-to-morrow for a few weeks' grouse-shooting before he leaves for his
-regiment in Africa. You will do your best to be attentive to him,
-Shafto.'
-
-'Of course,' said the latter, rather sulkily, however, all the more
-so that he was quick enough to detect that, at the mention of the
-visitor's name, a flush like a wave of colour crossed the cheek of
-Finella.
-
-Something in his tone attracted the attention of Lord Fettercairn,
-who said,
-
-'After the 12th I hope you will find a legitimate use for your
-gun--you know what I mean.'
-
-Shafto coloured deeply with annoyance, as his grandfather referred to
-a mischievous act of his, which was deemed a kind of outrage in the
-neighbourhood.
-
-In the ruins of Finella's Castle at Fettercairn a pair of majestic
-osprey had built their nest, guarded by the morass around them, and
-there they bred and reared a pair of beautiful eaglets. No one had
-been allowed to approach them, so that nothing should occur to break
-the confidence of safety which the pair of osprey acquired in their
-lonely summer haunt, till soon after Shafto came to Craigengowan, and
-by four rounds from his breech-loader he contrived to shoot them all,
-to the indignation of the neighbourhood and even of my Lord
-Fettercairn.
-
-Not that the latter cared a straw about these eagles as objects of
-natural history; but the fact of their existence formed the subject
-of newspaper paragraphs, and his vanity was wounded on finding that
-one of his family had acted thus.
-
-So on the morrow, at luncheon, the family circle at Craigengowan had
-two or three accessions to its number--friends invited for the 12th
-of August--among others Mr. Kippilaw the younger, a spruce and dapper
-Edinburgh Writer to the Signet, 'who,' Shafto said, 'thought no small
-beer of himself;' and Vivian Hammersley, a captain of the
-Warwickshire regiment, a very attractive and, to one who was present,
-most decided addition to their society.
-
-His regular features were well tanned by the sun in Natal; his dark
-hair was shorn short; his moustaches were pointed well out; and his
-dark eyes had a bright and merry yet firm and steady expression, as
-those of a man born to command men, who had more than once faced
-danger, and was ready to face it again.
-
-He was in his twenty-seventh year, and was every way a courteous and
-finished English gentleman, though Shafto, in his secret heart, and
-more than once in the stables, pronounced him to be 'a conceited
-beast.'
-
-Hammersley had fished in Norway, shot big game in Southern Africa,
-hunted in the English shires, taking his fences--even double
-ones--like a bird; he had lost and won with a good grace at Ascot and
-the Clubs, flirted 'all round,' and, though far from rich, was a good
-specimen of a handsome, open-handed, and open-hearted young officer,
-a favourite with all women, and particularly with his regiment.
-
-After luncheon he was seated beside Lady Fettercairn; he was too wise
-in his generation to have placed himself where he would have wished,
-beside Finella, whose little hand, on entering, Shafto thought he
-retained in his rather longer than etiquette required; for if
-Shafto's eyes were shifty, they were particularly sharp, and he soon
-found that though Finella, to a certain extent, had filled up her
-time by flirting in a cousinly way with himself, 'now that this
-fellow Hammersley had come,' he was 'nowhere' as he thought, with a
-very bad word indeed.
-
-We have said that Finella had paid a protracted and--to her--most
-enjoyable visit to Tyburnia. There at balls, garden parties, and in
-the Row she had met Vivian Hammersley repeatedly; and these meetings
-had not been without a deep and tender interest to them both; and
-when they were parted finally by her return to Craigengowan, though
-no declaration of regard had escaped him, he had been burning to
-speak to her in that sweet and untutored language by which the inmost
-secrets of the loving heart can be read; and now that they had met
-again, they had a thousand London objects to talk about safely in
-common, which made them seem to be what they were, quite old friends
-in fact, and erelong Lady Fettercairn began, like Shafto, to listen
-and look darkly and doubtfully on.
-
-But when they were alone, which was seldom, or merely apart from
-others, there was between them a new consciousness now--a secret but
-sweet understanding, born of eye speaking to eye--all the sweeter for
-its secrecy and being all their own, a conscious emotion that
-rendered them at times almost afraid to speak or glance lest curious
-eyes or ears might discover what that secret was.
-
-What was to be the sequel to all this? Hammersley was far from rich
-according to the standard of wealth formed by Lady Fettercairn, and
-the latter had destined her granddaughter with all her accumulated
-wealth to be the bride of Shafto. Hammersley knew nothing of this;
-he only knew his own shortcoming in the matter of 'pocketability;'
-but then youth, we are told, 'is sanguine and full of faith and hope
-in an untried future. It looks out over the pathway of life towards
-the goal of its ambition, seeing only the end desired, and giving
-little or no heed to hills and dales, storms and accidents, that may
-be met with on the way.' So, happy in the good fortune that threw
-him once more in the sweet society of bright Finella Melfort, Captain
-Hammersley gave full swing in secret to the most delightful of
-day-dreams.
-
-In all this, however, we are somewhat anticipating our narrative.
-
-But, like a wise man, while the luncheon lasted he was most attentive
-to his hostess, from whose old but still handsome face, like that of
-Tennyson's Maud, 'so faultily faultless, icily regular, and
-splendidly null,' he ever and anon turned to that of Finella--that
-_mignonne_ face, which was so full of varying expression, warmth,
-light, and colour.
-
-'Try that Madeira, Captain Hammersley,' said Lord Fettercairn. 'You
-will scarcely credit how long I have had it in the cellar. I bought
-a whole lot of it--when was it, Grapeston?' he asked, turning to the
-solemn old butler behind him.
-
-'The year Mr. Lennard left home, my Lord.'
-
-'Everything at Craigengowan seems to take date before or after that
-event,' said Lord Fettercairn, with knitted brow. 'Do you mean for
-India, Grapeston?'
-
-'Yes, my lord,' replied the butler, who had carried 'Master Lennard'
-in his arms as a baby.
-
-'Such a rich flavour it has, and just glance at the colour.'
-
-Hammersley affected to do so, but his eyes were bent on the face of
-Finella.
-
-'I hope you won't find Craigengowan dull, but every place is so after
-London.'
-
-'True, we live so fast there that we never seem to have time to do
-anything.'
-
-And now, understanding that Shafto was to be his chief companion at
-the covies on the morrow, Hammersley talked to him of hammerless
-guns, of central fire, of the mode of breaking in dogs, training
-setters, and so forth; and as these subjects had not been included in
-Shafto's education at Lawyer Carlyon's office, he almost yawned as he
-listened with irritation to what he could not comprehend.
-
-'If you care for fishing, Hammersley,' said Lord Fettercairn, 'the
-Bervie yields capital salmon, sea and yellow trout. Finella has
-filled more than one basket with the latter, but Shafto is somewhat
-of a duffer with his rod--he breaks many a rod, and has never landed
-a salmon yet.'
-
-'And the shootings?' said Hammersley inquiringly.
-
-'Well, the best in the county are Drumtochty, Fasque, Hobseat, and my
-own, as I hope you will find to-morrow.'
-
-'Thanks--indeed, I am sure I shall.'
-
-'I have close on 5,000 acres, and the probable bag of grouse and
-black game is from 400 to 500 brace.'
-
-After dinner that evening Finella was found singing at the
-piano--singing, as she always did, without requiring pressure and
-apparently for the mere pleasure of it, as a thrush on a rose bush
-sings; but now she sang for Vivian Hammersley, Shafto felt
-instinctively that she did so, and his bitterness was roused when he
-heard her, in a pause, whisper:
-
-'Please, Captain Hammersley, let Shafto turn the leaves. He likes to
-do it, though he can do little else in the way of music.'
-
-This kind of confidence seemed to imply foregone conclusions and a
-mutual understanding, however slight; but, to some extent, Finella
-had a kind of dread of Shafto.
-
-Hammersley smiled and drew back, after placing a piece of music
-before her; but not before remarking:
-
-'This song you are about to sing is not a new one.'
-
-'No--it is old as the days when George IV. was king--it is one you
-gave me some weeks ago in London, you remember?'
-
-'Am I likely to forget?'
-
-'Turn the leaves, Shafto, please,' said Finella, adjusting her dress
-over the music-stool; 'but don't talk to me.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'It interrupts one so; but turn the leaves at the proper time.'
-
-'Captain Hammersley will do that better than I,' said Shafto, drawing
-almost sulkily away, while the former resumed his place by Finella,
-with an unmistakable smile rippling over his face.
-
-This song, which, it would seem, Hammersley had given her, was an old
-one, long since forgotten, named the 'Trysting Place,' and jealous
-anger gathered in Shafto's heart as he listened and heard
-Hammersley's voice blend with Finella's in the last line of each
-verse:
-
- 'We met not in the sylvan scene
- Where lovers wish to meet,
- Where skies are bright and woods are green,
- And bursting blossoms sweet;
- But in the city's busy din,
- Where Mammon holds his reign,
- Sweet intercourse we sought to win
- 'Mid fashion, guile, and gain;
- Above us was a murky sky,
- Around a crowded space,
- Yet dear, my love, to thee and me,
- Was this, our _trysting place_.'
-
- 'They are who say Love only dwells
- 'Mid sunshine, light, and flowers;
- Alike to him are gloomy cells
- Or gay and smiling bowers;
- Love works not on insensate things
- His sweet and magic art;
- No outward shrine arrests his wings,
- His home is in the heart;
- And dearest hearts like _thine_ and _mine_,
- With rapture must retrace--
- How often Love has deigned to shine
- On this our _trysting place_.'
-
-
-'Miss Melfort, you have sung it more sweetly than ever!' said
-Hammersley in a low voice as he bent over her.
-
-'Confound him!' muttered Shafto to himself; 'where was this trysting
-place? I feel inclined to put a charge of shot into him to-morrow.
-I will, too, if the day is foggy!'
-
-Finella, though pressed, declined to sing more, as the Misses
-Kippilaw, who were rather irrepressible young ladies, now proposed a
-carpet-dance, and she drew on her gloves; and while she fumbled away,
-almost nervously, with the buttoning of one, she knew that
-Hammersley's eyes were lovingly and admiringly bent on her, till he
-came to the rescue, and did the buttoning required; and to Shafto it
-seemed the process was a very protracted one, and was a pretty little
-connivance, as in reality it was.
-
-Miss Prim, Lady Fettercairn's companion, was summoned, and she--poor
-creature--had to furnish music for the occasion, till at last Finella
-good-naturedly relieved her.
-
-So a carpet-dance closed the evening, and then Shafto, though an
-indifferent waltzer, thought he might excel in a square dance with
-Finella; but he seldom shone in conversation at any time, and on this
-occasion his attempts at it proved a great failure, and when he
-compared this with the animation of Hammersley and Finella in the
-Lancers, he was greatly puzzled and secretly annoyed. The former did
-not seem to undergo that agony so often felt by Shafto, of having
-out-run all the topics of conversation, or to have to rack his brain
-for anecdotes or jokes, but to be able to keep up an easy flow of
-well-bred talk on persons, places, and things, which seemed to amuse
-Finella excessively, as she smiled brightly and laughed merrily while
-fanning herself, and looking more sparkling and piquante than ever.
-
-'What the deuce can he find to say to her?' thought Shafto; but
-Hammersley was only finding the links--the threads of a dear old
-story begun in London months ago.
-
-So passed the first day of Hammersley's arrival at Craigengowan, and
-Finella laid her head on her pillow full of bright and happy
-thoughts, in which 'Cousin Shafto' bore no share.
-
-But while these emotions and events were in progress, where, in the
-meantime, was Florian? Ay, Shafto Gyle, where?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-AMONG THE GROUSE.
-
-Nathless the vengeful thoughts of the unamiable Shafto and his
-threats muttered in secret, the shooting next day passed off without
-any peril being encountered by the unconscious
-Hammersley--unconscious at least of the enmity his presence was
-inspiring. However, it was not so the second; and Finella and her
-fair friends agreed that if he looked so well and handsome in his
-heather-coloured knickerbocker shooting-dress, with ribbed stockings
-of Alloa yarn, his gun under his arm, and shot-belt over his
-shoulder, how gallant must he look when in full uniform.
-
-In the field the vicinity of Shafto was avoided as much as possible,
-as he shot wildly indeed. By the gamekeepers, servants, and people
-generally on the estate he was simply detested for the severity of
-his manner, his tyranny, his disposition to bully, and meanness in
-every way; though at first, when he came to Craigengowan, they had
-laboured in vain, and vied with each other in their attempts to
-initiate him into those field-sports so dear to Britons generally,
-and to the Scots in particular; but when shooting grouse especially,
-the beaters or 'drivers' had genuine dread of him, and, when fog was
-on, sometimes refused to attend him, and he was, as they said among
-themselves, 'a new experience i' the Howe o' the Mearns.'
-
-'I've seen as fu' a haggis toomed on a midden,' said the old
-head-gamekeeper wrathfully, as he drew his bonnet over his beetling
-brows, 'but I'll keep my mind to mysel', and tell my tale to the wind
-that blaws o'er Craigengowan.'
-
-Though well past sixty now, Lord Fettercairn, hale and hearty, was in
-the field with his central-fire gun with fine Damascus barrels.
-Shafto, Hammersley, young Kippilaw, and four others made up the party.
-
-The morning was a lovely one, and lovely too was the scenery, for
-August is a month richly tinted with the last touches of summer,
-blended with the russet tones of autumn; the pleasant meadows are yet
-green, and over the ripened harvest the breeze murmurs like the ocean
-when nearly asleep.
-
-Apart from the joyous exhilaration of shooting, and that out-door
-exercise so dear to every English gentleman, Vivian Hammersley felt
-all that which comes from the romantic beauty of his
-surroundings--the scenery of the Howe of the Mearns, which is a low
-champaign and highly cultivated country, studded with handsome
-mansions, and ornamented by rich plantations and thriving villages.
-
-Ere long the open muirs were reached, and the hill-sides, the steep,
-purple ridges of which the sportsmen had to breast; and, keen
-sportsman though he was, Hammersley had soon to admit that
-grouse-shooting was the most fatiguing work he had yet encountered;
-but soon came the excitements of the first point, the first brood,
-and the first shot or two.
-
-To the eye chiefly accustomed to brown partridges, grouse look dusky
-and even black, and they seem to hug the purple heather, but when one
-becomes accustomed to them they are as easy to knock over as the tame
-birds; and now the crack of the guns began to ring out along the
-hill-slopes.
-
-Shafto and Hammersley were about twenty yards apart, and twice when a
-bird rose before the latter, it was brought down wounded but not
-killed by the former.
-
-Hammersley felt that this was 'bad form,' as Shafto should not have
-fired, unless he had missed or passed it; but he only bit his lip and
-smiled disdainfully. Lord Fettercairn remarked the discourtesy, and
-added,
-
-'Shafto, I do wish you would take an example from Captain Hammersley.'
-
-'In what way?' grumbled Shafto.
-
-'He kills his game clean--few birds run from him with broken wings
-and so forth.'
-
-'I am glad to hit when I can,' said Shafto, whose mode of life in
-Devonshire had made him rather soft, and he was beginning to think
-that nerves of iron and lungs like a bagpipe were requisite for
-breasting up the hill-slopes, and then shoot straight at anything.
-
-Hammersley worked away silently, neither looking to his right nor
-left, feeling that though several elements are requisite for 'sport,'
-the chief then was to kill as much grouse as possible in a given
-time, but was more than once irritated and discomposed by Shafto, and
-even young Kippilaw, shooting in a blundering way along the line even
-when the birds were not flying high; and he proceeded in a
-workmanlike way to bring down one bird as it approached, the next
-when it was past him, and so on.
-
-The first portion of the day the Fettercairn party shot to points,
-and then to drivers, and in their fear of Shafto's wild shooting, the
-latter kept shouting while driving, and, as he loathed the whole
-thing, and was now 'completely blown--pumped out,' as he phrased it,
-he was not sorry when the magic word 'lunch' was uttered; and
-Hammersley certainly hailed it, for with the lunch came Finella, and
-with her arrival--to him--the most delightful part of the day.
-
-She came tooling along the sunny pathway that traversed the bottom of
-a glen, driving with her tightly gauntleted and deft little hands a
-pair of beautiful white ponies, which drew the daintiest of
-basket-phaetons, containing also Mr. Grapeston and an ample
-luncheon-basket; and the place chosen for halting was a green oasis
-amid the dark heather, where a spring of deliciously cool water was
-bubbling up, called Finella's Well.
-
-'Now, gentlemen,' said Lord Fettercairn, 'please to draw your
-cartridges. I was once nearly shot in this very place by a stupid
-fellow who omitted to do so. So glad you have come, Finella darling,
-we are all hungry as hawks, and thirsty too.'
-
-Lovely indeed did the piquante girl look in her coquettish hat and
-well-fitting jacket, while the drive, the occasion, and the touch of
-Hammersley's hand as he assisted her to alight gave her cheek an
-unwonted colour, and lent fresh lustre to her dark eyes, and the
-soldier thought that certainly there was nothing in the world so
-pleasant to a man's eye as a young, well-dressed, and beautiful girl.
-
-'You have had good sport,' said she to the group, while her eye
-rested on Hammersley, and then on the rows of grouse laid by braces
-on the grass; and she 'brought a breeze with her,' as the gentlemen
-thought, and had a pleasant remark for each. Her mode of greeting
-the members of the party was different, as to some she gave her hand
-like a little queen, while to others she smiled, or simply bowed; but
-provoked an angry snort from Shafto by expressing a hope that he 'had
-not shot anyone yet.'
-
-And then he grew white as he recalled his angry thoughts of the
-preceding night.
-
-'Why did you take the trouble to drive here?' he asked her, in a low
-voice.
-
-'Because I chose to come; and I do so love driving these plump
-darlings of ponies,' replied the girl, patting the sleek animals with
-her tiny, slim hand.
-
-'Old Grapeston would have done well enough; and why did you not bring
-one of the Kippilaw girls?'
-
-'They are at lawn-tennis. If I thought I could please you--not an
-easy task--I should have tried to bring them all, though that is
-rather beyond the capacities of my phaeton.'
-
-Shafto never for a moment doubted that she had come over to
-superintend the luncheon because 'that fellow Hammersley' was one of
-the party; and in this suspicion perhaps he was right.
-
-As for Hammersley, being ignorant of Shafto's antecedents, his
-present hopes, and those of Lady Fettercairn, he could not comprehend
-how the grandson and heir-apparent of a peer came to be 'such bad
-form--bad style, and all that sort of thing,' as he thought; and all
-that became rather worse when Shafto was under the influence of
-sundry bumpers of iced Pommery Greno administered by Mr. Grapeston.
-
-As the sportsmen lounged on the grass, and the luncheon proceeded
-under the superintendence of old Jasper Grapeston, Finella, the
-presiding goddess, looked unusually bright and happy--a consummation
-which Shafto never doubted, in his rage and jealousy, came of the
-presence of Vivian Hammersley, and that her brilliance was all the
-result of another man's society--not his certainly, and hence he
-would have preferred that she was not light-hearted at all.
-
-He could see that with all her _espieglerie_ Finella found no
-occasion to laugh at Hammersley or tease or snub that gentleman as
-she did himself, but the attentions of Hammersley were delicately and
-seductively paid. Deferential and gentle at all times, to all women,
-he had always been so to Finella Melfort, and she was able to feel
-more than his words, looks, or manner suggested to others; and he
-imagined--nay, he was becoming certain--and a glow of great joy came
-with the certainty--that Finella's sweet dark eyes grew brighter at
-his approach; that a rose-leaf tinge crossed her delicate cheek, and
-there came a slight quiver into her voice when she replied to him,
-
-'Was it all really so?'
-
-Fate was soon to decide that which he had been too slow or timid to
-decide for himself.
-
-As he said one of the merest commonplaces to her, their eyes met.
-
-It was only one lingering glance!
-
-But looks can say so much more than the voice, the eyes surpassing
-the lips, breaking or revealing what the silence of months, it may be
-years, has hidden, and leading heart to heart.
-
-'Grandpapa,' said Finella, suddenly, and just before driving off, 'do
-you shoot over this ground to-morrow?'
-
-'To a certain extent we shall--but why?'
-
-'Shall I bring the luncheon here?'
-
-'Yes, pet, to Finella's Well.'
-
-'So, then, this shall be our trysting-place!' said she, with a bow to
-all, and a merry glance which included most certainly Vivian
-Hammersley, to whom the landscape seemed to darken with her departure.
-
-'Now is the time for shooting to advantage,' said Lord Fettercairn,
-who knew by old experience that when the afternoon shadows, and more
-especially those of evening, begin to lengthen, the slopes of the
-hills are seen better, that the birds, too, lie better, and that as
-the air becomes more fresh and cool, men can shoot with greater care
-and deliberation than in the heat of noon. But Hammersley, full of
-his own thoughts, full of the image of Finella and that tale-telling
-glance they had exchanged, missed nearly every bird, to the great
-exultation of Shafto, who made an incredible number of bad and clumsy
-jokes thereon--jokes which the young Englishman heard with perfect
-indifference and equanimity.
-
-Shafto, however, scarcely foresaw the result of the next day's
-expedition, and certainly Hammersley did not do so either.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE TWO FINELLAS.
-
-Next day, when the grouse-shooting had been in progress for an hour
-or two, a mishap occurred to Hammersley. He twisted his ankle in a
-turnip-field, fell heavily on one side, and staggered up too lame to
-take further share in the sport for that day at least.
-
-'When Finella comes with the lunch in the pony-phaeton, she will
-drive you home,' said Lord Fettercairn, who then desired one of the
-beaters to give Hammersley the assistance of an arm to the well,
-where the repast was to be laid out as before.
-
-When Shafto saw his rival limping he was delighted, and thought,
-'This will mar his waltzing for a time at least;' but he was less
-delighted when he heard of Lord Fettercairn's natural suggestion.
-
-'It is likely a cunning dodge,' was his next thought, 'to get a quiet
-drive with her to Craigengowan.'
-
-And Finella's look and exclamation of alarm and interest were not
-lost upon him when she arrived and found Hammersley seated on the
-grass by the side of the well, and saw the difficulty with which he
-rose to greet her, propping himself upon his unloaded gun as he did
-so; and soft, indeed, was the blush of pleasure that crossed her
-delicate face when she heard of 'grandpapa's arrangement;' and
-certainly it met, secretly, with the entire approbation of
-Hammersley, who anticipated with delight the drive home with such a
-companion.
-
-After a time the luncheon--though skilfully protracted by Shafto--was
-over, and Finella and her 'patient' were together in the phaeton, and
-she, with a smile and farewell bow, whipped up her petted ponies,
-Flirt and Fairy, whom every day she fed with apples and carrots.
-
-Shafto thought jealously and sulkily that she was in great haste to
-be gone; but more sulky would he have been had he seen, or known that
-when once an angle of the glen was reached where the road dipped out
-of sight, the ponies were permitted to go at their own pace, which
-ere long dwindled into a walk, till they passed the vast ruined
-castle of Fettercairn. Finella and Hammersley were, however, if very
-happy, very silent, though both enjoyed the drive in the bright
-sunshine amid such beautiful scenery, and he quite forgot his petty
-misfortune in contemplating the delicate profile and long drooping
-eyelashes of the girl who sat beside him, and who, with a fluttering
-heart, was perhaps expecting the avowal that trembled on his lips,
-especially when he placed his hand on hers, in pretence of guiding
-the ponies, which broke into a rapid trot as the lodge gates were
-passed; and glorious as the opportunity accorded him had been,
-Hammersley's heart, while burning with passionate ardour, seemed to
-have lost all courage, for he had a sincere dread of Lady
-Fettercairn, and suspected that her interests were naturally centred
-in Shafto.
-
-At seven-and-twenty a man, who has knocked about the world, with a
-regiment especially, for some nine years or so, does not fall over
-head and ears in love like a rash boy, or without calculating his
-chances of general success; and poor Hammersley, though he did not
-doubt achieving it with Finella herself, saw deadly rocks and
-breakers ahead with her family, and his spirit was a proud one. To
-make a declaration was to ruin or lose everything, for if the family
-were averse to his suit he must, he knew, quit their roof for ever,
-and Finella would be lost to him, for heiresses seldom elope now,
-save in novels; and he knew that in her circle the motives for
-marriage are more various and questionable than with other and
-untitled ranks of life. Rank and money were the chief incentives of
-such people as the Melforts of Fettercairn. 'Venal unions,' says an
-essayist, 'no doubt occur in the humbler classes, but love is more
-frequently the incentive, while with princes and patricians the
-conjugal alliance is, in nine instances out of ten, a mere matter of
-_expedience_.'
-
-Craigengowan was reached, and not a word of the great secret that
-filled his heart had escaped him, for which he cursed his own folly
-and timidity when the drive ended, and a groom took the ponies' heads.
-
-Yet the day was not over, nor was a fresh opportunity wanting. Lady
-Fettercairn and all her female quests had driven to a flower-show at
-the nearest town--even Mrs. Prim was gone, and the house was empty!
-
-Everything in and about Craigengowan seemed conducive to love-talk
-and confidences. The great and picturesque house itself was
-charming. The old orchards would ere long be heavy with fruit, and
-were then a sight to see; on the terrace the peacocks were strutting
-to and fro; there were fancy arbours admirably adapted for
-flirtation, and a quaint old Scottish garden (with a sun and moon
-dial) now gay with all the flowers of August.
-
-On a lounge near an open window facing the latter Hammersley was
-reclining, when Finella, after changing her driving dress, came into
-the drawing-room, and finely her costume suited her dark and piquante
-style of beauty. She wore a cream-coloured silk, profusely trimmed
-with filmy lace, and a cluster of scarlet flowers on the left
-shoulder among the lace of the collarette that encircled her slender
-neck; and Hammersley, as he looked at her, thought that 'beauty
-unadorned' was rather a fallacy.
-
-His undisguised expression of admiration as he partly rose to receive
-her caused her to colour a little, as she inquired if his hurt was
-easier now; but, instead of replying, he said, while venturing
-slightly to touch her hand:
-
-'Tell me, Miss Melfort, how you came by your dear pretty name of
-Finella? Not from Finella in "Peveril of the Peak"?'
-
-'Ah, I am very unlike her!'
-
-'You are certainly quite as charming!'
-
-'But neither dumb nor pretending to be so,' said the girl, with one
-of her silvery little laughs.
-
-'Finella!' said Hammersley, as if to himself, in a low and
-unconsciously loving tone; 'whence the name? Is it a family one?'
-
-'Don't you know?' she asked.
-
-'How could I know? I know only that I will never forget it.'
-
-'Of course you could not know. The origin of my name is one of the
-oldest legends of the Howe of the Mearns.'
-
-'Howe--that is Scotch for "hollow," I believe.'
-
-'No; "hollow" is the English for _howe_,' replied Finella, laughing,
-as she recalled a quip of Boucicault's to the same purpose. 'You saw
-the great old castle we passed in our drive home?'
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'Well, I am called Finella from a lady who lived there.'
-
-'After it fell into ruin?'
-
-'No; before it.'
-
-'Then she must have lived a precious long time ago.'
-
-'She certainly did--some--nearly a thousand years ago.'
-
-'What a little quiz you are! Now, Miss Melfort, what joke is this?'
-
-'No joke at all,' said she, quite seriously; 'you can read about it
-in our family history--or I shall read it to you in the "Book of
-Fettercairn."'
-
-She took from a table near a handsome volume, which her
-grandfather--to please whom she was named Finella--had in a spirit of
-family vanity prepared for private circulation, and as if to connect
-his title with antiquity, prefaced by a story well known in ancient
-Scottish history, though little known to the Scots of the present day.
-
-We give it from his Lordship's book verbatim as she read it to Vivian
-Hammersley, who--cunning rogue--was not indisposed with such a
-charming and sympathetic companion as Finella to make the most of his
-fall, and reclined rather luxuriously on the velvet lounge, while
-she, seated in a dainty little chair, read on; but he scarcely
-listened, so intent was he on watching her sweet face, her white and
-perfect ears, her downcast eyelids with their long lashes--her whole
-self!
-
-The Melforts, Lords Fettercairn (Strathfinella) and of that Ilk, take
-their hereditary title from the old castle of that name, which stands
-in the Howe of the Mearns, and is sometimes called the Castle of
-Finella. It is situated on an eminence, and is now surrounded on
-three sides by a morass. It is enclosed within an inner and an outer
-wall of oblong form, and occupying half an acre of ground. The inner
-is composed of vitrified matter, but no lime has been used in its
-construction. The walls are a congeries of small stones cemented
-together by some molten matter, now harder than the stones
-themselves; and the remarkable event for which this castle is
-celebrated in history is the following:
-
-When Kenneth III., a wise and valiant king (who defeated the Danes at
-the battle of Luncarty, and created on that field the Hays, Earls of
-Errol, Hereditary Constables of Scotland, and leaders of the Feudal
-cavalry, thus originating also the noble families of Tweeddale and
-Kinnoull), was on the throne, his favourite residence was the castle
-of Kincardine, the ruins of which still remain about a mile eastward
-of the village of Fettercairn, and from thence he went periodically
-to pay his devotions at the shrine of St. Palladius, Apostle of the
-Scots, to whom the latter had been sent by Pope Celestine in the
-sixth century to oppose the Pelagian heresy, and whose bones at
-Fordoun were enclosed in a shrine of gold and precious stones in 1409
-by the Bishop of St. Andrews.
-
-The king had excited the deadly hatred of Finella, the Lady of
-Fettercairn, daughter of the Earl of Angus, by having justly put to
-death her son, who was a traitor and had rebelled against him in
-Lochaber; and, with the intention of being revenged, she prepared at
-Fettercairn a singular engine or 'infernal machine,' with which to
-slay the king.
-
-This engine consisted of a brass statue, which shot out arrows when a
-golden apple was taken from its hand.
-
-Kenneth was at Kincardine, engaged in hunting the deer, wolf, the
-badger and the boar, when she treacherously invited him to her castle
-of Fettercairn, which was then, as Buchanan records, 'pleasant with
-shady groves and piles of curious buildings,' of which there remained
-no vestiges when he wrote in the days of James VI.; and thither the
-king rode, clad in a rich scarlet mantle, white tunic, an eagle's
-wing in his helmet, and on its crest a glittering _clach-bhuai_, or
-stone of power, one of the three now in the Scottish regalia.
-
-Dissembling her hate, she entertained the king very splendidly, and
-after dinner conducted him out to view the beauties of the place and
-the structure of her castle; and Kenneth, pleased with her beauty
-(which her raiment enhanced), for she wore a dress of blue silk,
-without sleeves, a mantle of fine linen, fastened by a brooch of
-silver, and all her golden hair floating on her shoulders,
-accompanied her into a tower, where, in an upper apartment, and amid
-rich festooned arras and 'curious sculptures' stood the infernal
-machine.
-
-She courteously and smilingly requested the king to take the golden
-apple from the right hand of the statue; and he, amazed by the
-strange conceit, did so; on this a rushing sound was heard within it
-as a string or cord gave way, and from its mouth there came forth two
-barbed arrows which mortally wounded him, and he fell at her feet.
-
-Finella fled to Den Finella, and Kenneth was found by his retinue
-'_bullerand in his blude_.'
-
-Den Finella, says a writer, is said, in the genuine spirit of
-legendary lore, to have obtained its name from this princess, who,
-the more readily to evade her pursuers, stepped from the branches of
-one tree to those of another the whole way from her castle to this
-den, which is near the sea, in the parish of St. Cyres, as all the
-country then was a wild forest.
-
-Buchanan deems all this story a fable, though asserted by John Major
-and Hector Boece, and thinks it more probable that the king was slain
-near Fettercairn in an ambush prepared by Finella.
-
-So ended the legend.
-
-As the girl read on, Vivian Hammersley had bent lower and lower over
-her, till the tip of his moustache nearly touched her rich dark hair,
-and his arm all but stole round her. Finella Melfort was quite
-conscious of this close proximity, and though she did not shrink from
-it, that consciousness made her colour deepen and her sweet voice
-become unsteady.
-
-'That is the story of Finella of Fettercairn,' said she, closing the
-book.
-
-'And to this awful legend of the dark ages, which only wants
-blue-fire, lime-light, and a musical accompaniment to set it off, you
-owe your name?' said he, laughingly.
-
-'Yes--it was grandfather's whim.'
-
-'It is odd that you--the belle of the last London season, should be
-named after such a grotesque old termagant!'
-
-She looked up at him smilingly, and then, as their eyes met, the
-expression of that glance exchanged beside the well on the hills came
-into them again; heart spoke to heart; he bent his face nearer hers,
-and his arm went round her in earnest.
-
-'Finella, my darling!' escaped him, and as he kissed her unresisting
-lips, her blushing face was hidden on his shoulder.
-
-And _this_ tableau was the result of the two days' shooting--a sudden
-result which neither Shafto nor Hammersley had quite foreseen.
-
-Of how long they remained thus neither had any idea. Time seemed to
-stand still with them. Finella was only conscious of his hand
-caressing hers, which lay so willingly in his tender, yet firm, clasp.
-
-Hammersley in the gush of his joy felt oblivious of all the world.
-He could think of nothing but Finella, while the latter seemed
-scarcely capable of reflection at all beyond the existing thought
-that he loved her, and though the avowal was a silent and unuttered
-one, the new sense of all it admitted and involved, seemed to
-overwhelm the girl; her brightest day-dreams had come, and she
-nestled, trembling and silent, by his side.
-
-The unwelcome sound of voices and also of carriage-wheels on the
-terrace roused them. He released her hand, stole one more clinging
-kiss, and forgetful of his fall and all about it started with
-impatience to his feet.
-
-Lady Fettercairn and her lady guests had returned from the
-flower-show, and to avoid them and all the world, for a little time
-yet, the lovers, with their hearts still beating too wildly to come
-down to commonplace, tacitly wandered hand in hand into the recesses
-of a conservatory, and lingered there amid the warm, flower-scented
-atmosphere and shaded aisles, in what seemed a delicious dream.
-
-Finella was conscious that Vivian Hammersley was talking to her
-lovingly and caressingly, in a low and tender voice as he had never
-talked before, and she felt that she was 'Finella'--the dearest and
-sweetest name in the world to him--and no more Miss Melfort.
-
-* * * *
-
-It would be difficult, and superfluous perhaps, to describe the
-emotions of these two during the next few days.
-
-Though now quite aware that Finella and Hammersley had met each other
-frequently before, Shafto's surprise at their intimacy, though
-apparently undemonstrative, grew speedily into suspicious anger. He
-felt intuitively that _his_ presence made not the slightest
-difference to them, though he did not forget it; and he failed to
-understand how 'this fellow' had so quickly gained his subtle and
-familiar position with Finella.'
-
-It galled him to the quick to see and feel all this, and know that he
-could never please her as she seemed to be pleased with Hammersley;
-for her colour heightened, her eyes brightened, and her eyelashes
-drooped and flickered whenever he approached or addressed her.
-
-Shafto thought of his hopes of gaining Finella and her fortune
-against any discovery that might be made of the falsehood of his
-position, and so wrath and hatred gathered in his heart together.
-
-He was baffled at times by her bright smiles and pretty, irresistible
-manner, but nevertheless he 'put his brains in steep' to scheme again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-AT REVELSTOKE AGAIN.
-
-Meanwhile sore trouble had come upon Dulcie Carlyon in her Devonshire
-home.
-
-Her father had been dull and gloomy of late, and had more than once
-laid his hand affectionately on her ruddy golden hair, and said in a
-prayerful way that 'he hoped he might soon see her well married, and
-that she might never be left friendless!'
-
-'Why such thoughts, dear papa?' she would reply.
-
-Dulcie had felt a sense of apprehension for some time past. Was it
-born of her father's forebodings, or of the presentiment about which
-she had conversed with Florian? A depression hung over her--an
-undefinable dread of some great calamity about to happen. At night
-her sleep was restless and broken, and by day a vague fear haunted
-her.
-
-The evil boded was to happen soon now.
-
-With these oppressive thoughts mingled the memory of the tall and
-handsome dark-eyed lad she loved--it seemed so long ago, and she
-longed to hear his voice again, and for his breast to lay her head
-upon. But where was Florian now? Months had passed without her
-hearing of him, and she might never hear again!
-
-Little could she have conceived the foul trick that Shafto had played
-them both in the matter of the locket; but, unfortunately for
-herself, she had not seen the last of that enterprising young
-gentleman.
-
-She felt miserably that her heart was lonely and heavy, and that,
-young as she was, light and joy, with the absence and ruin of
-Florian, had gone out of her life. She was alone always with her
-great sorrow, and longed much for tears; but as her past life had
-been a happy and joyous one, Dulcie Carlyon had been little--if at
-all--given to them.
-
-One morning her father did not appear at breakfast as usual. As yet
-undressed her red-golden hair, that the old man loved to stroke and
-caress, was floating in a great loose mass on her back and shoulders,
-and her blue eyes looked bright and clear, if thoughtful.
-
-She had, as was her daily wont, arranged his letters, cut and aired
-the morning papers for him, adjusted a vase of fresh flowers on the
-table, with a basket of delicate peaches, which she knew he liked,
-from the famous south wall of the garden, with green fig leaves round
-them, for Dulcie did everything prettily and tastefully, however
-trivial. Then she cut and buttered his bread, poured out his tea,
-and waited.
-
-Still he did not appear. She knocked on his bedroom door, but
-received no answer, and saw, with surprise, that his boots were still
-on the mat outside.
-
-She peeped in and called on him--'Papa, papa!' but there was no
-response.
-
-The room was empty, and the morning sun streamed through the
-uncurtained window. The bed had not been slept in! Again she called
-his name, and rushed downstairs in alarm and affright.
-
-The gas was burning in his writing-room; the window was still closed
-as it had been overnight; and there, in his easy chair, with his
-hands and arms stretched out on the table, sat Llewellen Carlyon,
-with his head bent forward, asleep as Dulcie thought when she saw him.
-
-'Poor papa,' she murmured; 'he has actually gone to sleep over his
-horrid weary work.'
-
-She leaned over his chair; wound her soft arms round his neck and
-bowed grey head--her lovely blue eyes melting with tenderness, her
-sweet face radiant with filial love, till, as she laid her cheek upon
-it, a mortal chill struck her, and a low cry of awful dismay escaped
-her.
-
-'What is this--papa?'
-
-She failed to rouse him, for his sleep was the sleep of death!
-
-It was disease of the heart, the doctors said, and he had thus passed
-away--died in harness; a pen was yet clutched in his right hand, and
-an unfinished legal document lay beneath it.
-
-Dulcie fainted, and was borne away by the servants to her own
-room--they were old and affectionate country folks, who had been long
-with Llewellen Carlyon, and loved him and his daughter well.
-
-Poor Dulcie remained long unconscious, the sudden shock was so
-dreadful to her, and when she woke from it, the old curate, Mr.
-Pentreath, who had baptized Florian and herself, was standing near
-her bed.
-
-'My poor bruised lamb,' said he, kindly and tenderly, as he passed
-his wrinkled hand over her rich and now dishevelled tresses.
-
-'What has happened?' she asked wildly.
-
-'You fainted, Dulcie.'
-
-'Why--I never fainted before.'
-
-'She don't seem to remember, sir,' whispered an old servant, who saw
-the vague and wild inquiring expression of her eyes.
-
-'Drink this, child, and try to eat a morsel,' said the curate,
-putting a cup of coffee and piece of toast before her.
-
-'Something happened--something dreadful--what was it--oh, what was
-it?' asked Dulcie, putting her hands to her throbbing temples.
-
-'Drink, dear,' said the curate again.
-
-She drank of the coffee thirstily; but declined the bread.
-
-'I beat up an egg in the coffee,' said he; 'I feared you might be
-unable to eat yet.'
-
-Her blue eyes began to lose their wandering and troubled look, and to
-become less wild and wistful; then suddenly a shrill cry escaped her,
-and she said, with a calmness more terrible and painful than fainting
-or hysterics:
-
-'Oh, I remember now--papa--poor papa--dead! Found dead! Oh, my God!
-help me to bear it, or take me too--take me too!'
-
-'Do not speak thus, child,' said Mr. Pentreath gently.
-
-'How long ago was it--yesterday--a month ago, or when? I seem--I
-feel as if I had grown quite old, yet you all look just the
-same--just the same; how is this?'
-
-'My child,' said the curate, with dim eyes, 'your dire calamity
-happened but a short time ago--little more than an hour since.'
-
-Her response was a deep and heavy sob, that seemed to come from her
-overcharged heart rather than her slender throat, and which was the
-result of the unnatural tension of her mind.
-
-'Come to my house with me,' said the kind old curate; but Dulcie
-shook her head.
-
-'I cannot leave papa, dead or alive. I wish to be with him, and
-alone.'
-
-'I shall not leave you so; it is a mistake in grief to avoid contact
-with the world. The mind only gets sadder and deeper into its gloom
-of melancholy. If you could but sleep, child, a little.'
-
-'Sleep--I feel as if I had been asleep for years; and it was this
-morning, you tell me--only this morning I had my arms round his
-neck--dead--my darling papa dead!'
-
-She started to her feet as if to go where the body lay under the now
-useless hands of the doctor, but would have fallen had she not
-clutched for support at Mr. Pentreath, who upheld and restrained her.
-
-The awful thought of her future loneliness now that she had thus
-suddenly lost her father, as she had not another relation in the
-world, haunted the unhappy Dulcie, and deprived her of the power of
-taking food or obtaining sleep.
-
-In vain her old servants, who had known her from infancy, coaxed her
-to attempt both, but sleep would not come, and the food remained
-untasted before her.
-
-'A little water,' she would say; 'give me a little water, for thirst
-parches me.'
-
-All that passed subsequently seemed like one long and terrible dream
-to Dulcie. She was alone in the world, and when her father was laid
-in his last home at Revelstoke, within sound of the tumbling waves,
-in addition to being alone she found herself well-nigh penniless, for
-her father had nothing to leave her but the old furniture of the
-house they had inhabited.
-
-That was sold, and she was to remain with the family of the curate
-till some situation could be procured for her.
-
-She had long since ceased to expect any letter from or tidings of
-Florian. She began to think that perhaps, amid the splendour of his
-new relations, he had forgotten her. Well, it was the way of the
-world.
-
-Never would she forget the day she quitted her old home. Her
-father's hat, his coat and cane were in the hall; all that he had
-used and that belonged to him were still there, to bring his presence
-before her with fresh poignancy, and to impress upon her that she was
-fatherless, all but friendless, and an orphan.
-
-The superstitious people about Revelstoke now remembered that in
-Lawyer Carlyon's garden, blossom and fruit had at the same time
-appeared on more than one of his apple-trees, a certain sign of
-coming death to one of his household. But who can tell in this
-ever-shifting world what a day may bring forth!
-
-One evening--she never forgot it--she had been visiting her father's
-grave, and was slowly quitting the secluded burial-ground, when a man
-like a soldier approached her in haste.
-
-'Florian!' She attempted to utter his name, but it died away on her
-bloodless lips.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-''TIS BUT THE OLD, OLD STORY.'
-
-A poet says:
-
- 'Not by appointment do we meet delight
- And joy: they need not our expectancy.
- But round some corner in the streets of life,
- They on a sudden clasp us with a smile.'
-
-
-Florian it was who stood before her, but though he gazed at her
-earnestly, wistfully, and with great pity in his tender eyes as he
-surveyed her pale face and deep mourning, he made no attempt to take
-the hands she yearningly extended towards him. She saw that he was
-in the uniform of a private soldier, over which he wore a light
-dust-coat as a sort of disguise, but there was no mistaking his
-glengarry--that head-dress which is odious and absurd for English and
-Irish regiments, and which in his instance bore a brass badge--the
-sphinx, for Egypt.
-
-He looked thin, gaunt, and pale, and anon the expression of his eye
-grew doubtful and cloudy.
-
-'Florian!' exclaimed Dulcie in a piercing voice, in which something
-of upbraiding blended with tones of surprise and grief; and yet the
-fact of his presence seemed so unreal that she lingered for a moment
-before she flung herself into his arms, and was clasped to his
-breast. 'Oh, what is the meaning of this dress?' she asked, lifting
-her face and surveying him again.
-
-'It means that I am a soldier--like him whose son I thought myself--a
-soldier of the Warwickshire Regiment,' replied Florian with some
-bitterness of tone.
-
-'Oh, my God, and has it come to this!' said Dulcie wringing her
-interlaced fingers. 'Could not Shafto--your cousin----'
-
-'Shafto cast me off--seemed as if he could not get rid of me too
-soon.'
-
-'How cruel, when he might have done so much for you, to use you so!'
-
-'I had no other resort, Dulcie; I would not stoop to seek favours
-even from him, and our paths in life will never cross each other
-again; but a time may come--I know not when--in which I may seek
-forgiveness of enemies as well as friends--the bad and the good
-together--for a soldier's life is one of peril.'
-
-'Of horror--to me!' wailed Dulcie, weeping freely on his breast.
-
-'This tenderness is strange, Dulcie! Why did you cast me off in my
-utter adversity and return to me my locket?'
-
-Dulcie looked up in astonishment.
-
-'What _do_ you mean, Florian--have you lost your senses?' she asked
-in sore perplexity. 'Where have you come from last?'
-
-'Plymouth; in a paper there I saw a notice of your terrible loss, and
-resolved to see, even if I could not speak with you.'
-
-'And you came----'
-
-'To see you, my lost darling, once again. Oh, Dulcie, I thought I
-should die if I left England and sailed for Africa without doing so.
-I got a day's leave and am here.'
-
-'But why have you done this?'
-
-'This--what?'
-
-'Soldiering!'
-
-'Penniless, hopeless, what else could I do?--besides, I thought you
-had cast me off when you sent me back this locket,' he added,
-producing the gift referred to.
-
-'That locket was stolen from me on the night you left
-Revelstoke--literally wrenched from my neck, as I told you in my
-letter--the letter you never answered.'
-
-'I received no letter, Dulcie--but your locket was taken from you by
-whom?'
-
-'Shafto.'
-
-'The double villain! He must have intercepted that letter, and
-utilised the envelope with its postmarks and stamps to deceive me,
-and effect a breach between us.'
-
-'Thank God you came, dearest Florian!'
-
-'I thought you had renounced me, Dulcie, and now I almost wish you
-had.'
-
-'Why?'
-
-'It is little use to remember me now--I am so poor and hopeless.'
-
-'After all,' said she, taking his face between her hands caressingly,
-'what does poverty matter if we love each other still?'
-
-'And you love me, Dulcie--love me yet!' exclaimed Florian
-passionately.
-
-'And shall never, never cease to do so.'
-
-'But I am so much beneath you now in position, Dulcie--and--and----'
-his voice broke.
-
-'What, darling?'
-
-'May never rise.'
-
-'Would I be a true woman if I forsook you because you were
-unfortunate?'
-
-'No; but you are more than a woman, Dulcie--you are a golden-haired
-angel!'
-
-'My poor Florian, how gaunt and hollow your cheeks are! You have
-suffered----'
-
-'Much since last we parted here in dear old Devonshire. But Shafto's
-villainy surpasses all I could have imagined!'
-
-'And where is Shafto now?'
-
-'With his grand relations, I suppose. I am glad that we have
-unravelled that which was to me a source of sorrow and dismay--the
-returned locket. So you cannot take back your heart, Dulcie, nor
-give me mine?' said Florian.
-
-'Nor would I wish to do so,' she replied, sweetly and simply.
-'Though poor, we are all the world to each other now.'
-
-'Hard and matter-of-fact as our every-day existence is, there
-is--even in these railway times--much of strange and painful romance
-woven up with many a life; and so it seems to be with mine--with
-ours, Dulcie.'
-
-'Oh that I were rich, Florian, or that you were so!' exclaimed the
-girl, as a great pity filled her heart, when she thought of her
-lover's blighted life, their own baffled hopes, and the humble and
-most perilous course that was before him in South Africa, where the
-clouds of war were gathering fast. 'I, too, am poor, Florian--very
-poor; dear papa died involved, leaving me penniless, and I must cast
-about to earn my own bread.'
-
-'This is horrible--how shall I endure it?' said he fiercely, while
-regarding her with a loving but haggard expression in his dark eyes.
-
-'What would you have done if you had not met me by chance here?'
-
-'Loafed about till the last moment, and then done something
-desperate. I _would_ have seen you, and after that--the Deluge! In
-two days we embark at Plymouth,' he added, casting a glance at the
-old church of Revelstoke and its burying-ground. 'There our parents
-lie, Dulcie--yours at least, and those that I, till lately, thought
-were mine. There is something very strange and mysterious in this
-change of relationship and position between Shafto and myself. I
-cannot understand it. Why was I misled all my life by one who loved
-me so well? How often have I stood with the Major by a gravestone
-yonder inscribed with the name of Flora MacIan and heard him repeat
-while looking at it--
-
- 'A thousand would call the spot dreary
- Where thou takest thy long repose;
- But a rude couch is sweet to the weary,
- And the frame that suffering knows.
- I never rejoiced more sincerely
- Than at thy funeral hour,
- Assured that the one I loved dearly
- Was beyond affliction's power!
-
-Why did he quote all this to me, and tell me never to forget that
-spot, or who was buried there, if she was only Shafto's aunt, and not
-my mother?'
-
-Florian felt keenly for the position of Dulcie Carlyon, and the
-perils and mortifications that might beset her path now; but he was
-too young, too healthy and full of animal life and spirits, to be
-altogether weighed down by the thought of his humble position and all
-that was before him; and now that he had seen her again, restored to
-her bosom the locket, and that he knew she was true to him, and had
-never for a moment wavered in her girlish love, life seemed to become
-suddenly full of new impulses and hopes for him, and he thought
-prayerfully that all might yet be well for them both.
-
-But when?
-
-To Dulcie there seemed something noble in the hopeful spirit that,
-under her influence, animated her grave lover now. He seemed to
-become calm, cool, steadfast, and, hap what might, she felt he would
-ever be true to her.
-
-He seemed brave and tender and true--'tender and true' as a Douglas
-of old, and Dulcie thought how pleasant and glorious it would be to
-have such a handsome young husband as he to take care of her always,
-and see that all she did was right and proper and wise.
-
-A long embrace, and he was gone to catch the inexorable train. She
-was again alone, and for the first time she perceived that the sun
-had set, that the waves looked black as they rounded Revelstoke
-promontory, and that all the landscape had grown dark, desolate, and
-dreary.
-
-What a hopeless future seemed to stretch before these two creatures,
-so young and so loving!
-
-Florian was gone--gone to serve as a private soldier on the burning
-coast of Africa. It seemed all too terrible, too dreadful to think
-of.
-
-'Every morning and evening I shall pray for you, Florian,' wailed the
-girl in her heart; 'pray that you may be happy, good, and rich,
-and--and that we shall yet meet in heaven if we never meet on earth.'
-
-On the second morning after this separation, when Dulcie was pillowed
-in sleep, and the rising sun was shining brightly on the waves that
-rolled in Cawsand Bay and danced over the Mewstone, a great white
-'trooper' came out of Plymouth Sound under sail and steam, with the
-blue-peter flying at its foremasthead, her starboard side crowded
-with red coats, all waving their caps and taking a farewell look at
-Old England--the last look it proved to many--and, led by Bob
-Edgehill, a joyous, rackety, young private of the Warwickshire,
-hundreds of voices joined chorusing:
-
- 'Merrily, my lads, so ho!
- They may talk of a life at sea,
- But a life on the land
- With sword in hand
- Is the life, my lads, for me!'
-
-
-But there was one young soldier whose voice failed him in the chorus,
-and whose eyes rested on Stoke Point and the mouth of the Yealm till
-these and other familiar features of the coast melted into the
-widening Channel.
-
-Dulcie was roused to exertion from the stupor of grief that had come
-upon her by tidings that a situation had been found for her as
-companion--one in which she would have to make herself useful,
-amiable, and agreeable in the family of a lady of rank and wealth, to
-whom she would be sent by influential friends of Mr. Pentreath in
-London.
-
-The poor girl thought tearfully how desolate was her lot now, cast to
-seek her bread among utter strangers; and if she became ill,
-delicate, or unable to work, what would become of her?
-
-Her separation from Florian seemed now greater than ever; but, as
-Heine has it:
-
- 'Tis but the old, old story,
- Yet it ever abideth new;
- And to whomsoever it cometh
- The heart it breaks in two.'
-
-
-To leave Revelstoke seemed another wrench.
-
-Dulcie had been born and bred there, and all the villagers in
-Revelstoke loved and knew Lawyer Carlyon well, and were deeply
-interested in the future of his daughter; thus, on the day of her
-departure no one made any pretence of work or working. Heads were
-popping out and in of the windows of the village street all morning,
-and a cluster--a veritable crowd--of kindly folks accompanied Mr.
-Pentreath and the weeping girl to the railway station, for she wept
-freely at all this display of regard and sympathy, especially from
-the old, whom she might never see again.
-
-When the train swept her away, and she lost sight of the last
-familiar feature of her native place, a strange and heavy sense of
-utter desolation came over poor Dulcie, and but for the presence of
-other passengers she would have stooped her head upon her hot hands
-and sobbed aloud, for she thought of her dead parents--when did she
-not think of them now?
-
-'Oh!' exclaims a writer, 'if those who have loved and gone before us
-can see afar off those they have left, surely the mother who had
-passed from earth might tremble now for her child, standing so
-terribly alone in the midst of a seething sea of danger and
-temptations?'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-AT CRAIGENGOWAN.
-
-With the new understanding--the tacit engagement that existed between
-herself and Vivian Hammersley--Finella writhed with annoyance when
-privately and pointedly spoken to on the subject of her 'cousin'
-Shafto's attentions and hopes.
-
-'Grandmamma,' said she to Lady Fettercairn, 'I don't see why I may
-not marry whom I please. I am not like a poor girl who has nothing
-in the world. Indeed, in that case I am pretty sure that neither you
-nor cousin Shafto would want me.'
-
-'She must settle soon,' said Lady Fettercairn, when reporting this
-plain reply to Lady Drumshoddy. 'I certainly shall not take her to
-London again, yet awhile.'
-
-'You are right,' replied that somewhat grim matron; 'and when once
-this Captain Hammersley, who, to my idea, is somewhat too _èpris_
-with her, is gone, you can easily find some pretext for remaining at
-Craigengowan; or shall I have her with me?'
-
-'As you please,' replied Lady Fettercairn, who knew that the
-Drumshoddy _mènage_ did not always suit the taste of Finella; 'but I
-think she is better here--propinquity and all that sort of thing may
-be productive of good. I know that poor Shafto's mind is quite made
-up, and, as I said before, she must settle soon. We can't have
-twenty thousand a year slipping out of the family.'
-
-Finella thought little of their wishes or those of Shafto. She
-thought only of that passionate hour in the lonely drawing-room,
-where she was alone with Vivian, and his lips were pressed to hers;
-of the close throb of heart to heart, and that the great secret of
-her young girl's life was his now and hers no longer, but aware of
-the opposition and antagonism he would be sure to encounter just
-then, she urged upon him a caution and a secrecy of the engagement
-which his proud spirit somewhat resented.
-
-He thought it scarcely honourable to take advantage of Lord
-Fettercairn's hospitality, and gain the love of Finella without his
-permission; but as both knew that would never be accorded--that to
-ask for it would cut short his visit, and as he was so soon going on
-distant service, with Finella he agreed that their engagement should
-be kept a secret till his return.
-
-And to blind the eyes of the watchful or suspicious he actually found
-himself flirting with one of the Miss Kippilaws, three young ladies
-who thought they spoke the purest English, though it was with that
-accent which Basil Hall calls 'the hideous patois of Edinburgh;' and,
-perceiving this, Lady Fettercairn became somewhat contented, and
-Finella was excessively amused.
-
-Not so the astute Shafto.
-
-'It is all a d----d game!' muttered that young gentleman; 'a red
-herring drawn across the scent.'
-
-'Why do you look so unhappy, dearest?' asked Finella one evening,
-when she and her lover found themselves alone for a few minutes,
-during which she had been contemplating his dark face in silence.
-
-'My leave of absence is running out so fast--by Jove, faster than
-ever apparently now!'
-
-'Is that the sole reason?' asked the girl softly and after a pause,
-her dark eyes darkening and seeming to become more intense.
-
-'No,' he replied, with hesitation.
-
-'Tell me, then--what is the other?'
-
-'You know how I love you----'
-
-'And I--you.'
-
-'But in one sense my love is so liable to misconstruction--so
-hopeless of proof.'
-
-'Hopeless, Vivian--after all I have admitted?' she asked
-reproachfully.
-
-'I mean because I am almost penniless as compared to you.'
-
-'What does that matter? Surely I have enough for two,' said she,
-laughing.
-
-'And I fear the bitter opposition of your family.'
-
-'So do I; but don't mind it,' said the independent little beauty.
-
-'I have heard a rumour that one of the Melforts who made a pure
-love-marriage was cut off root and branch.'
-
-'That was poor Uncle Lennard, before I was born. Well--they can't
-cut _me_ off.'
-
-'They will never consent; and when I am far away, as I soon shall be,
-if their evil influence----'
-
-'Should prevail with me? Oh, Vivian!' exclaimed the girl, her dark
-eyes sparkling through their unshed tears. 'Think not of their
-influencing me, for a moment.'
-
-'Thank you a thousand times for the assurance, my love. It was vile
-of me to think of such things. I have a sure conviction that your
-cousin Shafto dislikes me most certainly,' said Hammersley, after a
-pause.
-
-'I don't doubt it,' said she.
-
-'They mean you for him.'
-
-'They--who?'
-
-'Your grandparents.'
-
-'I know they do--but don't tease me by speaking of a subject so
-distasteful,' exclaimed Finella, making a pretty moue expression of
-disdain.
-
-He pressed a kiss on her brow, another on her hair, and his lips
-quickly found their way to hers, after they had been pressed on her
-snow-white eyelids.
-
-'I love you with my whole heart, Finella,' he exclaimed passionately.
-
-'And I you,' said the artless girl again, in that style of iteration
-of which lovers never grow weary, with an adoring upward glance,
-which it was a pity the gathering gloom prevented him from seeing.
-
-As they walked slowly towards the house, she quickly withdrew her
-hands, which were clasped clingingly to his arm, as Shafto approached
-them suddenly. He saw the abrupt act, and drew his own conclusions
-therefrom, and, somewhat to Finella's annoyance, turned abruptly away.
-
-'So that is the amiable youth for whom they design you,' said he in a
-whisper.
-
-'Did I not say you were not to speak of him? To tell you the truth,
-I am at times somewhat afraid of him.'
-
-'My darling--I must give you an amulet--a charm against his evil
-influence,' said Hammersley, laughing, as he slipped a ring on her
-wedding-finger, adding, 'I hope it fits.'
-
-'What is this--oh, Vivian! actually a wedding-ring--but I cannot
-wear, though I may keep it.'
-
-'Then wear this until you can, when I return, darling,' said he, as
-he slipped a gemmed ring on the tiny finger, and stooping, kissed it.
-
-'My heart's dearest!' cooed the girl happily. 'Well, Vivian, none
-other than the hoop you have now given me shall be my wedding-ring!'
-
-Had Lady Fettercairn overheard all this she would have had good
-reason to fear that Finella's twenty thousand a year was slipping
-away from the Craigengowan family, all the more so that the scene of
-this tender interview was a spot below the mansion-house, said to be
-traditionally fatal to the Melforts of Fettercairn, the Howe of
-Craigengowan--for there a terrible adventure occurred to the first
-Lord, he who sold his Union vote, and of whom the men of the Mearns
-were wont to say he had not only sold his country to her enemies, but
-that he had also sold his soul to the evil one.
-
-It chanced that in the gloaming of the 28th of April, 1708, the first
-anniversary of that day on which the Scottish Parliament dissolved to
-meet no more, he was walking in a place which he had bought with his
-Union bribe--the Howe of Craigengowan, then a secluded dell,
-overshadowed by great alders and whin bushes--when he saw at the
-opposite end the figure of a man approaching pace for pace with
-himself, and his outline was distinctly seen against the red flush of
-the western sky.
-
-As they neared each other slowly, a strange emotion of superstitious
-awe stole into the hard heart of Lord Fettercairn. So strong was
-this that he paused for a minute, and rested on his cane. The
-stranger did precisely the same.
-
-The peer--the ex-Commissioner on Forfeited Estates--'pulled himself
-together,' and put his left hand jauntily into the silver hilt of his
-sword--a motion imitated exactly, and to all appearance mockingly, by
-the other, whose gait, bearing, and costume--a square-skirted crimson
-coat, a long-flapped white vest, black breeches and stockings rolled
-over the knee, and a Ramillie wig--were all the same in cut and
-colour as his own!
-
-Lord Fettercairn afterwards used to assert that he would never be
-able to describe the undefinable, the strange and awful sensation
-that crept over him when, as they neared each other, pace by pace, he
-saw in the other's visage the features of himself reproduced, as if
-he had been looking into a mirror.
-
-A cold horror ran through every vein. He knew and felt that his own
-features were pallid and convulsed with mortal terror and dismay,
-while he could see that those of his dreadful counterpart were
-radiant with spite and triumphant malice.
-
-Himself seemed to look upon himself--the same in face, figure, dress;
-every detail was the same, save that the other clutched a canvas bag,
-inscribed '£500' the price of the Union vote (or, as some said, the
-price of his soul)--on seeing which my Lord Fettercairn shrieked in
-an agony of terror, and fell prone on his face--a fiendish yell and
-laugh from the other making all the lonely Howe re-echo as he did so.
-
-How long he lay there he knew not precisely; but when he opened his
-eyes the pale April moon was shining down the Howe, producing weird
-and eerie shadows, the alder and whin bushes looked black and gloomy,
-and the window lights were shining redly in the tall and sombre mass
-of Craigengowan, the gables, turrets, and vanes of which stood up
-against the starry sky.
-
-He never quite recovered the shock, but died some years after; and
-even now on dark nights, when owls hoot, ravens croak, toads crawl,
-and the clock at Craigengowan strikes twelve, something strange--no
-one can exactly say what--is to be seen in the Howe, even within
-sound of the railway engine.
-
-But to resume our own story:
-
-Though a day for parting--for a separation involving distance, time,
-and no small danger to one--was inexorably approaching, Finella was
-very happy just then, with a happiness she had never known before,
-and with a completeness that made life--even to her who had known
-London for a brilliant season--seem radiant. She had been joyous
-like a beautiful bird, and content, too, before the renewal and
-fuller development of her intimacy with Vivian Hammersley; but she
-was infinitely more joyous and content now. ''Twas but the old, old
-story' of a girl's love, and in all her sentiments and all her hopes
-for the future Vivian shared.
-
-The beautiful dreams of a dual life had been partly--if not
-fully--realised through him, who seemed to her a perfect being, a
-perfect hero: though he was only a smart linesman, a handsome young
-fellow like a thousand others, yet he possessed every quality to
-render a girl happy.
-
-Shafto felt that Hammersley had quite 'cut the ground from under his
-feet' with Finella, as he phrased it; and hating him in consequence,
-and being a master in cunning and finesse, wonderfully so for his
-years, he resolved to get 'the interloper's' visit to Craigengowan
-cut short at all hazards, and he was not long in putting his scheme
-in operation.
-
-The lovers thus were not quite unconscious of being watched by eyes
-that were quickened by avarice, passion, and jealousy; yet, withal,
-they were very, very happy--in Elysium, in fact.
-
-Finding that Hammersley had suddenly become averse to gambling, after
-a long day among the grouse, Shafto strove hard to lure him into play
-one evening in the smoke-room.
-
-Hammersley declined, aware that Shafto was remarkably sharp at cards,
-having become somewhat efficient after years of almost nightly play
-in the bar-room of the Torrington Arms at Revelstoke.
-
-Shafto's manner on this evening became almost insulting, and he
-taunted him with 'taking deuced good care of such money as he had.'
-
-''Pon my soul, young fellow, do you know that you are
-rather--well--ah--rude?' said Hammersley, removing his cigar for a
-moment and staring at the speaker.
-
-'Sorry, but it's my way,' replied Shafto.
-
-'Perhaps you had better make that your way,' said Hammersley, his
-brown cheek reddening as he indicated the room-door with his cigar.
-Then suddenly remembering that he must preserve certain amenities,
-and as guest--especially one circumstanced as he was secretly--he
-pushed his cigar-case towards Shafto, saying--'Try one of these--they
-are Rio Hondos, and are of the best kind.'
-
-'Thanks, I prefer my own,' said Shafto, sulkily.
-
-At last, piqued by the manner of the latter, and having been lured
-into drinking a little more brandy and soda than was good for him
-after dinner, the unsuspecting Englishman sat down to play, and
-though he did so carelessly, his success was wonderful, for, while
-not caring to win, he won greatly.
-
-Higher and higher rose the stakes, till a very considerable sum had
-passed into his hands, and, handsome though Shafto's quarterly
-allowance from his 'grandfather,' paid duly by Mr. Kippilaw, he could
-not help the lengthening of his visage, and the growing pallor of it,
-while his shifty eyes rolled about in his anxiety and anger; and Lord
-Fettercairn and young Kippilaw, who were present, looked on--the
-former with some annoyance, and the latter with amused interest.
-
-Quite suddenly, Kippilaw exclaimed:
-
-'Hey--what the deuce is this? Captain Hammersley, you have dropped a
-card.'
-
-And he picked one up from that officer's side, and laid it on the
-table.
-
-'The ace of spades! By heaven, you have _already_ played that card!'
-exclaimed Shafto, with fierce triumph.
-
-'It is not mine!' said Hammersley, hotly.
-
-'Whose, then?'
-
-'How the devil should I know?' asked Hammersley, eyeing him firmly.
-
-'Your luck has been marvellous, but not so much so when we know that
-you play with double aces,' said Shafto, throwing down his cards and
-starting from the table, as the other did, now pallid with just rage.
-
-'Would you dare to insinuate?' began the officer, in a hoarse tone.
-
-'I insinuate nothing; but the disgraceful fact speaks for itself; and
-I think you have been quite long enough among us in Craigengowan,' he
-added, coarsely.
-
-Vivian Hammersley was pale as death, and speechless with rage. He
-thought first of Finella and then of his own injured honour; and we
-know not what turn this episode might have taken had not Lord
-Fettercairn, who, we have said, had been quietly looking on from a
-corner, said gravely, sharply, and even with pain, as he started
-forward:
-
-'Shafto! I saw you drop _that card_, where Mr. Kippilaw picked it
-up--drop it, whether purposely or not I do not say--but drop it you
-did.'
-
-'Impossible, sir!'
-
-'It is _not_ impossible,' said the peer, irately; 'and I am not blind
-or liable to make mistakes; and you too manifestly did so; whence
-this foul accusation of a guest in my own house--a gentleman to whom
-you owe a humble and most complete apology.'
-
-Shafto was speechless with rage and baffled spite at the new and
-sudden turn his scheme had taken, and at being circumvented in his
-own villainy.
-
-'My Lord Fettercairn, from my soul I thank you!' said Hammersley,
-drawing himself up proudly, looking greatly relieved in mind, and,
-turning next to Shafto, evidently waited for the suggested apology.
-
-But in that he was disappointed, as the 'heir' of Fettercairn turned
-abruptly on his heel and left the room, leaving his lordship to make
-the _amende_, which he did in very graceful terms.
-
-As it was impossible now for both to remain longer under the same
-roof after a fracas of this kind, Hammersley proposed at once to take
-his departure for the south by a morning train; but Lord Fettercairn,
-who, with all his selfish shortcomings, had been shocked by the
-episode, and by several other ugly matters connected with his newly
-found 'grandson,' would by no means permit of that movement; and in
-this spirit of hospitality even Lady Fettercairn joined, pressing him
-to remain and finish his visit, as first intended, while Shafto, in a
-gust of baffled rage and resentment, greatly to the relief of Finella
-and of the domestics, betook himself to Edinburgh, thus for a time
-leaving his rival more than ever in full possession of the field.
-
-'Whether she is influenced by Captain Hammersley I cannot say,' were
-the parting words of Lady Fettercairn to this young hopeful; 'but you
-seem by this last untoward affair to have lost even her friendship,
-and it will be a dreadful pity, Shafto, if all her money should be
-lost to you too.'
-
-And Shafto fully agreed with his 'dear grandmother' that it would be
-a pity indeed.
-
-As a gentleman and man with a keen sense of honour, Hammersley
-disliked exceedingly the secrecy of the engagement he had made with
-Finella, and felt himself actually colour more than once when Lord
-Fettercairn addressed him; but his compunctions about it grew less
-when he thought of the awful escape he had made from a perilous
-accusation, that might have 'smashed' him in the Service, and of the
-trickery of which Shafto was capable--a trickery of which he had not
-yet seen the end.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-AT THE BUFFALO RIVER.
-
-The evening of the 10th January was closing in, and the blood-red
-African sun, through a blended haze of gold and pale green, red and
-fiery, seemed to linger like a monstrous crimson globe at the
-horizon, tinging with the same hues the Buffalo River as its broad
-waters flowed past the Itelizi Hill towards Rorke's Drift.
-
-There a picquet of the Centre or Second column of infantry (of the
-army then advancing into Zululand), under Colonel Richard Glyn of the
-24th Regiment, was posted for the night. The main body of the
-picquet, under Lieutenant Vincent Sheldrake, a smart young officer,
-was bivouacked among some mealies at a little distance from the bank
-of the river, along the margin of which his advanced sentinels were
-posted at proper distances apart, and there each man stood motionless
-as a statue, in his red tunic and white tropical helmet, with his
-rifle at the 'order,' and his eyes steadily fixed on that quarter in
-which the Zulu army was supposed to be hovering.
-
-To reach the Buffalo River the various columns of Lord Chelmsford's
-army could not march by regular roads, as no such thing exists in
-Zululand, and the sole guides of our officers in selecting the line
-of advance through these savage regions were the grass-covered ruts
-left by the waggon-wheels of some occasional trader or sportsman in
-past times.
-
-As the column had been halted for the night, at a considerable
-distance in rear of the outlying picquet, the men of the latter had
-their provisions with them ready cooked, and were now having their
-supper in a grassy donga or hollow. The earthen floor was their
-table, and Lieutenant Sheldrake, being more luxurious than the rest,
-had spread thereon as a cloth an old sheet of the _Times_; but the
-appetites of all were good, and their temperament cheery and hearty.
-Their rifles were piled, and they brewed their coffee over a blazing
-fire, the flame of which glowed on their sun-burned and beardless
-young faces, and a few Kaffirs squatted round their own fire,
-jabbered, gesticulated, and swallowed great mouthfuls of their
-favourite liquor 'scoff.'
-
-Sheldrake was too ill or weary to attend closely to his own duties,
-and the moment the evening meal was over, he desired the sergeant of
-the picquet to 'go round the advanced sentries.'
-
-The sergeant, a young and slender man, and who was no other than
-Florian, touched the barrel of his rifle and departed on his
-mission--to visit the sentinels in rotation by the river bank, and
-see that they were in communication with those of the picquets on the
-right and left.
-
-The scenery around was savage and desolate; long feathery grass
-covered the veldt for miles upon miles. The chief features in it
-were some blue gum trees, and on a koppie, or little eminence, the
-deserted ruins of a Boer farm under the shadow of a clump of
-eucalyptus trees; and in the foreground were some bustards and blue
-Kaffir cranes by the river bank.
-
-Short service and disease had given Florian rapid promotion; for our
-soldiers, if brave, had no longer the power of manly endurance of
-their predecessors under the old system. According to General
-Crealock, the extreme youth of our soldiers in South Africa rendered
-their powers for toil very small; while the Naval Brigade, composed
-of older men, had scarcely ever a man in hospital. The Zulu campaign
-was a very trying one; there were the nightly entrenchments, the
-picquet duty amid high grass, and the absence of all confidence that
-discipline and that long mutual knowledge of each other give in the
-ranks. He added most emphatically that our younger soldiers were
-unfit for European campaigning; that half the First Division were
-'sick;' there were always some 200 weak lads in hospital, 'crawling
-about like sick flies,' and, like him, every officer was dead against
-the short-service system.
-
-The face of our young sergeant was handsome as ever; but it was
-strangely altered since late events had come to pass. There was a
-haggard and worn look in the features, particularly in the eyes. The
-latter looked feverish and dim--their brightness less at times, while
-a shadow seemed below them.
-
-Florian having, as he now deemed, no right to the name of Melfort, or
-even that of MacIan, had enlisted under the latter name, as that by
-which he had been known from infancy, lest he might make a false
-attestation. The name of Gyle he shrank from, even if it was
-his--which at times he doubted! His regiment was the brave old 24th,
-or Second Warwickshire, which had been raised in the eventful year
-1689 by Sir Edward Dering, Bart, of Surrenden-Dering, head of one of
-the few undoubted Saxon families in England, and it was afterwards
-commanded in 1695 by Louis, Marquis de Puizar.
-
-Second to none in the annals of war during the reigns of Anne and the
-early Georges, the 24th in later times served with valour at the
-first capture of the Cape of Good Hope, in the old Egyptian campaign,
-in the wars of Spain and India, and now they were once again to cover
-themselves with a somewhat clouded and desperate glory in conflict
-with the gallant Zulus.
-
-Florian in his new career found himself occasionally among a somewhat
-mixed and rough lot--the raw, weedy soldiers of the new disastrous
-system--but there were many who were of a better type; and the
-thought of Dulcie Carlyon--the only friend he had in the world, the
-only human creature who loved him--kept him free from the temptations
-and evil habits of the former; and he strove to live a steady, pure,
-and brave life, that he might yet be worthy of her, and give her no
-cause to blush for him.
-
-He got through his drilling as quickly as he could, and soon
-discovered that the sooner a soldier takes his place in the ranks the
-better for himself. He found that though many of his comrades were
-noisy, talkative, and quarrelsome, that the English soldier quicker
-than any other discovers and appreciates a gentleman. His officers
-soon learned to appreciate him too, and hence the rapidity with which
-he won his three chevrons, and Mr. Sheldrake felt that, young though
-he was, he could trust Florian to go round the sentinels.
-
-Each was at his post, and the attention of each increased as the
-gloom after sunset deepened, for none knew who or what might be
-approaching stealthily and unseen among the long wavy grass and mossy
-dongas that yawned amid the country in front.
-
-'Hush, Bob!' said he to his comrade, Edgehill, whom he heard singing
-merrily to himself, 'you should be mute as a fish on outpost duty,
-and keep your ears open as well as your eyes. What have you got in
-your head, Bob, that makes you so silly? But, as the author of the
-"Red Rag" says, we soldiers have not much in our heads at any time,
-or we wouldn't go trying to stop cannon balls or bullets with them.'
-
-'Right you are, Sergeant,' replied Bob, 'but I can't think what made
-you--a gentleman--enlist.'
-
-'Because I was bound to be a soldier, I suppose. And you?'
-
-'Through one I wish I never had seen?'
-
-'Who was that?'
-
- 'The handsome young girl,
- With her fringe in curl,
- That worked a sewing-machine,'
-
---sung the irrepressible Bob; and Florian returned to report 'all
-right' to Mr. Sheldrake.
-
-Though the actual cause of the Zulu war lies a little apart from our
-story, it may be necessary to mention that we invaded the country of
-Cetewayo after giving him a certain time, up to the 11th of January,
-to accept our ultimatum; to adopt an alternative for war, by
-delivering up certain of his subjects who had violated British
-territory, attacked a police-station, and committed many
-outrages,--among others, carrying off two women, one of whom they put
-to a barbarous death near the Buffalo River.
-
-But instead of making any apology, or giving an indemnity, Cetewayo
-prepared to defend himself at the head of an enormous army of hardy
-Zulu warriors, all trained in a fashion of their own, divided into
-strong regiments, furnished with powerful shields of ox-hide, and
-armed with rifles, war clubs, and assegais--a name with which we are
-now so familiar. The shaft of this weapon averages five feet in
-length, with the diameter of an ordinary walking-stick, cut from the
-assegai tree, which is not unlike mahogany in its fibre, and
-furnished with a spear-head. Some are barbed, some double-barbed,
-and the tang of the blade is fitted--when red-hot--into the wood, not
-the latter into the blade, which is then secured by a thong of wet
-hide, and is so sharp that the Zulu can shave his head with it; and
-it is a weapon which they can launch with deadly and unerring skill.
-
-The Zulu king, says Captain Lucas, was unable to sign his own name,
-'and was as ignorant and as savage as our Norman kings,' and he
-thought no more of putting women, 'especially young girls, to death,
-than Bluff King Hal' himself; yet a little time after all this was to
-see him presented at Osborne, and to become the petted and fêted
-exile of Melbury Road, Kensington.
-
-This night by the Buffalo River was Florian's first experience of
-outpost duty, and he felt--though not the responsible party--anxious,
-wakeful, and weary after a long and toilsome day's march.
-
-He knew enough of military matters to be well aware that the
-importance of outposts, especially when dealing with a wily and
-savage enemy, could scarcely be exaggerated, for no force, when
-encamped in the field, can be deemed for a moment safe without them.
-Thus it was a maxim of Frederick the Great that it was pardonable to
-be defeated, but never to be surprised.
-
-'I don't understand all this change that has come over my life,'
-thought he, as he stretched himself on the bare earth near the
-picquet fire; 'but I wonder if my father and mother can see and think
-of me where they are. Yet I sometimes feel,' he added, with a kind
-of boyish gush in his heart, 'as if they were near me and watching
-over me, so they must see and think too.'
-
-Where was Dulcie, then, and what was she doing? How supporting
-herself, as she said she would have to do? Had she found friends,
-or, months ago, been trodden, with all her tender beauty, down in the
-mire of misfortune and adversity?
-
-These were maddening thoughts for one so far away and so utterly
-powerless to help her as Florian felt himself, and rendered him at
-times more reckless of his own existence because it was useless to
-her.
-
-The air around was heavy with the dewy fragrance of strange and
-tropical plants, and vast, spiky, and fan-shaped leaves cast their
-shadows over him as he strove to snatch the proverbial 'forty winks'
-before again going 'the rounds,' or posting the hourly reliefs, for
-they are always hourly when before an enemy.
-
-And when our weary young soldier did sleep, he dreamt, not of the
-quick-coming strife, nor even of blue-eyed Dulcie, with her wealth of
-red golden hair, but, as the tender smile on his lips might have
-showed, of the time when his mother watched him in his little cot,
-with idolizing gaze, and when he, the now bronzed and moustached
-soldier, was a little child, with rings of soft dusky hair curling
-over his white forehead; when his cheeks had a rosy flush, and his
-tiny mouth a smile, and she fondly kissed the little hands that lay
-outside the snow-white coverlet her own deft fingers had made--the
-two wee hands that held his mother's heart between them--the heart
-that had long since mouldered by Revelstoke Church.
-
-And so he slept and dreamed till roused by the inevitable cry of
-'Sentry, go!' and, that duty over, as he composed himself to sleep
-again, with his knapsack under his head for a pillow, he thought as a
-soldier--
-
- 'To-day is ours. To-morrow never yet
- On any human being rose or set!'
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-ELANDSBERGEN.
-
-Next morning when the picquet was relieved young Sheldrake, who paid
-Hammersley's company in absence of the latter, who was soon expected
-with a strong draft from England, said to Florian--
-
-'Look here, MacIan, I've made a stupid mistake. The company's money
-I have left among my heavier baggage in the fort beyond Elandsbergen,
-and I have got the Colonel's permission to send you back for it.
-This is just like me--I've a head, and so has a pin! The
-Quartermaster will lend you his horse, and you can have my spare
-revolver and ammunition. Have a cigar before you go,' he added,
-proffering his case, 'and look sharp after yourself and the money.
-There is a deuced unchancy lot in the quarter you are going back to.
-We don't advance from this till to-morrow, so you have plenty of time
-to be with us ere we cross the river, if you start at once.'
-
-'Very good, sir,' replied Florian, as he saluted and went away to
-obtain the horse, the revolver, and to prepare for a duty which he
-intensely disliked, and almost doubted his power to carry out, as it
-took him rearward through a country of which he was ignorant, which
-was almost without roads, and where he would be single-handed, if not
-among savages, among those who were quite as bad, for in some of
-these districts, as in the Orange Free State and Boerland, there
-swarmed broken ruffians of every kind, many of them deserters; and,
-says an officer, 'so great, in fact, was the number of these
-undesirable specimens of our countrymen assembled in Harrysmith alone
-that night was truly made hideous with their howlings, respectable
-persons were afraid to leave their houses after nightfall, and the
-report of revolvers ceased to elicit surprise or curiosity. I have
-been in some of the most notorious camps and towns in the territories
-and mining districts of the United States, but can safely assert that
-I never felt more thankful than when I found my horse sufficiently
-rested here to continue my journey.' There were lions, too, in the
-wild plains, for some of our cavalry horses were devoured by them;
-the tiger-cat and the aarde-wolf also.
-
-With a knowledge of all this Florian loaded his revolver, looked
-carefully to the bridle and stirrup leathers of his horse, received a
-note from Mr. Sheldrake to the officer commanding the little fort
-near the foot of the Drakensberg, and left the camp of No. 2 column
-on his solitary journey, steering his way by the natural features of
-the country so far as he could recall them after the advance of the
-10th January, and watching carefully for the wheel tracks or other
-indications of a roadway leading in a westerly direction; and many of
-his comrades, including Bob Edgehill, watched him with interest and
-kindly anxiety till his white helmet disappeared as he descended into
-a long grassy donga, about a mile from Rorke's Drift.
-
-The evening passed and the following day dawned--the important
-12th--when Zululand was to be invaded at three points by the three
-columns of Lord Chelmsford; the advance party detailed from Colonel
-Glyn's brigade to reconnoitre the ground in front got under arms and
-began to move off, and Sheldrake and others began to feel somewhat
-uneasy, for there was still no appearance of the absent one.
-
-* * * *
-
-The country through which Florian rode was lonely, and farmhouses
-were few and many miles apart. Its natural features were undulating
-downs covered with tall waving grass, furrowed by deep, reedy
-water-courses; here and there were abrupt rocky eminences, and dense
-brushwood grew in the rugged kloofs and ravines.
-
-The air was delightful, and in spite of his thoughts the blood
-coursed freely through his veins; his spirits rose, and, exhilarated
-by the pace at which his horse went, he could not help giving a loud
-'Whoop!' now and then when a gnu, with its curved horns and white
-mane, or a hartebeest appeared on the upland slopes, or a baboon
-grinned at him from amid the bushes of a kloof.
-
-Before him stretched miles of open and grassy veldt, and the
-flat-topped hills of the Drakensberg range closed the horizon. The
-vast stretch of plain, across which ever and anon swept herds of
-beautiful little antelopes, was covered with luxuriant grass, which
-seemed smooth as a billiard-table, and over it went the track, which
-he was always afraid of losing. But, if pleasant to look upon, the
-veldt was treacherous ground, for hidden by the grass were everywhere
-deep holes burrowed by the ant-bears, and into these his horse's
-forelegs sank ever and anon, to the peril of the animal and his rider
-too. Thus Florian was compelled to proceed at a canter with his
-reins loose, while he sat tight and prepared for swerving when his
-nag, which was a native horse, prepared to dodge an apparent hole,
-which they can do with wonderful sagacity.
-
-So Florian was not sorry when he left the veldt behind him, and after
-a ride of about thirty miles saw the earthworks of the small fort at
-the foot of Drakensberg appear in front with a little Union Jack
-fluttering on a flagstaff.
-
-This was about mid-day.
-
-Anxious to return as soon as he could rest his horse, he lost no time
-in delivering Sheldrake's note to the officer in command, and with
-the key of a trunk indicated therein among his best uniform, and amid
-girls' photos, bundles of letters, old button bouquets, rare pipes,
-and an omnium-gatherum of various things, the bag was found, with the
-company's money, and delivered to Florian, who, after a two hours'
-halt, set out on his return journey; but he had not proceeded many
-miles when he found that his horse was utterly failing him, and,
-regretting that he had not remained at the post for the night, he
-resolved to spend it in the little town of Elandsbergen, towards
-which he bent his way, leading the now halting nag by the bridle.
-
-Elandsbergen consisted of a few widely detached cottages studding
-both sides of a broad pathway, amid a vast expanse of veldt or
-prairie, with fragmentary attempts at cultivation here and there; and
-how the people lived seemed somewhat of a mystery. Rows of stunted
-oaks lined the street, if such it could be called, and through it
-flowed a rill of pure water, at which the poor nag drank thirstily.
-
-Elandsbergen boasted of one hostelry, dignified by the title of the
-Royal Hotel, where 'civil entertainment for man and beast' was
-promised by the landlord, 'Josh Jarrett.' It was a somewhat
-substantial edifice of two storeys, built of baked brick, square in
-form, with a flat roof composed of strong lattice-work, covered with
-half-bricks and with clayey mortar to render it impervious to the
-torrents of the South African rainy season.
-
-In some of the windows were glass panes; in others sheepskin with the
-wool off, which, in consequence of extreme tension, attains a certain
-transparency. Giving his horse to a Kaffir ostler, whose sole
-raiment was a waistcoat made of a sleeveless regimental tunic,
-Florian somewhat wearily entered the 'hotel,' the proprietor of which
-started and changed colour at the sight of his red coat, as well he
-might, for, though disguised by a bushy beard, sedulously cultivated,
-and a shock head of hair under his broad-leaved hat, he was one of
-the many deserters from our troops, already referred to, and, though
-apparently anxious to appear civil, was secretly a ruffian of the
-worst kind.
-
-The room into which he ushered Florian was bare-walled, the furniture
-was of the plainest and rudest kind, and the floor was formed of
-cow-dung over wet clay, all kneaded, trodden, and hardened till it
-could be polished, a process learned from the Zulus in the
-construction of their kraals.
-
-A fly-blown map of Cape Colony, a cheap portrait of Sir Bartle Frere,
-and the skull of an eland with its spiral horns were the only
-decorations of the apartment, and the literature of 'the day' was
-represented by three tattered copies of the _Cape Argus_, _Natal
-Mercury_, and the _Boer Volksteem_.
-
-Josh Jarrett was dressed like a Boer, and in person was quite as
-dirty as a Boer; his loose cracker-trousers were girt by a broad belt
-with a square buckle, whereat hung a leopard-skin pouch and an ugly
-hunting-knife with a cross hilt. In the band of his broad hat were
-stuck a large meerschaum pipe and the tattered remnant of an ostrich
-feather.
-
-The Kaffir ostler now came hurriedly in, and announced something in
-his own language to the landlord, who, turning abruptly to Florian,
-said--
-
-'You are in something of a fix, Sergeant!'
-
-'How--what do you mean?' demanded Florian.
-
-'That your horse is dying.'
-
-'Dying!'
-
-'Yes, of the regular horse-sickness.'
-
-Florian in no small anxiety and excitement hurried out to the stable,
-in which two other nags were stalled, and there he saw the poor
-animal he had ridden lying among the straw in strong convulsions,
-labouring under that curse of South Africa, the horse-sickness, a
-most mysterious disorder, which had suddenly attacked it.
-
-The animal had looked sullen and dull all morning, and in the stable
-had been assailed by the distemper and its usual symptoms, heaving
-flanks, disturbed breathing, glassy eyes, and a projecting tongue
-tightly clenched between the teeth. Then came the convulsions, and
-he was dead in half an hour, and Florian found that he would probably
-have to travel afoot for more than twenty miles before he could
-rejoin the column on the morrow.
-
-'Where have you come from, Sergeant?' asked Josh Jarrett, when they
-returned to the public room.
-
-'The fort at the Drakensberg, last.'
-
-'Taking French leave, eh?' said Jarrett, with a portentous wink and a
-brightening eye.
-
-'Not at all!' replied Florian, indignantly.
-
-'Fellows do so every day now in these short-service times.'
-
-'I was going to the front, when my horse fell lame.'
-
-'Belong to the Mounted Infantry?'
-
-'The dismounted now, I think,' replied Florian. 'I should like to
-rest here for the night, and push on as best I can to-morrow; so what
-can I have for supper?'
-
-Josh Jarrett paused a moment, as if he thought a sergeant's purse
-would not go far in the way of luxuries, and then replied:
-
-'Rasher of bacon and eggs, or dried beef and a good glass of
-squareface or Cape smoke, which you please.'
-
-'The first will do, and a glass of the squareface, which means
-Hollands, I suppose. Cape smoke is a disagreeable spirit,' replied
-Florian wearily, as he took off his helmet and seated himself in a
-large cane-bottomed chair.
-
-'Won't you lay aside your revolver?' asked Jarrett.
-
-'Thanks--well, no--I am used to it.'
-
-'As you please,' said the other surlily, and summoning in a loud
-voice a female named 'Nan,' left the room.
-
-The latter laid the table, brought in the frugal supper, with a case
-bottle of squareface, and, instead of leaving the room, seated
-herself near a window and entered into conversation, with what object
-Florian scarcely knew, but he disliked the circumstance, till he
-began to remember that she probably considered herself his equal.
-
-When his hasty repast was over, taking a hint from a remark that he
-was weary, she withdrew, and then Florian began to consider the
-situation.
-
-He was fully twenty miles from the regiment; a rough country, not to
-be traversed even by daylight, infested with wild animals, and many
-obnoxious things, such as puff-adders, perhaps Zulus, lay between;
-and unless Jarrett would accommodate him with a horse, which was very
-unlikely (he seemed such a sullen and forbidding fellow), he would
-have to travel the journey on foot, and begin betimes on the morrow
-as soon as dawn would enable him to see the track eastward.
-
-He examined Sheldrake's handsome revolver and its ammunition,
-reloading the six chambers carefully. Then he thought of the
-company's money; and tempted, he knew not by what rash impulse unless
-it was mere boyish curiosity, he untied the red tape by which the
-paymaster had secured the mouth of the bag to have a peep at the gold.
-
-He had never seen a hundred sovereigns before, and never before had
-so much money in his possession. Some of the glittering coins fell
-out on the clay floor; and as he gathered them up a sound made him
-look round, and from the window he saw a human face suddenly vanish
-outside, thus showing that some one had, hitherto unnoticed, been
-furtively watching him, and he strongly suspected it to be the woman
-Nan, prompted, perhaps, by idle curiosity, and in haste he concealed
-the gold.
-
-He was the more convinced of the lurker being she when, soon after,
-she entered, retook her seat by the window, through which the evening
-sun was streaming now, and began to address him in a light and
-flippant manner, as if to get up a flirtation with him for ulterior
-purposes; but his suspicions were awakened now, and Florian was on
-his guard.
-
-He perceived that she had made some alterations and improvements in
-her tawdry dress, and had hung in her ears a pair of large
-old-fashioned Dutch ear-rings shaped like small rams' horns of real
-gold.
-
-She seemed to be about thirty years of age, and was not without
-personal attractions, though all bloom was past, and the expression
-of her face was marred by its being alternately leering, mocking,
-and--even in spite of herself--cruel. Yet her eyes were dark and
-sparkling. She wore a fringe of thick brown hair close down to them,
-concealing nearly all her forehead. Her mouth, if large, was
-handsome, but lascivious-looking, and Florian, whose barrack-room
-experience had somewhat 'opened his eyes,' thought--though he was not
-ungallant enough to say so--that her absence would be preferable to
-her company, which she seemed resolved to thrust upon him. But
-guests were doubtless scarce in these parts, and the 'Royal Hotel,'
-Elandsbergen, had probably not many visitors.
-
-She asked him innumerable questions--his age, country, regiment, and
-so forth--and all in a wheedling coaxing way, toyed with his hair,
-and once attempted to seat herself on his knee; but he rose and
-repelled her, and then it was that the unmistakably cruel expression
-came flashing into her eyes.
-
-'You are too young and too handsome to be killed and disembowelled by
-the big Zulus,' said she after a pause; 'they could eat a boy like
-you. Why don't you desert and go to the Diamond Fields?'
-
-'Thank you; I would die rather than do that!'
-
-'And so you serve the Queen, my dear?' she said sneeringly.
-
-'Yes.'
-
-'For what reason do you fight the poor Zulus?'
-
-'Honour,' replied Florian curtly.
-
-'I have read--I have some book-knowledge, you see--that when a Swiss
-officer was reproached by a French one that he fought for pay, and
-not like himself for honour, "So be it," replied the Swiss, "we each
-of us fight for that which he is most in need of."'
-
-'I don't see the allusion in this instance: a soldier, I do my duty
-and obey orders.'
-
-'Have a drop more of the squareface--you can't be so rude as to
-refuse a lady,' she continued, filling up a long glass, which she put
-to her lips, and then to those of Florian, who pretended to sip and
-then put the glass down.
-
-He was at a loss to understand her and her advances. Vanity quite
-apart, he knew that he was a good-looking young fellow, and that his
-uniform 'set him off;' but he remembered the face at the window, and
-was on his guard against her in every way. Would she have acted thus
-with an officer? he thought; and in what relation did she stand to
-the truculent-looking landlord--wife, daughter, or sister? Probably
-none of them at all.
-
-Suddenly her mood changed, or appeared to do so, and seating herself
-at a rickety old piano, which Florian had not noticed before, she,
-while eyeing him waggishly, proceeded to sing a once-popular flash
-song, long since forgotten in England, and probably taken out by some
-ancient settler, generations ago, to the Cape Colony:
-
- 'If I was a wife, and my dearest life
- Took it into his noddle to die,
- Ere I took the whim to be buried with him,
- I think I'd know very well _why_.
-
- 'If poignant my grief, I'd search for relief--
- Not sink with the weight of my care:
- A salve might be found, no doubt, above ground,
- And I think I know very well _where_.
-
- 'Another kind mate should give me what fate
- Would not from the former allow;
- With him I'd amuse the hours you abuse,
- And I think I'd know very well _how_.
-
- ''Tis true I'm a maid, and so't may be said
- No judge of the conjugal lot;
- Yet marriage, I ween, has a cure for the spleen,
- And I think I know very well _what_.'
-
-
-This she sang with a skill and power that savoured of the music hall,
-and then tried her blandishments again to induce Florian to drink of
-the fiery squareface; but he resisted all her inducement to take
-'just one little glass more.'
-
-Why was she so anxious that he should imbibe that treacherous spirit,
-which he would have to pay for? And why did the landlord, who
-certainly seemed full of curiosity about him, leave him so entirely
-in her society?
-
-Suddenly the voice of the latter was heard shouting, 'Nan, Nan!'
-
-'That is Josh,' said she impatiently; 'bother him, what does he want
-now? Josh is getting old, and nothing improves by age.'
-
-'Except brandy,' said Florian smiling, as he now hoped to be rid of
-her.
-
-'Right; and squareface, perhaps. Have one glass more, dear, before I
-leave you.'
-
-But he turned impatiently away, and she withdrew, closing a scene
-which caused Florian much suspicion and perplexity. He remembered to
-have read, that 'man destroys with the horns of a bull, or with paws
-like a bear; woman by nibbling like a mouse, or by embracing like a
-serpent.' And he was in toils here unseen as yet!
-
-The light faded out beyond the dark ridges of the Drakensberg, and
-Florian requested to be shown to his sleeping-apartment, which was on
-the upper storey.
-
-'You may hear a roaring lot here by-and-by,' said his host; 'but you
-are a soldier, and I dare say will sleep sound enough. You will be
-tired, too, after your ride.'
-
-The man had now a sneaking and wicked look in his eyes, which avoided
-meeting those of Florian, and which the latter did not like, but
-there was no help for it then.
-
-'You will call me early if I sleep too long,' said Florian, as
-Jarrett gave him a candle.
-
-The hand of the latter shook as he did so--he had evidently been
-drinking heavily, and his yellow-balled eyes were bloodshot, and his
-voice thick, as he said:
-
-'Good-night, Sergeant; you'll sleep sound enough,' and closed the
-door.
-
-With a sigh almost of relief Florian found himself alone. He set
-down the sputtering candle, and turned to fasten the door. It was
-without a lock, and secured only by a latch, by which it could be
-opened from the outside as well as within.
-
-On making this startling discovery, Florian's heart glowed with
-indignation and growing alarm! He felt himself trapped!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-BAFFLED!
-
-The room was small, low-ceiled, and its only furniture was a table,
-chair, and truckle-bed--all obviously of Dutch construction--and,
-unless he could find some means to secure his door, he resolved to
-remain awake till dawn. The only window in the room overlooked the
-roof of the stable where the dead horse lay. The sash was loose, and
-shook in the night wind, and he could see the bright and, to him, new
-constellations glittering in the southern sky.
-
-Florian contrived to secure the door by placing the chair on the
-floor as a wedge or barrier between it and the bedstead, on the
-mattress of which--though not very savoury in appearance--he cast
-himself, for he was weary, worn, and felt that there was an absolute
-necessity for husbanding his strength, as he knew not what might be
-before him, so he extinguished the candle.
-
-Something in the general aspect and bearing of the man Josh Jarrett,
-and in those of the woman, with her efforts to intoxicate him, and
-something, too, in his general surroundings and isolated
-situation--for the few scattered houses of Elandsbergen were all far
-apart--together with the memory of the prying face he had seen at the
-window, at the very moment he was picking up the gold, all served to
-put Florian on his guard; thus he lay down without undressing, and,
-longing only for daylight, grasped ever and anon the butt of his
-pistol.
-
-For some time past he had been unused to the luxury of even a
-truckle-bed or other arrangements for repose than his grey greatcoat
-and ammunition blanket, with a knapsack for a pillow; hence, despite
-his keen anxiety, he must have dropped asleep, for how long he knew
-not; but he suddenly started up as the sound of voices below came to
-his ear, and the full sense of his peculiar whereabouts rushed on him.
-
-Voices! They were coarse and deep, but not loud--voices of persons
-talking in low and concentrated tones in the room beneath, separated
-from him only by the ill-fitting boarding of the floor, between the
-joints of which lines of light were visible, and one bright upward
-flake, through a hole from which a knot had dropped out.
-
-'Curse him, he's but a boy; I could smash the life out of him by one
-blow of my fist!' he heard his host, Josh Jarrett, say.
-
-Others responded to this, but in low, stealthy, and husky tones.
-Certain that some mischief with regard to himself was on the _tapis_.
-Florian crept softly to the orifice in the floor, and looked down.
-Round a dirty and sloppy table, covered with drinking-vessels, pipes
-and tobacco-pouches, bottles of squareface and Cape smoke, were Josh
-Jarrett and three other ruffians, digger-like fellows, with Nan among
-them, all drinking; and a vile-looking quintette they were,
-especially the woman, with her hair all dishevelled now, and her face
-inflamed by that maddening compound known as Cape smoke.
-
-'When I was ass enough to be in the Queen's service,' said Jarrett
-with a horrible imprecation, 'these 'ere blooming officers and
-non-comms. led me a devil of a life; they said it was my own fault
-that I was always drunk and in the mill. Be that as it may, I've one
-of the cursed lot upstairs, and I'll sarve him out for what they made
-me undergo, cuss 'em. One will answer my purpose as well as another.
-Nan, you did your best to screw him, but he was wary--infernally
-wary. Blest if I don't think the fellow is a Scotsman after all, for
-all his English lingo.'
-
-'Yes, he did shirk his liquor,' hiccupped the amiable Nan; 'you
-should have drugged it, Josh.'
-
-'But then we didn't know that he had all this chink about him.'
-
-'That must be ours,' growled a fellow who had not yet spoken, but was
-prodding the table with a knife he had drawn from his belt; 'we'll
-give him a through ticket to the other world--one with the down
-train.'
-
-'And no return,' added Nan, laughing.
-
-Florian felt beads of perspiration on his brow; he was one against
-five--entrapped, baited, done to death--and if he did not appear at
-headquarters with the fatal money, what would be thought of him but
-that he had deserted with it, and his name would be branded as that
-of a coward and robber.
-
-Dulcie! The thought of Dulcie choked him, but it nerved him too.
-
-Another truculent-looking fellow now came in, making five men in all.
-
-'He has money galore on him--Nan saw the gold--money in a canvas bag.
-How comes he, a sergeant, to have all this in his grab, unless he
-stole it?' said Jarrett, in explanation to the new-comer.
-
-'Of course he stole it--it's regimental money, and evidently he is
-deserting with it,' said the other, who was no doubt, like Jarrett, a
-Queen's bad bargain also; for he added, 'What the devil do Cardwell's
-short-service soldiers care about their chances of pension or
-promotion--that's the reason he has the bag of gold; so why shouldn't
-we make it ours? It is only dolloping a knife into him, and then
-burying him out in the veldt before daylight. Even if he was traced
-here, who is to be accountable for a deserter?'
-
-And this practical ruffian proceeded at once to put a finer edge and
-point upon his long bowie knife.
-
-'You forget that he has a revolver,' said Nan.
-
-'I don't,' said Jarrett; 'but he ain't likely to use it in his sleep,
-especially when we pin him by the throat.'
-
-He was but one against five armed and reckless desperadoes; and there
-was the woman, too, whose hands were ready for evil work. The stair
-that led to his room was narrow--so much so that there was but space
-for one on a step. The lower or outer door he knew to be securely
-locked and bolted. The window of his room, we have said, overlooked
-the lean-to roof of the stable, where he knew that two horses were in
-stall--a sure means of escape could he reach one; but the door, he
-was aware, was locked, and the key in possession of the Kaffir groom.
-
-He was maddened by the thought that his barbarous and obscure death
-would brand him with a double disgrace; and death is more than ever
-hard when suffered at the hands of cowards.
-
-'What is the use of all this blooming talk?' said one, starting from
-the table; 'let us set about the job at once!'
-
-'Look you,' said Jarrett, 'if roused he'll perhaps try to escape by
-the stable-roof, so while you fellows go up the stair, I go round to
-the back of the house and cut off his retreat.'
-
-'The stable-roof,' thought Florian, 'my only chance lies that way.'
-
-He opened the window at the very moment that stealthy steps sounded
-on the wooden stair, and a red light streamed under the door, which
-their felon hands failed to force, so firmly was the chair wedged
-between it and the bed. He slid down the stable-roof, and dropped
-safely on the ground, to be faced by Josh Jarrett, who came rushing
-on, knife in hand, but Florian shot him down, firing two chambers
-into his very teeth, and then he sprang away like a hare out into the
-open veldt, leaving the ruffian wallowing in his blood.
-
-He knew not and cared not in what direction he ran at first, as he
-could hear the oaths and imprecations of his pursuers, over whom his
-youth, lightness, and activity gave him an advantage; but after a
-time red-dawn began to streak the eastern sky, and he knew that was
-the direction which, if he was spared, would take him to the bank of
-the Buffalo River.
-
-He continued to run at a good steady double, saving his wind as he
-did so, and his courage and confidence rose when he found that he was
-distancing his pursuers so much that he could neither see nor hear
-anything of them.
-
-As he ran on he thought for a moment or two of the fierce gleaming
-eyes and glistening teeth of Jarrett--of the blood he had shed, and
-the life he had perhaps taken for the first time, remorsefully; but
-had he not acted thus, what would he have been? A gashed corpse!
-
-'Bah!' he said aloud, 'I am a soldier--why such thoughts at all? Why
-should I have mercy when these wretches would have had none?' and he
-began to regret that he had not fired a random shot or two through
-the room-door and knocked over some of them on the staircase.
-
-A sound now struck his ear; it was the thud of galloping hoofs upon
-the veldt, and his heart sank as he remembered the two horses in the
-stable, where his dead nag was lying.
-
-He looked back, and there, sure enough, in the grey dawn were two
-mounted men riding in scouting fashion, far apart, and he could not
-for a moment doubt they were two of Jarrett's companions in pursuit,
-thirsting with avarice and for revenge.
-
-He made his way, stumbling wildly and breathlessly down a wooded
-ravine to elude their sight; on and on he strove till a vine root
-caught his foot: his hands outstretched beat the air for a moment,
-and then he fell headlong forward and downward into a donga full of
-brushwood.
-
-For a moment he had a sense of strange palms, and giant cacti, and of
-great plants with long spiky leaves being about him, and then he
-became unconscious as he lay there stunned and bleeding profusely
-from a wound in his forehead, which had come in contact with a stone.
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. I.
-
-
-
-BILLING & SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Dulcie Carlyon, Volume I (of 3), by James Grant</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Dulcie Carlyon, Volume I (of 3)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A novel</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: James Grant</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 11, 2022 [eBook #68293]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DULCIE CARLYON, VOLUME I (OF 3) ***</div>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- DULCIE CARLYON.<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- A Novel.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- JAMES GRANT,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- AUTHOR OF 'THE ROMANCE OF WAR,' ETC.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- IN THREE VOLUMES.<br />
-<br />
- VOL. I.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON:<br />
- WARD AND DOWNEY,<br />
- 12, YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN.<br />
-<br />
- 1886.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- [<i>All Rights Reserved.</i>]<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-NEW NOVELS AT EVERY LIBRARY.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-FROM THE SILENT PAST. By Mrs. HERBERT MARTIN. 2 Vols.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-COWARD AND COQUETTE. By the Author of 'The Parish of Hilby.' 1 vol.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-MIND, BODY, AND ESTATE. By the Author of 'Olive Varcoe.' 3 vols.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-AT THE RED GLOVE. By KATHARINE S. MACQUOID. 3 vols.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-WHERE TEMPESTS BLOW. By the Author of 'Miss Elvester's Girls.' 3 vols.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-IN SIGHT OF LAND. By Lady DUFFUS HARDY. 3 vols.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-AS IN A LOOKING-GLASS. By F. C. PHILIPS. 1 vol.
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-LORD VANECOURT'S DAUGHTER. By MABEL COLLINS. 3 vols.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-WARD AND DOWNEY, PUBLISHERS, LONDON.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-In Loving Memory
-<br />
-OF
-<br />
-MY ELDEST SON,
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-JAMES SIMPSON GRANT,
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-<i>Captain Cheshire Regiment,</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-I INSCRIBE
-<br />
-THIS MILITARY STORY.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-CHAPTER
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-I. <a href="#chap01">IN THE HOWE OF THE MEARNS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-II. <a href="#chap02">WEDDED</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-III. <a href="#chap03">THE SPURNED OFFER</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-IV. <a href="#chap04">REVELSTOKE COTTAGE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-V. <a href="#chap05">DULCIE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VI. <a href="#chap06">THE SECRET PACKET</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VII. <a href="#chap07">A FAREWELL</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-VIII. <a href="#chap08">THE SILVER LOCKET</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-IX. <a href="#chap09">MR. KIPPILAW, W.S.</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-X. <a href="#chap10">ALONE IN THE WORLD</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XI. <a href="#chap11">SHAFTO IN CLOVER</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XII. <a href="#chap12">VIVIAN HAMMERSLEY</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XIII. <a href="#chap13">AMONG THE GROUSE</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XIV. <a href="#chap14">THE TWO FINELLAS</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XV. <a href="#chap15">AT REVELSTOKE AGAIN</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XVI. <a href="#chap16">''TIS BUT THE OLD, OLD STORY'</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XVII. <a href="#chap17">AT CRAIGENGOWAN</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XVIII. <a href="#chap18">AT THE BUFFALO RIVER</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XIX. <a href="#chap19">ELANDSBERGEN</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-XX. <a href="#chap20">BAFFLED!</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-DULCIE CARLYON.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER I.
-<br /><br />
-IN THE HOWE OF THE MEARNS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'This will end in a scene, Fettercairn, and
-you know how I hate scenes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So do I, they are such deuced bad form.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall need all my self-possession to get
-over the <i>esclandre</i> this affair may cause,'
-exclaimed the lady, fanning herself violently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, life is made up of getting over
-things,' responded her husband.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But not things so disgraceful as this,
-Fettercairn!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is this son of yours in his senses?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who is that loves? it has been asked,'
-said the culprit referred to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A marriage between you and a penniless
-girl in her rank of life is not to be thought of,
-Lennard.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Her rank of life, father?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Her father's rank was superior to that of
-the first of our family, when life began with
-him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is that to you or to me now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Much to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Too much, it would seem.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The excited speakers were a Peer, Cosmo,
-Lord Fettercairn, his wife, the Lady thereof,
-and their youngest son, Lennard Melfort, a
-captain of the line, home on leave from
-India, who had been somewhat timidly
-venturing to break&mdash;knowing the inordinate
-family vanity of his parents&mdash;we say to break
-the news of his love for a girl possessed of
-more beauty than this world's goods; and, in
-his excitement and indignation, his lordship's
-usual easy, indolent, and drawling way was
-forgotten now when addressing his son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo, Lord Fettercairn of that Ilk (and
-Strathfinella in the Mearns) was by nature a
-proud, cold, selfish, and calculating man,
-whose chief passion in life was a combined
-spirit of enormous vanity and acquisitiveness,
-which he inherited from his predecessors,
-whom he resembled in political caution and
-selfishness, and also in personal appearance,
-to judge from the portraits of three generations,
-by Sir John de Medina, Aikman, and
-Raeburn, adorning the walls of the stately
-room in the house of Craigengowan, where
-this rather stormy interview took place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Tall and thin in figure, with flat square
-shoulders and sandy-coloured hair, cold grey
-eyes, and irregular features, he was altogether
-a contrast to his son Lennard, who inherited
-his slightly aquiline nose and perfect face
-from his mother, but his firm dark eyes and
-rich brown hair from a previous generation;
-and these, together with an olive complexion,
-rendered more dusky by five years' exposure
-to an Indian sun, made his aspect a very
-striking one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-My Lady Fettercairn's birth and breeding
-were, as Sir Bernard Burke had recorded,
-irreproachable, and she certainly seemed a
-<i>grande dame</i> to the tips of her long slender
-fingers. She was about forty-five years of
-age, but looked ten younger. The upper
-part of her aristocratic face was strikingly
-handsome; but the lower, with its proud and
-firm lips, was less pleasant to look at. Her
-complexion was almost colourless, her hair
-of the lightest brown, like her eyebrows and
-lashes; while her eyes were clear and blue as
-an Alpine sky, and, as Lennard often thought
-with a sigh, they seemed quite as&mdash;cold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her manner was always calm, assured, and
-self-possessed. She would smile, but that
-smile never degenerated into honest laughter,
-while her pale and impressive face was
-without a line&mdash;especially on her forehead&mdash;that
-seemed to indicate either thought or
-reflection, and certainly she had never known
-care or sorrow or even annoyance until
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She is beautiful, mother,' urged the
-young man, breaking an ominous silence, with
-reference to the object of his love.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps; but she is not one of us,'
-exclaimed Lady Fettercairn, cresting up her
-handsome head haughtily, and a whole
-volume of intense pride and hauteur was
-centred in the last word she spoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who is this Flora MacIan, as she calls
-herself?' asked his father in a similar tone;
-'but I need not ask. You have already told
-us she is the governess in a house you have
-been recently visiting&mdash;that of Lady
-Drumshoddy&mdash;a governess, with all her beauty, poor
-and obscure.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not so obscure,' said Lennard, a wave of
-red passing under the tan of his olive cheek;
-'her father was a gallant old officer of the
-Ross-shire Buffs, who earned his V.C. at the
-battle of Khooshab, in Persia, and her only
-brother and support fell when leading on his
-Grenadiers at the storming of Lucknow. The
-old captain was, as his name imports, a cadet
-of the Macdonalds of Glencoe.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With a pedigree of his family, no doubt,
-from the grounding of the Ark to the battle
-of Culloden,' sneered his father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then his family would end soon after ours
-began,' retorted the son, becoming greatly
-ruffled now. 'You know, father, we can't
-count much beyond three generations ourselves.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Fettercairn, wounded thus in his
-sorest point, grew white with anger.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We always suspected you of having some
-secret, Lennard,' said his mother severely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, mother, unfortunately, as some one
-says, a secret is like a hole in your coat&mdash;the
-more you try to hide it, the more it is seen.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'An aphorism, and consequently vulgar;
-does <i>she</i> teach you this style of thing?' asked
-the haughty lady, while Lennard reddened
-again with annoyance, and gave his dark
-moustache a vicious twist, but sighed and
-strove to keep his temper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have found and felt it very bitter, father,
-to live under false colours,' said he gently and
-appealingly, 'and to keep that a secret from
-you both, which should be no secret at all.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We would rather not have heard this
-secret,' replied Lord Fettercairn sternly, while
-tugging at his sandy-coloured mutton-chop
-whiskers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then would you have preferred that I
-should be deceitful to you, and false to the
-dear girl who loves and trusts me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I do not choose to consider <i>her</i>,' was the
-cold reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I do, and must, now!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because we are already married&mdash;she is
-my wife,' was the steady response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Married!' exclaimed his father and mother
-with one accord, as they started from their
-chairs together, and another ominous silence
-of a minute ensued.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor, lost boy&mdash;the prey of an artful
-minx!' said Lady Fettercairn, looking as if
-she would like to weep; but tears were rather
-strangers to her cold blue eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mother, dear mother, if you only knew
-her, you would not talk thus of Flora,' urged
-Lennard almost piteously. 'If we had it in
-our power to give love and to withhold it, easy
-indeed would our progress be through life.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Love&mdash;nonsense!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Save to the two most interested, who are
-judges of it,' said Lennard. 'Surely you
-loved my father, and he you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Our case was very different,' replied Lady
-Fettercairn, in her anger actually forgetting
-herself so far as to bite feathers off her fan
-with her firm white teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How, mother dear?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In rank and wealth we were equal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lennard sighed, and said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I little thought that you, who loved me
-so, would prove all but one of the mothers of
-Society.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What do you mean, sir?' demanded his
-father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a writer says.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what the devil does he say?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That "love seems such a poor and
-contemptible thing in their eyes in comparison
-with settlements. Perhaps they forget their
-own youth; one does, they say, when he
-outlives romance. And I suppose bread and
-butter is better than poetry any day."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I should think so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We had other and brilliant views for you,'
-said his mother in a tone of intense
-mortification, 'but now&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Leave us and begone, and let us look
-upon your face no more,' interrupted his
-father in a voice of indescribable sternness,
-almost hoarse with passion, as he pointed to
-the door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mother!' said Lennard appealingly, 'oh,
-mother!' But she averted her face, cold as a
-woman of ice, and said, 'Go!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So be it,' replied Lennard, gravely and
-sadly, as he drew himself up to the full height
-of his five feet ten inches, and a handsome
-and comely fellow he looked as he turned
-away and left the room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank God, his elder brother, Cosmo, is
-yet left to us!' exclaimed Lady Fettercairn
-earnestly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the last time in this life he ever
-heard his mother's voice, and he quitted the
-house. On the terrace without, carefully he
-knocked the ashes out of his cherished briar-root,
-put it with equal care into its velvet-lined
-case, put the case into his pocket, and
-walked slowly off with a grim and resolute
-expression in his fine young face, upon which
-from that day forth his father and mother
-never looked again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he was thinking chiefly of the sweet
-face of the young girl who had united her
-fortunes with his, and who was anxiously
-awaiting the result of the interview we have
-described.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sorrow, mortification, and no small
-indignation were in the heart of Lennard Melfort
-at the result of the late interview.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have been rash,' he thought, 'in marrying
-poor Flora without their permission, but that
-they would never have accorded, even had
-they seen her; and none fairer or more
-beautiful ever came as a bride to Craigengowan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Pausing, he gave a long and farewell look
-at the house so named&mdash;the home of his boyhood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It stands at some distance from the Valley
-of the Dee (which forms the natural
-communication between the central Highlands
-and the fertile Lowlands) in the Hollow or
-Howe of the Mearns. Situated amid
-luxuriant woods, glimpses of Craigengowan
-obtained from the highway only excite curiosity
-without gratifying it, but a nearer approach
-reveals its picturesque architectural features.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These are the elements common to most
-northern mansions that are built in the old
-Scottish style&mdash;a multitude of conical turrets,
-steep crowstepped gables and dormer gablets,
-encrusted with the monograms and armorial
-bearings of the race who were its lords when
-the family of Fettercairn were hewers of wood
-and drawers of water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The turrets rise into kindred forms in the
-towers and gables, and are the gradual
-accumulation of additions made at various times
-on the original old square tower, rather than
-a part of the original design, but the effect of
-the whole is extremely rich and picturesque.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the old Scottish garden was an ancient
-sun and moon dial, mossy and grey, by which
-many a lover had reckoned the time in the
-days of other years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of old, Craigengowan belonged to an exiled
-and attainted Jacobite family, from whom it
-passed readily enough into the hands of the
-second Lord Fettercairn, a greedy and
-unscrupulous Commissioner on the forfeited
-estates of the unfortunate loyalists. It had
-now many modern comforts and appliances;
-the entrance-hall was a marble-paved apartment,
-off which the principal sitting-rooms
-opened, and now a handsome staircase led to
-the upper chambers, whilom the abode of
-barons who ate the beef and mutton their
-neighbours fed in the valley of the Dee.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The grounds were extensive and beautiful,
-and Lord Fettercairn's flower gardens and
-conservatories were renowned throughout
-Angus and the Mearns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the bitter storm that existed in his own
-breast, and that which he had left in those of
-his parents, how peaceful by contrast looked
-the old house and the summer scenery to
-Lennard&mdash;the place on which he probably
-would never gaze again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a breeze that rustled the green
-leaves in the thickets, but no wind. Beautiful
-and soft white clouds floated lazily in the
-deep blue sky, and a recent shower had
-freshened up every tree, meadow, and
-hedgerow. The full-eared wheat grew red or
-golden by the banks of the Bervie, and the
-voice of the cushat dove came from the
-autumn woods from time to time as with a
-sigh Lennard Melfort turned his back on
-Craigengowan for ever, cursing, as he went,
-the pride of his family, for, though not an
-old one, by title or territory, they were as
-proud as they were unscrupulous in politics.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first prominent member of the family,
-Lennard Melfort, had been a Commissioner
-for the Mearns in the Scottish Parliament,
-and for political services had been raised to
-the peerage by Queen Anne as Lord Fettercairn
-and Strathfinella, and was famous for
-nothing but selling his Union vote for the
-same sum as my Lord Abercairnie, £500,
-and for having afterwards 'a rug at the
-compensation,' as the English equivalent money
-was called. After the battle of Sheriffmuir
-saw half the old peerages of Scotland
-attainted, he obtained Craigengowan, and was
-one 'who,' as the minister of Inverbervie
-said, 'wad sell his soul to the deil for a
-crackit saxpence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With the ex-Commissioner the talent&mdash;such
-as it was&mdash;of the race ended, and for three
-generations the Lords of Fettercairn had
-been neither better nor worse than peers
-of Scotland generally; that is, they were
-totally oblivious of the political interests of
-that country, and of everything but their own
-self-aggrandisement by marriage or otherwise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lennard Melfort seemed the first of the
-family that proved untrue to its old instincts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I had made up my mind that he
-should marry Lady Drumshoddy's daughter&mdash;she
-has a splendid fortune!' wailed Lady
-Fettercairn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Married my governess&mdash;the girl MacIan!'
-snorted my Lady Drumshoddy when she
-heard of the dreadful mésalliance. 'Why
-marry the creature? He might love her, of
-course&mdash;all men are alike weak&mdash;but to marry
-her&mdash;oh, no!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And my Lady Drumshoddy was a very
-moral woman according to her standard, and
-carried her head very high.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When tidings were bruited abroad of what
-happened, and the split in the family circle at
-Craigengowan, there were equal sorrow and
-indignation expressed in the servants' hall,
-the gamekeepers' lodges, and the home farm,
-for joyous and boyish Captain Melfort was a
-favourite with all on the Fettercairn estates;
-and Mrs. Prim, his mother's maid, actually
-shed many tears over the untoward fate he
-had brought upon himself.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER II.
-<br /><br />
-WEDDED.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'And you will love me still, Flora, in spite
-of this bitter affront to which you are
-subjected for my sake?' said Lennard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said the girl passionately, 'I love
-you, Lennard&mdash;love you so much,' she added,
-while her soft voice broke and her blossom-like
-lips quivered, 'that were I to lose you I
-would die!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My darling, you cannot lose me now,' he
-responded, while tenderly caressing her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are we foolish to talk in this fashion,
-Lennard?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Foolish?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;or rash. I have heard that it is
-not lucky for people to love each other so
-much as we do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Could we love each other less?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't think so,' said she simply and
-sweetly, as he laid her cheek on his breast
-with her upturned eyes gazing into his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl was slight and slender, yet perfect
-was every curve of her shapely figure, which
-was destitute of any straight line; even her
-nose was, in the slightest degree, aquiline.
-Her beautifully arched mouth, the scarlet
-line of her upper lip, and the full round of
-the nether one were parted in a tender
-smile, just enough to show her teeth, defied
-all criticism; her complexion was pure and
-soft, and her eyes were of the most liquid
-hazel, with almost black lashes. Her hair
-was of the same tint, and Flora seemed a
-lady to perfection, especially by the whiteness
-and delicacy of her beautifully shaped little
-hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When she walked she did so gracefully, as
-all Highland women do, and like them held
-her head poised on her slender neck so
-airily and prettily that her nurse, Madelon,
-called her 'the swan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How I trembled, Lennard,' said she,
-after a pause, 'as I thought of the <i>mauvais
-quart d'heure</i> you were undergoing at Craigengowan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It was a <i>mauvais</i> hour and more, darling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And ever and anon I felt that strange
-chill, or shudder, which Nurse Madelon says
-people feel when some one crosses the place
-where their grave is to be. How can your
-parents be so cruel to you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And to you, Flora!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, that is different,' she replied, with
-her eyes full of unshed tears, and in a pained
-voice. 'Doubtless they consider me a very
-designing girl; but in spite of that, you
-will always care for me as much as you do now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why such fears? Ever and always&mdash;ever
-and always, my darling,' said Lennard
-Melfort, stopping her questioning lips most
-effectually for a time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, if you should ever come to regret,
-and with regret to love me less!' said she,
-in a low voice, with her eyes for a moment
-fixed on vacancy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why that boding thought, Flora?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because, surely, such great love never lasts.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He kissed her again as the readiest response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the sequel proved that his great love
-outlasted her own life, poor girl!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then they sat long silent, hand locked in
-hand, while the gloaming deepened round
-them, for words seem poor and feeble when
-the heart is very full.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How long will they continue to despise
-me?' said Flora suddenly, while across her
-soft cheeks there rushed the hot blood of a
-long and gallant line of Celtic ancestors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An exclamation of bitterness&mdash;almost
-impatience, escaped Lennard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Let us forget them&mdash;father, mother, all!' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl looked passionately into the face
-of her lover-husband&mdash;the husband of a
-month; and never did her bright hazel eyes
-seem more tender and soft than now, with
-all the fire of love and pride sparkling in
-their depths, for her Highland spirit and
-nature revolted at the affront to which she
-was subjected.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bearing of Lennard Melfort and the
-poise of his close-shorn head told that he was
-a soldier, and a well-drilled one; and the
-style of his light grey suit showed how
-thoroughly he was a gentleman; and to
-Flora's loving and partial eye he was
-every-way a model man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had been married just a month, we
-have said, a month that very day, and
-Lennard had brought his bride to the little
-burgh town, within a short distance of
-Craigengowan, and left her in their apartments
-while he sought with his father and mother
-the bootless interview just narrated.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For three days before he had the courage
-to bring it about, they had spent the time
-together, full of hopeful thoughts, strolling
-along the banks of the pretty Bervie, from
-the blue current of which ever and anon the
-bull-trout and the salmon rise to the flies; or
-in the deep and leafy recourses of the
-adjacent woods, and climbing the rugged
-coast, against which the waves of the German
-Sea were rolling in golden foam; or ascending
-Craig David, so called from David II. of
-Scotland&mdash;a landmark from the sea for
-fifteen leagues&mdash;for both had a true and
-warm appreciation and artistic love of Nature
-in all her moods and aspects.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sounds of autumn were about them
-now; the hum of insects and the song of the
-few birds that yet sang; the fragrance of the
-golden broom and the sweet briar, with a
-score of other sweet and indefinable scents
-and balmy breaths. All around them was
-scenic beauty and peace, and yet with all
-their great love for each other, their hearts
-were heavy at the prospect of their future,
-which must be a life of banishment in India,
-and to the heaviness of Lennard was added
-indignation and sorrow. But he could
-scarcely accuse himself of having acted
-rashly in the matter of his marriage, for to
-that his family would never have consented;
-and he often thought could his mother but
-see Flora in her beauty and brightness,
-looking so charming in her smart sealskin and
-bewitching cap and feather, and long skirt of
-golden-brown silk that matched her hair and
-eyes&mdash;every way a most piquante-looking
-girl!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Young though he was, and though a
-second son, Lennard Melfort had been a
-favourite with more than one Belgravian
-belle and her mamma, and there were few
-who had not something pleasant or complimentary
-to say of him since his return from
-India. At balls, fêtes, garden and water
-parties, girls had given him the preference
-to many who seemed more eligible, had
-reserved for him dances on their programmes,
-sang for him, made unmistakable <i>œillades</i>,
-and so forth; for his handsome figure and his
-position made him very acceptable, though
-he had not the prospects of his elder brother,
-the Hon. Cosmo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Fettercairn knew how Lennard was
-regarded and valued well, and nourished
-great hopes therefrom; but this was all over
-and done with now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To her it seemed as if he had thrown his
-very life away, and that when his marriage
-with a needy governess&mdash;however beautiful
-and well born she might be&mdash;became known,
-all that charmed and charming circle in
-Belgravia and Tyburnia would regard him as
-a black sheep indeed; would shake their
-aristocratic heads, and pity poor Lord and
-Lady Fettercairn for having such a renegade
-son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora's chief attendant&mdash;a Highland woman
-who had nursed her in infancy&mdash;was comically
-vituperative and indignant at the affront put
-by these titled folks upon 'her child' as she
-called her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Madelon Galbraith was strong, healthy,
-active, and only in her fortieth year, with
-black eyes and hair, a rich ruddy complexion,
-a set of magnificent white teeth, and her
-manner was full of emphatic, almost violent,
-gesticulation peculiar to many Highlanders,
-who seem to talk with their hands and arms
-quite as much as the tongue.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sometimes Madelon spoke in her native
-Gaelic, but generally in the dialect of the
-Lowlands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Set them up indeed,' she muttered; 'wha
-are the Melforts o' Fettercairn, that they
-should slight you&mdash;<i>laoghe mo chri</i>?' she
-added, softly (calf of my heart). 'What a
-pity it is ye canna fling at their heads the
-gold they love, for even a Lowland dog winna
-yowl gin ye pelt him wi' banes. But you've
-begun wi' love and marriage, and a gude
-beginning mak's a gude ending.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But we shall be so poor, Nursie Madelon,
-and I have ruined my poor Lennard,' urged
-Flora, as the kind woman caressed her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They say a kiss and a cup of water mak'
-but a wersh breakfast,' laughed Madelon; 'but
-you're no sae puir as that comes to, my
-darling.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not quite' said Flora, laughing faintly, in
-turn. 'Yet I have sorely injured my
-husband's prospects.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tut, tut, my bairn. Ony man can woo,
-but he weds only whar his weird lies; and so
-Captain Melfort wedded you, and wha better?
-Then what is a Lord that we should <i>lippen</i> to
-<i>him</i>? As long as ye serve a tod ye maun
-carry his tail? And your father's daughter
-may carry her head wi' the highest.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lennard Melfort now resolved neither
-verbally nor by letter to have further
-intercourse with his family at Craigengowan or
-elsewhere, but before he could make up his
-mind what to do or could betake him south,
-as he meant to quit Scotland without delay,
-on the day subsequent to the stormy interview
-Madelon announced a visitor, and on a
-salver brought in a card inscribed&mdash;'MR. KENNETH
-KIPPILAW, W.S.'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER III.
-<br /><br />
-THE SPURNED OFFER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'The family agent from Edinburgh, Flora,'
-said Lennard, in answer to her inquiring
-glance. 'Mrs. Melfort,' he added, introducing
-her to their visitor, who bowed with a
-critical glance and appreciative smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have been telegraphed for by your
-father, Captain Melfort,' said Mr. Kippilaw,
-as they shook hands and he was motioned to
-a chair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A hale, hearty, unpretentious, business-like
-man, about forty years of age, Mr. Kenneth
-Kippilaw was too well-bred and too sensible
-to begin the matter in hand by any remarks
-about youthful imprudence, early marriages,
-or so forth, as he knew the pride and
-temperament of the young man before him, but
-laid down his hat, and, after some of that
-familiar weather talk which is the invariable
-prelude to any conversation over all the
-British Isles, he gently approached the object
-of his mission, which Flora, in the simplicity
-and terror of her heart, never doubted was a
-separation of some kind between herself and
-Lennard, so with a pallid face she bowed and
-withdrew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To what am I indebted for the pleasure
-of this&mdash;a&mdash;unexpected interview?' asked
-Lennard, a little stiffly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Instructions just received from your father,
-Captain Melfort.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then you have come from Craigengowan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Straight.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has he made up his mind to accept my
-wife as his daughter-in-law?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Quite the reverse, I regret to say.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lennard's face darkened with indignation,
-and he gave his moustache an angry twist.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are my father and mother determined to
-ignore the fact that she is a lady by birth?'
-asked Lennard after a gloomy pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;they know, of course, that she is a
-lady,' stammered Mr. Kippilaw, feeling his
-mission an ungracious one, 'but poor&mdash;one
-who has sunk into obscurity and dependence&mdash;pardon
-me, I but use their own identical words.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is done in this instance unfortunately
-cannot be undone, Captain Melfort;
-but his lordship, feeling, of course, keenly in
-the matter, is willing to continue your allowance,
-and even to double it, on one condition.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Name it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Kippilaw sighed, for though, as a
-lawyer, considerably hardened, he felt the
-delicacy of the whole situation, and Lennard's
-dark eyes seemed to focus and pierce him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The condition&mdash;to the point!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is&mdash;that you will return to India&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I mean to do so forthwith,' interrupted
-Lennard sharply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Or you may live anywhere out of Britain,
-but never attempt to intrude Mrs. Melfort
-upon your family or their circle, and contrive,
-if possible, to let that circle forget your existence.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Insolent&mdash;and cruel as insolent!' exclaimed
-Lennard Melfort as he started from
-his chair and paced about the room, with his
-dark eyes flashing and the veins in his
-forehead swollen like whip-cord.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The words I speak are not my own,' said
-Mr. Kippilaw, deprecatingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Return to Craigengowan, and tell my
-father that I reject his bribe to insult my
-wife&mdash;for a bribe it is&mdash;with the scorn it merits.
-Not a penny of his money will I accept while
-my sword and pay, or life itself, are left me.
-Tell Lord and Lady Fettercairn that I view
-myself as their son no more. As they
-discard me, so do I discard them; and even
-their <i>very name</i> I shall not keep&mdash;remember that!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dear me&mdash;dear me, all this is very sad!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They have thrust me from them as if I
-had been guilty of a crime&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Captain Melfort!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A crime I say&mdash;yet a day may come
-when they will repent it; and from this hour
-I swear&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not in anger,' interrupted Mr. Kippilaw,
-entreatingly; 'take no hasty vow in your
-present temper.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I swear that to them and theirs I shall
-be&mdash;from this hour&mdash;as one in the grave!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But,' urged the lawyer, 'but suppose&mdash;which
-God forbid&mdash;that aught happened to
-your elder brother, Mr. Cosmo Melfort?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I wish Cosmo well; but I care not for my
-interest in the title&mdash;it may become dormant,
-extinct, for aught that I care. Neither I nor
-any of mine shall ever claim it, nor shall I
-again set foot in Craigengowan, or on the
-lands around it&mdash;no, never again, never again!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To every argument of the kind-hearted
-Mr. Kippilaw, who really loved the Fettercairn
-family and esteemed the high-spirited
-Lennard, the latter turned a deaf ear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He departed in despair of softening matters
-between the rash son and indignant parents.
-To them he greatly modified the nature of
-the useless interview, but they heard of
-Lennard's determination with perfect unconcern,
-and even with a grim smile of contempt,
-never doubting that when money pressure
-came upon him they would find him at their
-mercy. But that time never came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Kippilaw returned to Edinburgh, and
-there the affair seemed to end.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The parting words of Lord Fettercairn to
-him were said smilingly and loftily:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The French have a little phrase, which in
-six words expresses all our experiences in life.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And this phrase, my lord?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is simply&mdash;<i>tout passe, tout casse, tout
-lasse</i>&mdash;that we outlive everything in turn and in
-time&mdash;and so this matter of Lennard's pride
-will be a matter of time only. Be assured
-we shall outlive the indignation of our
-misguided son.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But will you outlive your own?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can but hope that you will, my lord.
-Remember the hackneyed quotation from
-Pope&mdash;"To err is human, to forgive divine."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I never forgive!' replied his lordship bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The name of Lennard was never uttered
-again by his parents, nor even by his brother
-Cosmo (then reading up at Oxford) till the
-hour for forgiveness was past; and even
-Cosmo they contrived to innoculate with
-their own cruel and unchristian sentiment of
-hostility. Lennard's portrait was removed
-from its place of honour in the dining-hall,
-and banished to the lumber-attic; the goods,
-chattels, and mementoes he left at home were
-scattered and dispersed; even his horses were
-sold, and the saddles he had used; and the
-Fettercairn family would&mdash;could they have
-done so&mdash;have obliterated his name from the
-great double-columned tome of Sir Bernard
-Burke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Heedless of all that, the young husband
-and his dark-eyed girl-wife were all the world
-to each other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After mamma followed papa to the grave,
-Lennard&mdash;for she never held up her head
-after she heard of his death at Khooshab,'
-said Flora, as she nestled her head in his
-neck, 'I seemed to be condemned to a life of
-hardship, humiliation, and heartlessness, till
-I met you, dearest. I felt that even the love
-of some dumb animal&mdash;a dog or a horse&mdash;was
-better than the entire absence of affection
-in the narrow circle of my life. I did so long
-for something or some one to love me
-exclusively&mdash;I felt so miserably, so utterly alone
-in the world. Now I have you&mdash;<i>you</i> to love
-me. But in winning you I have robbed you
-of the love of all your people.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Talk not of it, and think not of it, dearest
-Flora. We are now more than ever all in
-all to each other.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The money bribe, offered in such a way
-and for such a purpose, exasperated Lennard
-still more against his family, and drew many
-a tear of humiliation from Flora in secret.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She thought that she had wrought Lennard
-a great wrong by winning his love for herself,
-and she was now burning with impatience to
-turn her back on the shores of Britain and
-find a new home in India; and there, by staff
-or other employments and allowances, Lennard
-knew that he could gain more than the
-yearly sum his father so mortifyingly offered him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora wept much over it all, we say, and
-her appetite became impaired; but she did
-not&mdash;like the heroine of a three-volume
-novel&mdash;starve herself into a fright.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But a short time before she had been a
-childish and simple maiden&mdash;one sorely tried,
-however, and crushed by evil fortune; but
-with Lennard Melfort now, 'the prince had
-come into her existence and awakened her
-soul, and she was a woman&mdash;innocent
-still&mdash;but yet a woman.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The scenery of the Mearns looked inexpressibly
-lovely in the purity and richness of
-its verdure and varied artistic views, for the
-woods were profusely tinted with gold, russet
-brown, and red, when Lennard Melfort turned
-his back upon it and his native home for
-ever!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The birds were chirping blithly, and the
-voice of the corncraik, with
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'The sweet strain that the corn-reapers sang,'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-came on the evening breeze together. The
-old kirk bell was tolling in the distance, and
-its familiar sound spoke to Lennard's heart
-of home like that of an old friend. The river
-was rolling under its great arch of some eighty
-feet in span, the downward reflection of the
-latter in the water making a complete circle
-like a giant O. The old castle of Halgreen,
-with its loopholed battlements of the
-fourteenth century, stood blackly and boldly upon
-its wave-beaten eminence, and the blue smoke
-of picturesque Gourdon, a fisher village, curled
-up on the ambient air, as the scenery faded
-out in the distance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Flora became marvellously cheerful when
-their journey fairly began, and laughingly she
-sung in Lennard's ear&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'The world goes up and the world goes down,<br />
- But <i>yesterday's</i> smile and <i>yesterday's</i> frown<br />
- Can never come back again, sweet friend&mdash;<br />
- Can never come back again!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Means were not forgotten to support nurse
-Madelon in her native place, where we shall
-leave her till she reappears in our narrative
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Lennard and his girl-wife sailed for
-India, full of love for each other and hope for
-their own lonely and unaided future, and both
-passed for ever out of the lives and apparently
-out of the memory of the family at Craigengowan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Times there were when he hoped to distinguish
-himself, so that the circle there&mdash;those
-who had renounced him&mdash;would be
-proud of him; but in seeking that distinction
-rashly, he might throw away his life, and thus
-leave his little Flora penniless on the mercy
-of a cold world and a proverbially ungrateful
-Government.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But they could not forget home, and many
-a time and oft, where the sun-baked cantonments
-of Meerut seemed to vibrate under the
-fierce light of the Indian sun, where the
-temples of Hurdwar from their steep of marble
-steps look down upon the Ganges, or where
-the bungalows of Cawnpore or Etwah,
-garlanded with fragrant jasmine, stand by the
-rolling Jumna amid glorious oleanders and
-baubool trees, with their golden balls loading
-the air with perfume, while the giant heron
-stalked by the river's bed, the alligator basked
-in the ooze, and the Brahmin ducks floated
-overhead, Flora's sweet voice made Lennard's
-heart thrill as she sang to him the songs of
-the land they had resolved never to look
-upon again, even when that sound so stirring
-to the most sluggish Scottish breast when far
-away, the pipes of a Highland regiment,
-poured their notes on the hot sunny air.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At home none seemed to care or think of
-the discarded son but the worthy lawyer
-Kenneth Kippilaw, who had loved him as a
-lad, and could not get his hard fate out of his
-mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From time to time, inspired by kindness
-and curiosity, he watched his name among the
-captains in the military lists of that thick
-compendium which no Scottish business
-establishment is ever without&mdash;'Oliver and
-Boyd's Almanack.' Therein, after a while,
-the name of Lennard Melfort <i>disappeared</i>,
-but whether he was dead, had sold out, or
-'gone to the bad,' the worthy Writer to the
-Signet could not discover, and he not
-unnaturally sighed over what he deemed a lost
-life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And here we end that which is a species of
-prologue to our story.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IV.
-<br /><br />
-REVELSTOKE COTTAGE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-More than twenty years had elapsed after
-the episodes we have described, and Lennard
-and Flora had found a new home, and she,
-her <i>last one</i>, more than four hundred and
-fifty miles as the crow flies from where
-Craigengowan looks down on the German
-Sea. But none that looked on Lennard
-Melfort now would have recognised in the
-prematurely aged man the handsome young
-fellow who in ire and disgust had quitted his
-native land.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In two years after he had gone eastward a
-dreadful fever, contracted in a place where
-he had volunteered on a certain duty to
-gain money for the support of his wife and
-her little Indian establishment&mdash;the Terrai of
-Nepaul, that miasmatic border of prairie which
-lies along the great forest of the Himalayas,
-and has an evil repute even among the
-natives of the country in the wet season when
-the leaves are falling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This fever broke Lennard's health completely,
-and so changed him that his rich
-brown hair and moustache were grey at
-six-and-twenty, and ere long he looked like a
-man of twice his age.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Can that fellow really be Lennard Melfort
-of the Fusiliers? Why, he is a veritable
-Knight of the Rueful Countenance!'
-exclaimed some old friends who saw him at
-'The Rag,' when he came home to seek a
-place of quiet and seclusion in Devonshire, as
-it subsequently chanced to be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Amid the apple bowers of the land of cider,
-and near a beautiful little bay into which the
-waters of the British Channel rippled, stood
-the pretty and secluded cottage he occupied,
-as 'Major MacIan,' with his son and a
-nephew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The wooded hills around it were not all
-covered with orchards, however, and the little
-road that wound round the bay ran under
-eminences that, from their aspect, might make
-a tourist think he was skirting a Swiss lake.
-Others were heath-clad and fringed at the
-base by a margin of grey rocks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Into the bay flowed a stream, blue and
-transparent always. Here salmon trout were
-often found, and the young men spent hours
-at its estuary angling for rock fish.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A Devonshire cottage is said by Mrs. Bray
-to be 'the sweetest object that the poet, the
-artist, or the lover of the romantic could
-desire to see,' and such a cottage was that of
-Major MacIan, the name now adopted by
-Lennard&mdash;that of Flora's father&mdash;in fulfilment
-of the vow he had made to renounce the
-name, title, and existence of his family.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Around it, and in front sloping down to
-the bay, was a beautiful garden, teeming with
-the flowers and fruits of Devonshire. On
-three sides was a rustic verandah, the trellis
-work of which was covered by a woven
-clematis, sweetbriar, and Virginia creeper,
-which, in the first year of her residence there,
-Flora's pretty hands, cased in garden gloves,
-were never tired of tending; and now the
-Virginia creeper, with its luxuriant tendrils,
-emerald green in summer, russet and red in
-autumn, grew in heavy masses over the roof
-and around the chimney stalks, making it, as
-Flora was wont to say exultingly, 'quite a
-love of a place!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On one hand lay the rolling waters of the
-Channel, foaming about the Mewstone Rock;
-on the other, a peep was given amid the
-coppice of the ancient church of Revelstoke,
-and here the married pair lived happily and
-alone for a brief time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Save for the advent of a ship passing in
-sight of the little bay, it was a sleepy place
-in which Lennard, now retired as a major,
-had 'pitched his tent,' as he said&mdash;the Cottage
-of Revelstoke. Even in these railway times
-people thereabout were content with yesterday's
-news. There was no gas to spoil the
-complexions of the young, and no water rates
-to 'worrit' the old; and telegrams never
-came, in their orange-tinted envelopes, to
-startle the hearts of the feeble and the sickly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No monetary transactions having taken
-place, and no correspondence being necessary,
-between Lennard and his family or their
-legal agent, Mr. Kippilaw, for more than
-twenty years now, he had quite passed away
-from their knowledge, and almost from their
-memory; and many who knew them once
-cared not, perhaps, whether he or his wife
-were in the land of the living.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A son, we have said, had been born to
-them, and Lennard named the child Florian,
-after his mother (here again ignoring his own
-family), whom that event cost dear, for the
-sweet and loving Flora never recovered her
-health or strength&mdash;injured, no doubt, in
-India&mdash;but fell into a decline, and, two years
-after, passed away in the arms of Lennard
-and her old nurse, Madelon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lonely, lonely indeed, did the former feel
-now, though an orphan nephew of Flora&mdash;the
-son of her only sister&mdash;came to reside
-with him&mdash;Shafto Gyle by name&mdash;one who
-will figure largely in our story.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Would Lennard ever forget the day of her
-departure, when she sank under that wasting
-illness with which no doctor could grapple?
-Ever and always he could recall the sweet
-but pallid face, the white, wasted hands, the
-fever-lighted dark eyes, which seemed so
-unnaturally large when, after one harrowing
-night of pain and delirium, she became gentle
-and quiet, and lovingly told him to take a
-little rest&mdash;for old-looking he was; old, worn,
-and wasted far beyond his years&mdash;and he
-obeyed her, saying he would take a little
-turn in the garden among the roses&mdash;the
-roses her hands would tend no more&mdash;sick
-at heart with the closeness of the sick-chamber
-and all it suggested, and maddened by the
-loud ticking of the watchful doctor's repeater
-as it lay on a table littered with useless
-phials; and how, ere he had been ten minutes
-in the sunny morning air, amid the perfume
-of the roses, he was wildly summoned by
-Madelon Galbraith with white cheeks and
-affrighted eyes, back to the chamber of
-death it proved to be; for it was on the
-brow of Death he pressed his passionate
-kisses, and to ears that could hear no more
-he uttered his heartrending entreaties that
-she would not leave him, or would give him
-one farewell word; and ever after would the
-perfume of roses be associated in his mind
-with that morning&mdash;the most terrible one of
-his life!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Beside Revelstoke Church&mdash;old, picturesque,
-and rendered comely by a wealth
-of luxuriant ivy that Time has wreathed
-around its hoary walls to flutter in the sea
-breeze&mdash;she was laid, and the heart of
-Lennard seemed to be buried with her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is a lonely old building, spotted with
-lichens, worn by storms, and perched upon
-the verge of a low, rocky cliff, up which the
-salt spray comes at times to the
-burial-ground. It is near the end of Mothcombe
-Bay, where the shore makes a turn to the
-southward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not a house is near it, the solitary hills
-and waves encompass it, and it is said that
-its smouldering tombstones would furnish
-ample matter for the 'meditations' of a
-Hervey. So there Flora was laid, and there
-Lennard was to be laid by her side when the
-time came.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her death hardened his heart more than
-ever against his own family, and he began
-almost to forget that he ever bore any other
-name than hers&mdash;his adopted one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the kindness of his heart the major, as
-the lads&mdash;his son and nephew&mdash;grew up
-together, introduced both to neighbours and
-strangers equally as his sons, but most
-unwisely, as we shall ere long have to record.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Neither to Florian nor to Shafto Gyle did
-he reveal his real name, or the story of the
-quarrel with his family and their work; thus
-in and about Revelstoke all three passed
-under the name of MacIan now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Madelon Galbraith, who had attended her
-mistress on her death-bed, and nursed her
-baby into boyhood, had now gone back to
-her native glen in the wilds of Ross. She
-proved, Lennard found, somewhat unfitted
-for the locality of Revelstoke, as her ways
-and ideas were foreign to those of the folks
-thereabouts; but she will have a prominent
-place in our story in the future.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But long, long Madelon wept over Florian,
-and pressed him often to her breast&mdash;'the
-baby of her bairn,' as she had called
-him&mdash;for as she had nursed him, so had she nursed
-his mother before him in the days when the
-victorious Ross-shire Buffs set up their tents
-at Khooshab, on the plains of Persia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Gude-by, calf of my heart,' were her parting
-words; 'I'll see ye yet again, Florian.
-If it were na for hope, the heart wad break!'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER V.
-<br /><br />
-DULCIE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-All trace of Lennard Melfort had been
-obliterated at Craigengowan, we have said.
-He was never mentioned there, and though
-his family tried to think of him as dead, they
-did not quite succeed; but the disappearance
-of his name from the Army List first excited
-a little speculation, but no inquiry, until a
-terrible event occurred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The eldest son, the Hon. Cosmo, married
-the daughter of Lady Drumshoddy, thus
-securing her thousands, and did his best to
-console Lord and Lady Fettercairn for 'the
-disgrace' brought upon them by Lennard,
-and they regarded him quite as a model son.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He shone as Chairman at all kinds of
-county meetings; became M.P. for a cluster
-of northern burghs, and was a typical Scottish
-member, mightily interested when such grand
-Imperial matters as the gravelling of Park
-Lane, the ducks on the Serpentine, and the
-improvements at Hyde Park Corner were
-before the House, but was oblivious of all
-Scottish interests, or that such a place as
-Scotland existed. When she wanted&mdash;like
-other parts of the empire&mdash;but never got
-them&mdash;grants for necessary purposes, the
-Hon. Cosmo was mute as a fish, or if he
-spoke it was to record his vote against them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lennard saw in a chance newspaper, and
-with natural grief and dismay, that Cosmo
-had come to an untimely end when deer-stalking
-near Glentilt. He had wounded a
-large stag, the captain of its herd, and
-approached rashly or incautiously when the
-infuriated animal was at bay. It broke its
-bay, attacked him in turn, and ere the great
-shaggy hounds could tear it down, Cosmo
-was trampled under foot and gored to death
-by its horns.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As Lennard read, his sad mind went to the
-scene where that death must have happened,
-under mighty Ben-y-gloe, where the kestrel
-builds his nest and the great mountain eagle
-has his eyry, and the Tilt comes thundering
-down over its precipices of grey rock. Never
-again would his eyes rest on such glorious
-scenes as these.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Cosmo had left a little daughter, Finella,
-who took up her abode with her grandparents
-at Craigengowan, but no son, and
-Lennard knew that by this tragedy he was
-now the heir to the peerage, but he only gave
-a bitter sigh as he thought of Flora in her
-grave and made no sign.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Cosmo,' he muttered, and forgetting
-for a time much that had occurred, and how
-completely Cosmo had leagued with father
-and mother against him, his memory went
-back to the pleasant days of their happy
-boyhood, when they rode, fished, and shot
-together, shared the same bedroom in Craigengowan,
-and conned their tasks from the same books.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, well,' he added, 'all that is over
-and done with long, long ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He made no sign, we say, but let time pass
-by, not foreseeing the complications that were
-eventually to arise by his doing so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian, born two years after the adoption
-of Shafto Gyle in his infancy, always regarded
-and looked up to the latter as a species of
-elder brother and undoubted senior.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his twentieth year Florian was really a
-handsome fellow, and if, without absurdity,
-the term 'beautiful' could be applied to a
-young man, he was so, in his perfect manliness.
-Tall in figure, hard and well developed
-in muscle, regular in features, he had clear,
-dark, honest eyes, with lashes like a girl's,
-and a dark, silky moustache.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto's face was in some respects handsome
-too, but an evil one to look at, in one
-way. His fair eyebrows were heavy, and
-had a way of meeting in a dark frown when
-he was thinking. His pale grey eyes were
-shifty, and were given him, like his tongue,
-to conceal rather than express his thoughts,
-for they were sharp and cunning. His
-nostrils were delicate, and, like his thin lips,
-suggestive of cruelty, while his massive jaw
-and thick neck were equally so&mdash;we must say
-almost to brutality.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were rather a contrast, these two
-young men&mdash;a contrast no less great in their
-dispositions and minds than in their outward
-appearance. They were so dissimilar&mdash;one
-being dark and the other fair&mdash;that no one
-would have taken them for brothers, as they
-were generally supposed to be, so affectionate
-was the Major to both, and both bearing his
-name in the locality.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a schoolboy Shafto had won an unpleasant
-reputation for jockeying his companions,
-'doing' them out of toys, sweetmeats,
-marbles, and money, and for skilfully shifting
-punishments on the wrong shoulders when
-opportunity offered, and not unfrequently on
-those of the unsuspecting Florian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From some of his proclivities, the Major
-thought Shafto would make a good attorney,
-and so had him duly installed in the office of
-Lewellen Carlyon, the nearest village lawyer,
-while for his own boy, Florian, he had higher
-hopes and aspirations, to make him, like
-himself, a soldier; but though far from idle,
-or lacking application, Florian failed, under
-the insane high-pressure system of 'cramming,'
-to pass, and not a few&mdash;Shafto particularly&mdash;laid
-it to the account of a certain
-damsel, Dulcie by name, who was supposed,
-with some truth, to occupy too much of his
-thoughts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Disgusted by the result of his last 'exam.,'
-Florian would at once have enlisted, like so
-many others, who rush as privates for
-commissions nowadays; but his father's
-fast-failing health, his love for Dulcie Carlyon,
-and the desperate but 'Micawber'-like hope
-that 'something would turn up,' kept him
-hanging on day by day aimlessly at Revelstoke,
-without even the apparent future that
-had opened to Shafto when elevated to a
-high stool in Lawyer Carlyon's office.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As time went on, Lennard Melfort (or
-MacIan as he called himself), though he had
-a high appreciation of Shafto's sense, turn for
-business to all appearance, cleverness, and
-strength of character, turned with greater
-pleasure to his own son Florian, whose clear
-open brow and honest manly eyes bore
-nature's unmistakable impress of a truer
-nobility than ever appertained to the truculent
-and anti-national lords of Fettercairn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though to all appearance the best of
-friends before the world, the cousins were
-rivals; but as Florian was the successful
-lover, Shafto had a good basis for bitterness,
-if not secret hate.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In common with the few neighbours who
-were in that sequestered quarter, the lawyer
-liked the Major&mdash;he was so gentle, suave,
-retiring in manner, and courteously polite.
-He liked Florian too, but deemed him idle,
-and there his liking ended.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He took Shafto into his office at the
-Major's urgent request, as a species of
-apprentice, but he&mdash;after the aphorism of
-'Dr. Fell'&mdash;did not much affect the young man,
-though he found him sharp enough&mdash;too
-sharp at times; and, like most of the
-neighbours, he never cared to inquire into the
-precise relationship of the Major and the two
-lads, both of whom from boyhood had called
-the latter 'Papa.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie Carlyon was the belle of the limited
-circle in which she moved, and a very limited
-circle it was; but she was pretty enough to
-have been the belle of a much larger orbit;
-for she was the very ideal of a sweet, bright
-English girl, now nearly in her eighteenth
-year, and the boy and girl romance in the
-lives of her and Florian had lasted since they
-were children and playmates together, and
-they seemed now to regard each other with
-'the love that is given once in a lifetime.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Could I but separate these two!' muttered
-Shafto, as with eyes full of envy and evil he
-watched one of their meetings, amid the
-bushes that fringed an old quarry not far from
-Revelstoke Church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the summit where he lurked there
-was a magnificent view of the sea and the
-surrounding country. On one hand lay the
-lonely old church and all the solitary hills that
-overlook its wave-beaten promontory; on the
-other were the white-crested waves of the
-British Channel, rolling in sunshine; but
-Shafto saw only the face and figure of Dulcie
-Carlyon, who was clad just as he was fond of
-picturing her, in a jacket of navy blue,
-fastened with gilt buttons, and a skirt with
-clinging folds of the same&mdash;a costume which
-invests an English girl with an air equally
-nautical and coquettish. Dulcie's dresses
-always fitted her exquisitely, and her small
-head, with smart hat and feather, set
-gracefully on her shapely shoulders, had just a
-<i>soupçon</i> of pride in its contour and bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Slender in figure, with that lovely flower-like
-complexion which is so peculiarly English,
-Dulcie had regular and delicate features, with
-eyes deeply and beautifully blue,
-reddish-golden hair, a laughing mouth that some
-thought too large for perfect beauty, but it
-was fully redeemed by its vivid colour and
-faultless teeth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Could I but separate them!' muttered
-Shafto, through his clenched teeth, while
-their murmured words and mutual caresses
-maddened him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie was laughingly kissing a likeness in
-an open locket which Florian had just given
-her&mdash;a likeness, no doubt, of himself&mdash;and
-she did so repeatedly, and ever and anon
-held it admiringly at arm's length. Then she
-closed it, and Florian clasped the flat silver
-necklet to which it was attached round her
-slender white throat; and with a bright fond
-smile she concealed it among the lace frilling
-of her collarette, and let the locket, for
-security, drop into the cleft of her bosom,
-little foreseeing the part it was yet to play in
-her life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto's face would not have been pleasant
-to look upon as he saw this episode, and his
-shifty grey eyes grew pea-green in hue as he watched it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Dulcie!' exclaimed Florian, with a
-kind of boyish rapture, as he placed a hand
-on each of her shoulders and gazed into her
-eyes, 'I am most terribly in love with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why should there be any terror in it?'
-asked Dulcie, with a sweet silvery laugh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I feel so full of joy in having your
-love, and being always with you, that&mdash;that
-a fear comes over me lest we should be some
-day parted.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who can part us but ourselves?' said she
-with a pretty pout, while her long lashes
-drooped.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dulcie,' said he, after a little pause, 'have
-you ever had an emotion that comes uncalled
-for&mdash;that which people call a presentiment?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes; often.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Has it ever come true?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sometimes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;I have a presentiment this evening
-which tells me that something is about to
-happen to me&mdash;to us&mdash;and very soon too!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What can happen to us&mdash;we are so happy?'
-said Dulcie, her blue eyes dilating.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Did the vicinity of Shafto, though unknown
-to Florian, mysteriously prompt this thought&mdash;this
-boding fear. Shafto heard the words,
-and a strange smile spread over his face as he
-shook his clenched hand at the absorbed pair,
-and stole away from his hiding-place, leaving
-two foolish hearts full of a foolish dream from
-which they might be roughly awakened&mdash;leaving
-the happy Florian, with that sweet
-and winsome Dulcie whom he loved, and
-with whom he had played even as a child;
-with whom he had shared many a pot of
-clotted cream; with whom he had fished for
-trout in the Erme and Yealm; explored with
-fearful steps and awe-stricken heart the cavern
-there, where lie thick the fossil bones of the
-elephant, hyæna, and wolf; and wandered for
-hours by the moors, among mossy rocks and
-mossy trees, and in woody labyrinthine lanes,
-and many a time and oft by the sea shore,
-where the cliffs are upheaved and contorted in
-a manner beyond description, but so loosely
-bound together that waves rend them asunder,
-and shape them into forms like ruined castles
-and stranded ships; till, as years went on,
-heart had spoken to heart; boy and girl life
-had been left behind; and that dream-time
-came in which they seemed to live for years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-No one could accuse Dulcie Carlyon of
-coquetry, her nature was too truthful and open
-for that; thus she had never for a moment
-wavered in her preference between Florian
-and Shafto, and spent with the former those
-bright and hopeful hours that seldom come
-again with the same keen intensity in a
-lifetime, though often clouded by vague
-doubts.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As yet they had led a kind of Paul and
-Virginia life, without very defined ideas of their
-future; in fact, perhaps scarcely considering
-what that future might be.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They only knew, like the impassioned boy
-and girl in the beautiful story of Bernardin
-St. Pierre, that they loved each other very dearly,
-and for the sweet present that sufficed; while
-cunning Shafto Gyle looked darkly, gloomily,
-and enviously on them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps it was his fast failing health that
-prevented Lennard Melfort from looking
-more closely into this matter, or it may be
-that he remembered the youthful love of his
-own heart; for he could never forget her
-whom he was so soon to join now, and who,
-'after life's fitful fever,' slept by the grey wall
-of Revelstoke, within sound of the restless sea.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie's father, Lawyer Carlyon, heard
-rumours of these meetings and rambles, and
-probably liked them as little as the Major did;
-but he was a busy man absorbed in his work,
-and had been used to seeing the pair together
-since they were toddling children. Lennard,
-perhaps, thought it was as well to let them
-alone, as nothing would come of it, while the
-lawyer treated it surlily as a kind of joke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, Dulcie, my girl,' said he one day,
-'what is to be the end of all this philandering
-but spoiling your own market, perhaps? Do
-you expect a young fellow to marry you who
-has no money, no prospects, no position in
-the world?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Position he has,' said poor Dulcie, blushing
-painfully, for though an only and motherless
-child she stood in awe of her father.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Position&mdash;a deuced bad one, I think!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The other two items will come in time,
-papa,' said Dulcie, laughing now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie was silent, and&mdash;for the first time in
-her life&mdash;thought sadly, 'Yes, when!' But
-she pressed a pretty white hand upon the
-silver locket in her bosom, as if to draw
-courage therefrom as from an amulet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, lass, he can't keep even the roof of
-a <i>cob</i> cottage over your head.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, papa, remember our hopeful Devonshire
-proverb&mdash;a good cob, a good hat and
-shoes, and a good heart last for ever.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Right, lass, and a good heart have you,
-my darling,' said Mr. Carlyon, kissing her
-peach-like cheek, for he was a kind and
-good-hearted man, though somewhat rough in his
-exterior, and more like a grazier than a
-lawyer. 'You are both too young to know
-what you are talking about. He'll be going
-away, however&mdash;can't live always on his
-father, and <i>he</i>, poor fellow, won't last long.
-The fancy of you both will wear itself out,
-like any other summer flirtation&mdash;I had many
-such in my time,' he added, with a chuckle,
-'and got safely over them all. So will you,
-lass, and marry into some good family, getting
-a husband that will give you a comfortable
-home&mdash;for instance, Job Holbeton, with his
-pits of Bovey coal.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor little Dulcie shivered, and could
-scarcely restrain her tears at the hard,
-practical suggestions of her father.
-Hard-featured, stout, and grizzled Joe Holbeton
-versus her handsome Florian!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her father spoke, too, of his probable
-'going away.' Was this the presentiment to
-which her lover had referred? It almost
-seemed so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the sunset she went forth into the
-garden to work with her wools, and even to
-have a 'good cry' over what her father had
-said; but in this she was prevented by
-suddenly finding Shafto stretched on the grass
-at her feet under a pine chestnut-tree&mdash;Shafto,
-whom she could only tolerate for
-Florian's sake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why do you stare at me so hard, Shafto,'
-she asked, with unconcealed annoyance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Staring, was I?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, like an owl.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I always like to see girls working.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the work, what do you call it?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Crewel work. And you like to see us busy?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, especially when the work is done by
-hands so pretty and white.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As mine, you mean, of course?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Dulcie. How you do bewilder a fellow!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't begin as usual to pay me clumsy
-compliments, Shafto, or I shall quit the
-garden,' said Dulcie, her blue eyes looking
-with a half-frightened, half-defiant expression
-into the keen, shifty, and pale grey ones of
-Shafto, who was somewhat given to persecuting her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could see the outline of the locket with
-every respiration of her bosom. Could he
-but possess himself of it, thought he, as he
-proceeded to fill his meerschaum pipe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thought gentlemen did not smoke in
-ladies' society unless with permission,' said
-Dulcie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never bother about that, little one, please.
-But may I smoke?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks; this is jolly,' said he, looking up
-at her with eyes full of admiration. 'I feel
-like Hercules at the feet of Omphale.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't know who he was, or what you
-feel, but do you know what you look like?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shall I tell you?' asked Dulcie, her eyes
-sparkling with mischief.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, like the Athenian weaver, Bottom,
-with his ass's head, at the feet of Titania.
-"Dost like the picture?"'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto eyed her spitefully, all the more so
-that Dulcie laughed merrily, showing all her
-pearly teeth at her reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oho, this comes of rambling in quarries,'
-said he, bluntly and coarsely; 'doing the
-Huguenot business, the <i>pose</i> of Millais'
-picture. Bosh! What can you and he mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Millais and I?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; you and Florian!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mean!' exclaimed Dulcie, her sweet face
-growing very pale in spite of herself at the
-bluntness of Shafto, and the unmistakable
-anger of his tone and bearing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;with your tomfoolery.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How?&mdash;why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Penniless as you are&mdash;he at least.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good evening, Shafto; you are very unpleasant,
-to say the least of it,' said Dulcie, as
-she gathered up her wools and sailed into the
-house, while his eyes followed her with a
-menacing and very ugly expression indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VI.
-<br /><br />
-THE SECRET PACKET.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The broken health brought by Lennard from
-the miasmatic Terai of Nepaul was rapidly
-becoming more broken than ever, and,
-though not yet fifty, he was a premature old
-man, and it seemed as if the first part of
-Florian's presentiment or prevision of coming
-sorrow would soon be fulfilled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His steps became very feeble, and he could
-only get about, in the autumn sunshine, with
-the aid of a stick and Florian's arm; and
-the latter watched him with grief and pain,
-tottering like the aged, panting and leaning
-heavily on his cane, as ever and anon he
-insisted on being led up a steep slope from
-which he could clearly see the old church of
-Revelstoke on its wave-beaten promontory,
-overlooked by sad and solitary hills, and his
-hollow eyes glistened as he gazed on it, with
-a kind of yearning expression, as if he longed
-to be at peace, and by the side of her he had
-laid there, it seemed long years ago&mdash;a lifetime ago.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Lennard was certainly near his tomb,
-and all who looked upon him thought so; yet
-his calm eye, ever looking upward, betrayed
-no fear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One day when Florian was absent&mdash;no
-doubt sketching, boating with Dulcie on the
-Yealm, or idling with her on the moors&mdash;Lennard
-besought Shafto to stay beside him
-as he sat feeble and languid in his easy chair,
-sinking with the wasting and internal fever,
-with which the country practitioners were
-totally incapable of grappling; and on this
-day, for the first time, he began to speak
-to him of Scotland and the home he once
-had there; and he was listened to with
-the keenest interest by Shafto, who had
-ever&mdash;even as a child&mdash;been cunning, selfish, and
-avaricious, yet wonderfully clever and
-complaisant in his uncle's prejudiced eyes, as he
-remembered only Flora's dead and devoted
-sister.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have been thinking over old times and
-other days, Shafto,' said he, with his
-attenuated hands crossed on the head of his
-bamboo cane; 'and, all things considered, it
-seems an occupation I had better avoid did
-the memory concern myself alone: but I
-must think of others and their interests&mdash;of
-Florian and of you&mdash;so I can't help it, boy,
-in my present state of health, or rather
-want of health,' he added, as a violent fit of
-spasmodic coughing came upon him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a pause he spoke again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You, Shafto, are a couple of years older
-than Florian, and are, in many ways, several
-years older in thought and experience by the
-short training you have received in Carlyon's
-office.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Major paused again, leaving Shafto
-full of wonder and curiosity as to what this
-preamble was leading up to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The former had begun to see things more
-clearly and temperately with regard to the
-sudden death of Cosmo, and to feel that,
-though he had renounced all family ties,
-name, and wealth, so far as concerned himself,
-to die, with the secret of all untold, would
-be to inflict a cruel wrong on Florian. At
-one time Lennard thought of putting his
-papers and the whole matter in the hands of
-Mr. Lewellen Carlyon, and it was a pity he
-did not do so instead of choosing to entrust
-them to his long-headed nephew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hand here my desk, and unlock it for
-me&mdash;my hands are so tremulous,' said he.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When this was done he selected a packet
-from a private drawer, and briefly and rapidly
-told the story of his life, his proper name,
-and rank to Shafto, who listened with
-open-eyed amazement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the latter had thoroughly digested the
-whole information, he said, after a long pause:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This must be told to Florian!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And with Florian came the thought of
-Dulcie, and how this sudden accession of her
-lover to fortune and position would affect her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nay, Shafto&mdash;not yet&mdash;not till I am gone&mdash;a
-short time now. I can trust you, with
-your sharpness and legal acumen, with the
-handling of this matter entirely. When I
-am gone, and laid beside your aunt Flora,
-by the wall of the old church yonder,' he
-continued with a very broken voice&mdash;one
-almost a childish treble, 'you will seek the
-person to whom this packet is addressed,
-Kenneth Kippilaw, a Writer to the Signet in
-Edinburgh&mdash;he is alive still; place these in
-his hands, and he will do all that is required;
-but treasure them, Shafto&mdash;be careful of them
-as you would of your soul's salvation&mdash;for
-my sake, and more than all for the sake of
-Florian! Now, my good lad, give me the
-composing draught&mdash;I feel sleepy and so
-weary with all this talking, and the thoughts
-that have come unbidden&mdash;unbidden, sad,
-bitter, and angry thoughts&mdash;to memory.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto locked the desk, put it aside, and,
-giving his uncle the draught, stole softly away
-to his own room with the papers, to con them
-over and to&mdash;think!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had not sat at a desk for three years in
-Lawyer Carlyon's office without having his
-wits sharpened. He paused as he put the
-documents away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Stop&mdash;stop&mdash;let me think, let me
-consider!' he exclaimed to himself, and he
-certainly did consider to some purpose. He
-was cold and calculating; he was never
-unusually agitated or flustered, but he became
-both with the thoughts that occurred to him
-now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Among the papers and letters entrusted to
-him were the certificates of the marriage of
-Lennard and Flora, and another which ran
-thus:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Certificate of entry of birth, under section
-37 of 17 and 18 Vict., cap. 80.' It authenticated
-the birth of their child Florian at
-Revelstoke, with the date thereof to a minute.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These documents were enclosed in a letter
-written in a tremulous and uncertain hand by
-Lennard Melfort to Mr. Kenneth Kippilaw,
-part of which was in these terms:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The child was baptized by a neighbouring
-clergyman&mdash;the Rev. Paul Pentreath&mdash;who
-has faithfully kept the promise of secrecy he
-gave me, and, dying as I now feel myself to
-be, I pray earnestly that my father and
-mother will be kind to my orphan son. Let
-them not&mdash;as they one day hope for mercy at
-that dread throne before which I am soon to
-appear&mdash;visit upon his innocent head my
-supposed and most heavily punished offence.
-Let him succeed in poor Cosmo's place to
-that which is his due; let him succeed to all
-I renounced in anger&mdash;an anger that has
-passed away, for now, my dear old friend, I
-am aged beyond my years, and my hair is
-now white as snow through ill-health
-contracted in India, where, to procure money
-necessary for my poor Flora, I volunteered
-on desperate service, and in seasons destructive
-to existence. In your hands I leave the
-matter with perfect hope and confidence. The
-bearer will tell you all more that may be
-necessary.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After having read, reread, and made himself
-thoroughly master of the contents of this
-to him certainly most astounding packet, he
-requested the Major to re-address it in his own
-tremulous and all but illegible handwriting,
-and seal it up with his long-disused signet
-ring, which bore the arms of Fettercairn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Prior to having all this done, Shafto had
-operated on one of the documents most
-dexterously and destructively with his pen-knife!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A peerage! a peerage!&mdash;rank, wealth,
-money, mine&mdash;all mine!' he muttered under
-his breath, as he stored the packet away in a
-sure and secret place, and while whistling
-softly to himself, a way he had when brooding
-(as he often did) over mischief, he recalled
-the lines of Robert Herrick:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Our life is like a narrow raft,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Afloat upon the hungry sea;<br />
- Hereon is but a little space,<br />
- And all men, eager for a place,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Do thrust each other in the sea.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-'So why should I not thrust him into the
-hungry briny? If life is a raft&mdash;and, by
-Jove, I find it so!&mdash;why should one not grasp
-at all one can, and make the best of life for
-one's self, by making the worst of it for other
-folks? Does such a chance of winning rank
-and wealth come often to any one's hands?
-No! and I should be the biggest of fools&mdash;the
-most enormous of idiots&mdash;not to avail
-myself to the fullest extent. I see my little
-game clearly, but must play warily. "Eat,
-drink, and be merry," says Isaiah, "for
-to-morrow we die." They say the devil can
-quote Scripture, and so can Shafto Gyle.
-But I don't mean to die to-morrow, but to
-have a jolly good spell for many a year to
-come!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And in the wild exuberance of his spirits
-he tossed his hat again and again to the
-ceiling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From that day forward the health of
-Lennard Melfort seemed to decline more
-rapidly, and erelong he was compelled by
-the chill winds of the season to remain in
-bed, quite unable to take his place at table or
-move about, save when wheeled in a chair to
-the window, where he loved to watch the
-setting sun.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then came one evening when, for the last
-time, he begged to be propped up there in
-his pillowed chair. The sun was setting over
-Revelstoke Church, and throwing its
-picturesque outline strongly forward, in a dark
-indigo tint, against the golden and crimson
-flush of the west, and all the waves around
-the promontory were glittering in light.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Lennard saw nothing of all this,
-though he felt the feeble warmth of the
-wintry sun as he stretched his thin, worn
-hands towards it; his eyesight was gone, and
-would never come again! There was something
-very pathetic in the withered face and
-sightless eyes, and the drooping white
-moustache that had once been a rich dark-brown,
-and waxed <i>à l'Empereur</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His dream of life was over, and his last
-mutterings were a prayer for Florian, on
-whose breast his head lay as he breathed his
-last.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two lads looked at each other in that
-supreme moment&mdash;but with very different
-thoughts in their hearts. Florian felt only
-desolation, blank and utter, and even Shafto,
-in the awful presence of Death, felt alone in
-the world.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VII.
-<br /><br />
-A FAREWELL.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-As he lay dead, that old-looking, wasted, and
-attenuated man, whose hair was like the
-thistledown, none would have recognised in
-him the dark-haired, bronzed, and joyous
-young subaltern who only twenty-four years
-before had led his company at the storming
-of the Redan, who had planted the scaling-ladder
-against the scarp, and shouted in a
-voice heard even amid the roar of the adverse
-musketry:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come on, men! ladders to the front,
-eight men per ladder; up and at them, lads,
-with the bayonet,' and fought his way into
-an embrasure, while round-shot tore up the
-earth beneath his feet, and men were swept
-away in sections of twenty; or the hardy
-soldier who faced fever and foes alike in the
-Terai of Nepaul.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How still and peaceful he lay now as the
-coffin-lid was closed over him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Snow-flakes, light and feathery, fell on the
-hard ground, and the waves seemed to leap
-and sob heavily round the old church of
-Revelstoke, when Lennard Melfort was laid
-beside the now old and flattened grave
-of Flora, and keen and sharp the frosty wind
-lifted the silver hair of the Rev. Paul
-Pentreath, whistled among the ivy or on the
-buttresses, and fluttered the black ribbon of
-the pall held by Florian, who felt as one in a
-dreadful dream&mdash;amid a dread and unreal
-phantasmagoria; and the same wind seemed
-to twitch angrily the pall-ribbon from the
-hand of Shafto, nor could he by any effort
-recover it, as more than one present, with
-their Devonian superstition, remarked, and
-remembered when other things came to pass.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last all was over; the mourners departed,
-and Lennard Melfort was left alone&mdash;alone
-with the dead of yesterday and of ages;
-and Florian, while Dulcie was by his side and
-pressed his hand, strove to commit to memory
-the curate's words from the Book of Revelation,
-'There shall be no more death, neither
-sorrow, nor sighing; for God shall wipe
-away all tears from their eyes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto now let little time pass before he
-proceeded to inform Florian of what he
-called their 'relative position,' and of their
-journey into Scotland to search out Mr. Kippilaw.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been said that in life we have
-sometimes moments so full of emotion that they
-seem to mark a turn in it we can never reach
-again; and this sharp turn, young and startled
-Florian seemed to pass, when he learned that
-since infancy he had been misled, and that
-the man, so tender and so loving, whom
-he had deemed his father was but his uncle!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How came it all to pass now? Yet the
-old Major had ever been so kind and affectionate
-to him&mdash;to both, in fact, equally so,
-treating them as his sons&mdash;that he felt only a
-stunning surprise, a crushing grief and bitter
-mortification, but not a vestige of anger; his
-love for the dead was too keen and deep for
-that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The packet, sealed and addressed to
-Mr. Kippilaw, though its contents were as yet
-unknown to him, seemed to corroborate the
-strange intelligence of Shafto; but the
-question naturally occurred to Florian, 'For what
-end or purpose had this lifelong mystery
-and change in their positions been brought
-about?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He asked this of Shafto again and again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It seems we have been very curiously
-deluded,' said that personage, not daring to
-look the sorrowful Florian straight in the
-face, and pretended to be intent on stuffing
-his pipe.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Deluded&mdash;how?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How often am I to tell you,' exclaimed
-Shafto, with petulance and assumed irritation,
-'that the contents of this packet prove that <i>I</i>
-am the only son of Major Melfort (not
-MacIan at all), and that you&mdash;you&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Are Florian Gyle, the nephew&mdash;adopted
-as a son. Mr. Kippilaw will tell you all
-about it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you, Shafto?' queried Florian,
-scarcely knowing, in his bewilderment, what
-he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mean to go in for my proper position&mdash;my
-title, and all that sort of thing, don't you
-see?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And act&mdash;how!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not the proverbial beggar on horseback,
-I hope. I'll do something handsome for you,
-of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I want nothing done for me while I have
-two hands, Shafto.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As you please,' replied the latter, puffing
-vigorously at his pipe. 'I have had enough
-of hopeless drudgery for a quarterly pittance
-in the dingy office of old Carlyon,' said he,
-after a long pause; 'and, by all the devils,
-I'll have no more of it now that I am going
-to be rich.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, from the day of Lennard Melfort
-entrusting him with the packet, Shafto had
-done little else at the office but study the
-laws of succession in Scotland and England.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How much you love money, Shafto!'
-said Florian, eying him wistfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do I? Well, I suppose that comes from
-having had so precious little of it in my
-time. I am a poor devil just now, but,' thought
-he exultantly, 'this "plant" achieved successfully,
-how many matrons with daughters
-unmarried will all be anxious to be mother to
-me! And Dulcie Carlyon I might have for
-asking; but I'll fly at higher game now, by
-Jove!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As further credentials, Shafto now
-possessed himself of Major Melfort's sword,
-commissions, and medals, while Florian
-looked in blank dismay and growing
-mortification&mdash;puzzled by the new position in which
-he found himself, of being no longer his father's
-son&mdash;a source of unfathomable mystery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto was in great haste to be gone, to
-leave Revelstoke and its vicinity behind him.
-It was too late for regrets or repentance now.
-Not that he felt either, we suppose; and
-what he had done he would do again if there
-was no chance of being found out. In the
-growing exuberance of his spirits, he could
-not help, a day or two after, taunting Florian
-about Dulcie till they were on the verge of a
-quarrel, and wound up by saying, with a
-scornful laugh:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You can't marry her&mdash;a fellow without a
-shilling in the world; and I wouldn't now,
-if she would have me, which I don't doubt.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Dulcie! She heard with undisguised
-grief and astonishment of these events, and
-of the approaching departure of the cousins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The cottage home was being broken up;
-the dear old Major was in his grave; and
-Florian, the playmate of her infancy, the
-lover of her girlhood, was going away&mdash;she
-scarcely knew to where. They might be
-permitted to correspond by letter, but when,
-thought Dulcie&mdash;oh, when should they meet
-again?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun was shedding its light and warmth
-around her as usual, on woodland and hill, on
-wave and rock; but both seemed to fade out,
-the perfume to pass from the early spring
-flowers, the glory from land and sea, and a
-dim mist of passionate tears clouded the
-sweet and tender blue eyes of the affectionate
-girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He would return, he said, as he strove to
-console her; but how and when, and to what
-end? thought both so despairingly. Their
-future seemed such a vague, a blank one!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am penniless, Dulcie&mdash;a beggar on the
-face of the earth&mdash;twice beggared now, I
-think!' exclaimed Florian, in sorrowful bitterness.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't speak thus,' said she imploringly,
-with piteous lips that were tremulous as his
-own, and her eyes drowned in tears.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They had left the road now, and wandered
-among the trees in a thicket, and seated
-themselves on a fallen trunk, a seat and place
-endeared to them and familiar enough in past time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He gazed into her eyes of deep pansy-blue,
-as if his own were striving to take away a
-memory of her face&mdash;a memory that would
-last for eternity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you really go to-night?' she asked,
-in piteous and broken accents.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;with Shafto. I am in a fever,
-darling, to seek out a position for myself.
-Surely Shafto may assist me in that&mdash;though
-I shrink from asking him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your own cousin?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;but sometimes he looks like a
-supplanter now, and his bearing has been so
-unpleasant to me, especially of late,' said
-Florian. 'But you will wait for me, Dulcie,
-and not be persuaded to marry anyone else?'
-he added imploringly, as he clasped each of
-her hands in his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall wait for you, Florian, if it should
-be for twenty years!' exclaimed the girl, in a
-low and emphatic voice, scarcely considering
-the magnitude and peril of such a promise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank you, darling Dulcie!' said he
-bending down and kissing her lips with
-ardour, and, though on the eve of parting,
-they felt almost happy in the confidence of
-the blissful present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How often shall I recall this last meeting
-by the fallen tree, when you are far, far
-away from Revelstoke and&mdash;me,' said Dulcie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will often come here to be reminded
-of me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do you think, Florian, I will require to
-be reminded of you?' asked the girl, with a
-little tone of pain in her sweet voice, as she
-kissed the silver locket containing his likeness,
-and all the sweet iteration of lover-talk,
-promises, and pledges went on for a time,
-and new hopes began to render this last
-interview more bearable to the young pair who
-were on the eve of separation, without any
-very distinct arrangement about correspondence
-in the interval of it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun was setting now redly, and amid
-dun winter clouds, beaming on each chimney-head,
-on Revelstoke Church, and the leafless
-tree-tops his farewell radiance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian took a long, long kiss from Dulcie,
-and with the emotion of a wrench in his
-heart, was gone, and she was alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A photo and a lock of red-golden hair were
-all that remained to him of her&mdash;both to be
-looked upon again and again, till his eyes
-ached, but never grew weary.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie's were very red with weeping, and
-the memory of that parting kiss was still
-hovering on her quivering lips when, in
-a lonely lane not far from her home, she
-found herself suddenly face to face with
-Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had known him from his boyhood,
-ever since he came an orphan to Lennard
-Melfort's cottage; and although she always
-distrusted and never liked him, his face was
-a familiar one she might never see more; thus
-she resolved to part with him as with the best
-of friends, and to remember that he was the
-only kinsman of Florian, whose companion
-and fellow-traveller he was to be on a journey
-the end of which she scarcely understood.
-So, frankly and sweetly, with a sad smile in
-her eyes, she proffered her pretty hand,
-which Shafto grasped and retained promptly
-enough.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER VIII.
-<br /><br />
-THE SILVER LOCKET.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Shafto had just been with her father. How
-contemptuously he had eyed the corner and
-the high old stool on which he had sat in the
-latter's legal establishment, and all its
-surroundings; the fly-blown county maps of
-Devon and Cornwall; advertisements of
-sales&mdash;property, mangold wurzel, oats and hay,
-Thorley's food for cattle, and so forth; the
-tin boxes of most legal aspect; dockets of
-papers in red tape; the well-thumbed ledgers;
-day and letter books, and all the paraphernalia
-of a country solicitor's office.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ugh! How well he knew and loathed
-them all. Now it was all over and done with.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The three poor lads in the office, whose
-cheap cigars and beer he had often shared at
-the Ashburton Arms, he barely condescended
-to notice, while they regarded him with
-something akin to awe, as he gave Lawyer Carlyon
-his final 'instructions' concerning the disposal
-of the lease of the Major's pretty cottage,
-and of all the goods and chattels that were
-therein.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had Florian been present he would have
-felt only shame and abasement at the tone
-and manner Shafto adopted on this occasion;
-but worthy Lawyer Carlyon, who did not
-believe a bit in the rumoured accession of
-Shafto to family rank and wealth, laughed
-softly to himself, and thought his 'pride would
-have a sore fall one of these fine days.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And even now, when face to face with
-Dulcie, his general bearing, his coolness and
-insouciance, rendered her, amid all her grief,
-indignant and defiant ultimately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How piquant, compact, and perfect the girl
-looked, from the smart scarlet feather in her
-little hat to her tiny Balmoral boots. Her
-veil was tightly tied across her face, showing
-only the tip of her nose, her ripe red lips, and
-pretty white chin&mdash;its point, like her cheeks,
-reddened somewhat by the winter breeze from
-the Channel. Her gloved hands were in her
-small muff, and the collar of her sealskin
-jacket was encircled by the necklet at which
-her silver locket hung&mdash;the locket Shafto
-had seen her kiss when Florian had bestowed
-it on her, while he looked close by, with his
-heart full of envy, jealousy, and hatred, and
-now it was the first thing that attracted his eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you actually leave us to-night, Shafto?'
-she said softly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, Dulcie, by the train for Worcester
-and the north. My estates, you know, are
-in Scotland.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'These changes are all strange and most
-startling,' said she, with a sob in her slender
-throat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'We live in whirligig times, Dulcie; but I
-suppose it is the result of progress,' he added
-sententiously. 'I wonder how our grandfathers
-and grandmothers contrived to mope
-over and yawn out their dull and emotionless
-existence till they reached threescore and ten years.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall never see that age, Shafto.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who knows; though life, however sweet
-now, won't be worth living for then, I fancy.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie sighed, and he regarded her in
-admiring silence, for he had a high appreciation
-of her bright and delicate beauty, and
-loved her&mdash;if we may degrade the phrase&mdash;in
-his own selfish and peculiar way, though
-now resolved&mdash;as he had often thought vainly&mdash;to
-'fly at higher game;' and so, full of
-ideas, hopes, and ambitions of his own, if he
-had ceased to think of Dulcie, he had, at
-least, ceased for a space to trouble her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Florian will be writing to you, of course?'
-said he, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Alas! no, we have made no arrangement;
-and then, you know, papa&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Wouldn't approve, of course. My farewell
-advice to you, Dulcie, is&mdash;Don't put off
-your time thinking of Florian&mdash;his ship will
-never come home.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nor yours either, perhaps,' said Dulcie, angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You think so&mdash;but you are wrong.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! I know these waited for ships rarely do.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have read somewhere that ships of the
-kind rarely do come home in this prosaic and
-disappointing world; that some get wrecked
-almost within sight of land; others go down
-without the flapping of a sail, and sometimes
-after long and firm battling with adverse
-winds and tides; but <i>my ship</i> is a sure craft,
-Dulcie,' he added, as he thought of the packet
-in his possession&mdash;that precious packet on
-which all his hopes rested and his daring
-ambition was founded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie looked at him wistfully and distrustfully,
-and thought&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why is he so sure? But his ideas were
-always selfish and evil. Tide what may,'
-she added aloud, 'I shall wait twenty years
-and more for Florian.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The more fool you, then! And so die an
-old maid?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am, perhaps, cut out for an old maid.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And if he never can marry you&mdash;or
-marries some one else when he can?' asked
-Shafto viciously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, then I'll take to æstheticism, or
-women's rights, and all that sort of thing,'
-said the poor girl, with a ghastly and defiant
-attempt at a jest, which ended in tears, while
-Shafto eyed her angrily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How fond you are of that silver locket&mdash;you
-never wear any other!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have so few ornaments, Shafto.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And none you prize so much?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'None!' said Dulcie, with a sweet, sad smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is that the reason you wear it with all
-kinds of dresses? What is in it&mdash;anything?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is my secret,' replied Dulcie, putting
-her right hand on it and instinctively drawing
-back a pace, for there was a menacing expression
-in the cold grey eyes of Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Allow me to open it,' said he, taking her
-hand in his.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You shall!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Never!' exclaimed Dulcie, her eyes
-sparkling now as his grasp upon her hand
-tightened.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An imprecation escaped Shafto, and with
-his eyes aflame and his cheeks pale with
-jealousy and rage he tore her hand aside and
-wrenched by brutal force the locket from her,
-breaking the silver necklet as he did so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Coward!' exclaimed Dulcie; 'coward and
-thief&mdash;how dare you? Surrender that locket
-instantly!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not if I know it,' said he, mockingly,
-holding the prized trinket before her at arm's
-length.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But for Florian's sake, I would at once
-apply to the police.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A vulgar resort&mdash;no, my pretty Dulcie,
-you wouldn't.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not for Florian's sake?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whose, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your own, for you wouldn't like to have
-your old pump of a father down on you; and
-so you dare not make a row about it, my
-pretty little fury.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shafto, I entreat you, give me back that
-photo,' said Dulcie, her tears welling forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; I won't.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of what interest or use can it be to you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'More than you imagine,' said Shafto, to
-whom a villainous idea just then occurred.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I entreat you,' said Dulcie, letting her
-muff drop and clasping her slim little hands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Entreat away! I feel deucedly inclined
-to put my heel upon it&mdash;but I won't.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This robbery is cruel and infamous!'
-exclaimed Dulcie, trembling with grief and just
-indignation; but Shafto only laughed in
-anger and bitterness&mdash;and a very hyena-like
-laugh it was, and as some one was coming
-down the secluded lane, he turned away and
-left her in the twilight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He felt himself safe from opprobrium and
-punishment, as he knew well she was loth to
-make any complaint to her father on the
-subject; and just then she knew not how to
-communicate with Florian, as the darkness
-was falling fast, and the hour of his departure
-was close at hand. She thought it not
-improbable that Shafto would relent and return
-the locket to her; but the night was far
-advanced ere that hope was dissipated, and she
-attained some outward appearance of
-composure, though her father's sharp and
-affectionate eyes detected that she had been
-suffering.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had heard from her some confused
-and rambling story about the family secret,
-the packet, and the peerage, a story of which
-he could make nothing, though Shafto's
-bearing to himself that evening seemed to
-confirm the idea that 'there was something in
-it.' Anyway, Mr. Carlyon was not indisposed
-to turn the event to account in one sense.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Likely&mdash;likely enough, Dulcie lass,' said
-he; 'and so you'll hear no more of these
-two lads, if they are likely to become great
-folks, and belong to what is called the upper
-ten; they'll never think again of a poor
-village belle like you, though there is not a
-prettier face in all Devonshire than my
-Dulcie's from Lyme Regis to Cawsand Bay.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He meant this kindly, and spoke with a
-purpose; and his words and the warning
-they conveyed sank bitterly into the tender
-heart of poor Dulcie.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By this time the cousins were sweeping
-through the darkness in the express train by
-Exeter, Taunton, and so forth; both were
-very silent, and each was full of his own
-thoughts, and what these were the reader
-may very well imagine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Heedless of the covert and sneering smiles
-of Shafto, Florian, from time to time, drew
-forth the photo of Dulcie, and her shining
-lock of red-golden hair, his sole links between
-the past and the present; and already he felt
-as if a score of years had lapsed since they
-sat side by side upon the fallen tree.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, that he might give his whole
-thoughts to Dulcie, he affected to sleep; but
-Shafto did not sleep for hours. He sat
-quietly enough with his face in shadow, his
-travelling-cap of tweed-check pulled well
-down over his watchful and shifty grey-green
-eyes, the lamp overhead giving a miserable
-glimmer suited to the concealment of expression
-and thought; and as the swift train sped
-northward, the cousins addressed not a word
-to each other concerning those they had left
-behind, what was before them, or anything else.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a time, Shafto really slept&mdash;slept the
-slumber which is supposed to be the reward
-of the just and conscientious, but which is
-much more often enjoyed by those who have
-no conscience at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie contrived to despatch a letter to
-Florian detailing the outrage to which she
-had been subjected by Shafto; but time
-passed on, and, for a reason we shall give in
-its place, the letter never reached him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Again and again she recalled and rehearsed
-her farewell with Florian, and thought
-regretfully of his passionate pride, and desperate
-poverty too probably, if he quarrelled with
-Shafto; and she still seemed to see his
-beautiful dark eyes, dim with unshed tears, while
-her own welled freely and bitterly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When could they meet again, if ever, and
-where and how? Her heart and brain
-ached with these questions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie did not bemoan her fate, though
-her cheek paled a little, and she felt&mdash;even
-at her early years&mdash;as if life seemed over
-and done with, and in her passionate love for
-the absent, that existence alone was left to
-her, and so forth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And as she was her father's housekeeper
-now, kept the keys and paid all the servants,
-paid all accounts and made the preserves, he
-was in no way sorry that the young men were
-gone; that the 'aimless philandering,' as he
-deemed it, had come to an end; and that
-much would be attended to in his cosy little
-household which he suspected&mdash;but unjustly&mdash;had
-been neglected hitherto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Dulcie, the whole locality of her native
-place, the breezy moors, the solitary hills, the
-mysterious Druid pillars and logan stones,
-the rocky shore, and the pretty estuary of the
-Yealm, where they had been wont to boat
-and fish for pilchards in summer and autumn,
-were all full of the haunting presence of the
-absent&mdash;the poor but proud and handsome
-lad who from boyhood, yea from infancy, had
-loved her, and who now seemed to have
-slipped out of her existence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Spring melted into summer; golden sunshine
-flooded hill and dale, and lit up the
-waters of the Erm, the Yealm, and the
-far-stretching Channel, tinting with wondrous
-gleams and hues the waves that rolled upon
-the shore, or boiled about the Mewstorre
-Rock, and the sea-beaten promontory of
-Revelstoke; but to Dulcie the glory was
-gone from land and water: she heard no
-more, by letter or otherwise, of the love of
-her youth; he seemed to have dropped
-utterly out of her sphere; and though
-mechanically she gathered the fragrant leaves of
-the bursting June roses&mdash;the Marshal Neil
-and Gloire de Dijon&mdash;and treasured them
-carefully in rare old china jars and vases, a
-task in which she had often been assisted by
-Florian, she felt and thought&mdash;'Ichabod!
-Ichabod! the glory has departed!'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER IX.
-<br /><br />
-MR. KIPPILAW, W.S.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Shafto found himself a little nervous when
-he and Florian were actually in Edinburgh, a
-city in its beauty, boldness and grandeur of
-rock and mountain, fortress, terrace, and
-temple, so foreign-looking to English eyes,
-and so utterly unlike everything they had
-ever seen or conceived before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian's thoughts were peculiarly his own.
-His father's death&mdash;though called an uncle
-now, but Florian always felt for and thought
-of him as a parent&mdash;the loss of Dulcie, their
-abrupt departure from Devonshire, and rough
-uprootal of all early associations, had made a
-kind of hiatus in the young fellow's life, and
-it was only now when he found himself amid
-the strange streets and picturesque splendour
-of Edinburgh that he began&mdash;like one
-recovering consciousness after a long
-illness&mdash;to gather up again the ravelled threads of
-thought, but with curious want of concern and
-energy; while Shafto felt that he personally
-had both, and that now he required to have
-all his wits about him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian stood for a time that night at the
-door of their hotel in Princes Street looking
-at the wonderful lights of the Old Town
-sparkling in mid air, and some that were in
-the Castle must, he thought, be stars, they
-were so high above the earth. Scores of
-cabs and carriages went by, eastward and
-westward, but no carts or wains or lorries,
-such as one sees in London or Glasgow&mdash;vehicles
-with bright lamps and well muffled
-occupants, gentlemen in evening suits, and
-ladies in ball or dinner dresses, and crowds of
-pedestrians, under the brilliant gas lights and
-long boulevard-like lines of trees&mdash;the
-ever-changing human panorama of a great city
-street before midnight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How odd, how strange and lonely poor
-Florian felt; he seemed to belong to no one,
-and, like the Miller o' Dee, nobody cared for
-him; and ever and anon his eyes rested on
-the mighty castled rock that towers above
-streets, monuments, and gardens, with a
-wonderous history all its own, 'where
-treasured lie the monarchy's last gems,' and
-with them the only ancient crown in the
-British Isles. 'Brave kings and the fairest
-of crowned women have slept and been
-cradled in that eyrie,' says an enthusiastic
-English writer; 'heroes have fought upon its
-slopes; English armies have stormed it;
-dukes, earls, and barons have been
-immured in its strong dungeons; a sainted
-Queen prayed and yielded up her last breath
-there eight centuries ago. It is an imperishable
-relic&mdash;a monument that needs no carving
-to tell its tale, and it has the nation's worship;
-and the different church sects cling round its
-base as if they would fight again for the
-guardianship of a venerable mother.....
-And if Scotland has no longer a king and
-Parliament all to herself, her imperial crown
-is at least safely kept up there amid strong
-iron stanchions, as a sacred memorial of her
-inextinguishable independence, and, if need
-were, for future use.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian was a reader and a thinker, and he
-felt a keen interest in all that now surrounded
-him; but Shafto lurked in a corner of the
-smoke-room, turning in his mind the task of
-the morrow, and unwisely seeking to fortify
-himself by imbibing more brandy and soda
-than Florian had ever seen him take before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a sound night's rest and a substantial
-Scottish breakfast had fitted Shafto, as he
-thought, for facing anything, a cab deposited
-him and Florian (who was now beginning to
-marvel why he had travelled so far in a
-matter that concerned him not, in reality)
-at the residence of Mr. Kenneth Kippilaw,
-W.S., in Charlotte Square&mdash;a noble specimen
-of Adams Street architecture, having four
-stately symmetrical corresponding façades,
-overlooked by the dome of St. George's
-Church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Lawyers evidently thrive in Scotland,'
-said Shafto, as he looked at the mansion of
-Mr. Kippilaw, and mentally recalled the
-modest establishment of Lawyer Carlyon;
-'but foxes will flourish as long as there are
-geese to be plucked.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Kippilaw was at home&mdash;indeed he was
-just finishing breakfast, before going to the
-Parliament House&mdash;as they were informed by
-the liveried valet, who led them through a
-pillared and marble-floored vestibule, and
-ushered them into what seemed a library, as
-the walls from floor to ceiling were lined
-with handsome books; but every professional
-man's private office has generally this
-aspect in Scotland.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In a few minutes Mr. Kippilaw appeared
-with a puzzled and perplexed expression in
-his face, as he alternatively looked at his two
-visitors, and at Shafto's card in his hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Kippilaw was now in his sixtieth year;
-his long since grizzled hair had now become
-white, and had shrunk to two patches far
-apart, one over each ear, and brushed stiffly
-up. His eyebrows were also white, shaggy,
-and under them his keen eyes peered
-sharply through the rims of a gold pince-nez
-balanced on the bridge of his long aquiline
-nose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto felt just then a strange and unpleasant
-dryness about his tongue and lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'<i>Mr. Shafto Melfort?</i>' said Mr. Kippilaw
-inquiringly, and referring to the card again. 'I
-was not aware that there was a Mr. Shafto
-Melfort&mdash;any relation of Lord Fettercairn?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'His grandson,' said Shafto unblushingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This gentleman with the dark eyes?'
-asked Mr. Kippilaw, turning to the silent
-Florian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No&mdash;myself,' said Shafto sharply and
-firmly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are most unlike the family, who have
-always been remarkable for regularity of
-features. Then you are the son&mdash;of&mdash;of&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The late Major Lennard Melfort who died
-a few weeks ago&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good Heavens, where?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'On the west coast of Devonshire, near
-Revelstoke, where he had long resided under
-the assumed name of MacIan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That of his wife?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Precisely so&mdash;my mother.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And this young gentleman, whose face
-and features seem curiously familiar to me,
-though I never saw him before, he is your
-brother of course.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No, my cousin, the son of my aunt Mrs. Gyle.
-I am an only son, but the Major ever
-treated us as if he had been the father of both,
-so great and good was his kindness of heart.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Be seated, please,' said the lawyer in a
-breathless voice, as he seated himself in an
-ample leathern elbow chair at his writing-table,
-which was covered with documents and
-letters all arranged by his junior clerk in the
-most orderly manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is very sudden and most unexpected
-intelligence,' said he, carefully wiping his
-glasses, and subjecting Shafto's visage to a
-closer scrutiny again. 'Have you known all
-these years past the real name and position of
-your father, and that he left Kincardineshire
-more than twenty years ago after a very grave
-quarrel with his parents at Craigengowan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No&mdash;I only learned who he was, and who
-we really were, when he was almost on his
-deathbed. He confided it to me alone, as his
-only son, and because I had been bred to the
-law; and on that melancholy occasion he
-entrusted me with this important packet
-addressed to <i>you</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With an expression of the deepest interest
-pervading his well-lined face, Mr. Kippilaw
-took the packet and carefully examined the
-seal and the superscription, penned in a
-shaky handwriting, with both of which he was
-familiar enough, though he had seen neither
-for fully twenty years, and finally he
-examined the envelope, which looked old and
-yellow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If all be true and correct, these tidings will
-make some stir at Craigengowan,' he muttered
-as if to himself, and cut round the seal with a
-penknife.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will find ample proofs, sir, of all I
-have alleged,' said Shafto, who now felt that
-the crisis was at hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Kippilaw, with growing interest and
-wonder, drew forth the documents and read
-and re-read them slowly and carefully, holding
-the papers, but not offensively, between
-him and the light to see if the dates and
-water-marks tallied.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The slow way this old devil goes on
-would exasperate an oyster!' thought Shafto,
-whose apparently perfect coolness and
-self-possession rather surprised and repelled the
-lawyer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There were the certificate of Lennard's
-marriage with Flora MacIan, which Mr. Kippilaw
-could remember he had seen of old;
-the 'certificate of entry of birth of their son,
-born at Revelstoke at 6 h. 50 m. on the 28th
-October P.M., 18&mdash;,' signed by the Registrar,
-and the Major's farewell letter to his old
-friend, entrusting his son and his son's
-interests to his care.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But, hallo!' exclaimed Mr. Kippilaw, after
-he had read for the second time, and saw that
-the letter of Lennard Melfort was undoubtedly
-authentic, 'how comes it that the whole of
-your Christian name is <i>torn out</i> of the birth
-certificate, and the surname <i>Melfort</i> alone
-remains?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Torn out!' exclaimed Shafto, apparently
-startled in turn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'There is a rough little hole in the
-document where the name <i>should be</i>. Do you
-know the date of your birth?' asked
-Mr. Kippilaw, partly covering the document with
-his hand, unconsciously as it were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;28th October.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the year?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto gave it from memory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Quite correct&mdash;as given here,' said
-Mr. Kippilaw; 'but you look old for the date of
-this certificate.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I always looked older than my years,'
-replied Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian, who might have claimed the date
-as that of his own birth, was&mdash;luckily for
-Shafto&mdash;away at a window, gazing intently
-on a party of soldiers marching past, with a
-piper playing before them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Another certificate can be got if necessary,'
-said Mr. Kippilaw, as he glanced at the
-Registrar's signature, a suggestion which
-made Shafto's heart quake. 'It must have
-come from the Major in this mutilated state,'
-he added, re-examining with legal care and
-suspicion the address on the envelope and
-the seal, which, as we have said, he had cut
-round; 'but it is strange that he has made
-no mention of it being so in his letter to me.
-Poor fellow! he was more of a soldier than a
-man of business, however. Allow me to
-congratulate you, Mr. Melfort, on your new
-prospects. Rank and a very fine estate are
-before you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He warmly shook the hand of Shafto, who
-began to be more reassured; and saying, 'I
-must carefully preserve the documents for the
-inspection of Lord Fettercairn,' he locked
-them fast in a drawer of his writing-table, and
-spreading out his coat-tails before the fire,
-while warming his person in the fashion
-peculiar to the genuine 'Britisher,' he eyed
-Shafto benignantly, and made a few pleasant
-remarks on the Fettercairn family, the
-fertility and beauty of Craigengowan, the
-stables, kennels, the shootings, and so forth,
-and the many fine qualities of 'Leonard'&mdash;as
-he called him&mdash;and about whom he asked
-innumerable questions, all of which Shafto
-could answer truly and with a clear conscience
-enough, as he was master of all that.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter was asked 'what he thought
-of Edinburgh&mdash;if he had ever been there
-before,' and so forth. Shafto remembered a
-little 'Guide Book' into which he had
-certainly dipped, so as to be ready for
-anything, and spoke so warmly of the picturesque
-beauties and historical associations of the
-Modern Athens that the worthy lawyer's
-heart began to warm to so intelligent a
-young man, while of the silent Florian,
-staring out into the sun-lit square and its
-beautiful garden and statues, he took little
-notice, beyond wondering <i>where</i> he had seen
-his eyes and features before!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER X.
-<br /><br />
-ALONE IN THE WORLD.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-'And you were bred to the law, you say,
-Mr. Melfort?' remarked the old Writer to the
-Signet after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, in Lawyer Carlyon's office.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very good&mdash;very good indeed; that is
-well! We generally think in Scotland that
-a little knowledge of the law is useful, as it
-teaches the laird to haud his ain; but I
-forgot that you are southland bred, and
-born too&mdash;the more is the pity&mdash;and can't
-understand me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto did not understand him, but thought
-that his time spent in Lawyer Carlyon's
-office had not been thrown away now;
-experience there had 'put him up to a trick or
-two.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall write to Craigengowan by the first
-post,' said Mr. Kippilaw after another of
-those thoughtful pauses during which he
-attentively eyed his visitor. 'Lord and Lady
-Fettercairn&mdash;like myself now creeping up the
-vale of years&mdash;(Hope they may soon see
-the end of it! thought Shafto) will, I have
-no doubt, be perfectly satisfied by the sequence
-and tenor of the documents you have brought
-me that you are their grandson&mdash;the son of
-the expatriated Lennard&mdash;and when I hear
-from them I shall let you know the result
-without delay. You are putting up at&mdash;what
-hotel?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'At the Duke of Rothesay, in Princes Street.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah! very well.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks; I shall be very impatient to hear.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And your cousin&mdash;he will, of course, go
-with you to Craigengowan?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto hesitated, and actually coloured, as
-Florian could detect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What are your intentions or views?'
-Mr. Kippilaw asked the latter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He failed to pass for the army,' said
-Shafto bluntly and glibly, 'so I don't know
-what he means to do <i>now</i>. I believe that he
-scarcely knows himself.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have you no friends on your mother's
-side, Mr. Florian?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'None!' said Florian, with a sad inflection
-of voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Indeed! and what do you mean to do?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Follow the drum, most probably,' replied
-Florian bitterly and a little defiantly, as
-Shafto's coldness, amid his own great and
-good fortune, roused his pride and galled his
-heart, which sank as he thought of Dulcie
-Carlyon, sweet, golden-haired English Dulcie,
-so far away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Mr. Kippilaw shook his bald head at the
-young man's answer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have some little influence in many ways,
-and if I can assist your future views you may
-command me, Mr. Florian,' said he with
-fatherly kindness, for he had reared&mdash;yea and
-lost&mdash;more than one fine lad of his own.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been said that one must know mankind
-very well before having the courage to
-be solely and simply oneself; thus, as Shafto's
-knowledge of mankind was somewhat limited,
-he felt his eye quail more than once under
-the steady gaze of Mr. Kippilaw.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is a very strange thing,' said the latter,
-'that after the death of Mr. Cosmo in Glentilt,
-when Lord and Lady Fettercairn were so
-anxious to discover and recall his younger
-brother as the next and only heir to the title
-and estates, we totally failed to trace him.
-We applied to the War Office for the
-whereabouts of Major Lennard Melfort, but the
-authorities there, acting upon a certain
-principle, declined to afford any information.
-Advertisements, some plainly distinct, others
-somewhat enigmatical, were often inserted in
-the <i>Scotsman</i> and <i>Times</i>, but without the
-least avail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As for the <i>Scotsman</i>,' said Shafto, 'the Major&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your father, you mean?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said he, reddening, 'was no more
-likely to see such a provincial print in
-Devonshire than the Roman <i>Diritto</i> or the
-Prussian <i>Kreuz Zeitung</i>; and the <i>Times</i>, if
-he saw it&mdash;which I doubt&mdash;he must have
-ignored. Till the time of his death drew
-near, his feelings were bitter, his hostility to
-his family great.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I can well understand that, poor fellow!'
-said Mr. Kippilaw, glancing at his watch, as
-he added&mdash;'You must excuse me till
-to-morrow: I am already overdue at the
-Parliament House.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He bowed his visitors out into the sun-lit
-square.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You seem to have lost your tongue,
-Florian, and to have a disappointed look,'
-said Shafto snappishly, as they walked
-slowly towards the hotel together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Disappointed I am in one sense, perhaps,
-but I have no reason to repine or complain
-save at our change of relative positions, but
-certainly not at your unexpected good fortune,
-Shafto. It is only right and just that your
-father's only son should inherit all that is
-legally and justly his.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Even at these words Shafto never winced
-or wavered in plans or purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was apparent, however, to Florian, that
-he had for some time past looked restless
-and uneasy, that he started and grew pale at
-any unusual sound, while a shadow rested on
-his not usually very open countenance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Betimes next morning a note came to him
-at the Duke of Rothesay Hotel from
-Mr. Kippilaw, requesting a visit as early as
-possible, and on this errand he departed alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He found the old lawyer radiant, with a
-letter in his hand from Lord Fettercairn (in
-answer to his own) expressive of astonishment
-and joy at the sudden appearance of
-this hitherto unknown grandson, whom he
-was full of ardour and anxiety to see.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will lose no time in starting for
-Craigengowan,' said Mr. Kippilaw. 'You
-take the train at the Waverley Station and
-go <i>viâ</i> Burntisland, Arbroath, and Marykirk&mdash;or
-stay, I think we shall proceed together,
-taking your papers with us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks,' said Shafto, feeling somehow
-that the presence of Mr. Kippilaw at the
-coming interview would take some of the
-responsibility off his own shoulders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Craigengowan, your grandfather says, will
-put on its brightest smile to welcome you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very kind of Craigengowan,' said Shafto,
-who felt but ill at ease in his new role of
-adventurer, and unwisely adopted a
-free-and-easy audacity of manner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A cheque on the Bank of Scotland for
-present emergencies,' said Mr. Kippilaw,
-opening his cheque-book, 'and in two hours
-we shall meet at the station.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks again. How kind you are, my dear sir.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I would do much for your father's son,
-Mr. Shafto,' said the lawyer, emphatically.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And what about Florian?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The letter ignores him&mdash;a curious omission.
-In their joy, perhaps Lord and Lady Fettercairn
-forgot. But, by the way, here is a letter
-for him that came by the London mail.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A letter for him!' said Shafto, faintly,
-while his heart grew sick with apprehension,
-he knew not of what.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Mr. Florian's face is strangely familiar to
-me,' said Mr. Kippilaw aloud; but to himself,
-'Dear me, dear me, where can I have seen
-features like his before? He reminds me
-curiously of Lennard Melfort.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto gave a nervous start.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The letter was a bulky one, and bore the
-Wembury and other post-marks, and to
-Shafto's infinite relief was addressed in the
-familiar handwriting of Dulcie Carlyon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He chuckled, and a great thought worthy
-of himself occurred to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the solitude of his own room at the
-hotel, he moistened and opened the gummed
-envelope, and drew forth four closely written
-sheets of paper full of the outpourings of the
-girl's passionate heart, of her wrath at the
-theft of her locket by Shafto, and mentioning
-that she had incidentally got the address of
-Mr. Kippilaw from her father, and desiring
-him to write to her, and she would watch for
-and intercept the postman by the sea-shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bosh,' muttered Shafto, as he tore up and
-cast into the fire Dulcie's letter, all save a
-postscript, written on a separate scrap of
-paper, and which ran thus:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have all the love of my heart, Florian;
-but, as I feel and fear we may never meet
-again, I send you this, which I have worn
-next my heart, to keep.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>This</i> was a tiny tuft of forget-me-nots.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Three stamps on all this raggabash!'
-exclaimed Shafto, whom the girl's terms of
-endearment to Florian filled with a tempest
-of jealous rage. He rolled the locket he had
-wrenched from Dulcie's neck in soft paper,
-and placed it with the postscript in the
-envelope, which he carefully closed and
-re-gummed, placed near the fire, and the moment
-it was perfectly dry he gave it to Florian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-If the latter was surprised to see a letter to
-himself, addressed in Dulcie's large, clear,
-and pretty handwriting, to the care of 'Lawyer
-Kippilaw,' as she called him, he was also
-struck dumb when he found in the envelope
-the locket, the likeness, and the apparently
-curt farewell contained in one brief sentence!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a time he stood like one petrified.
-Could it all be real? Alas! there was no
-doubting the postal marks and stamps upon
-this most fatal cover; and while he was
-examining it and passing his hand wildly more
-than once across his eyes and forehead, Shafto
-was smoking quietly at a window, and to all
-appearance intent on watching the towering
-rock and batteries of the Castle, bathed in
-morning sunshine&mdash;batteries whereon steel
-morions and Scottish spears had often gleamed
-of old.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though his soul shrank from doing so,
-Florian could not resist taking Shafto into
-his confidence about this unexplainable event;
-and the latter acted astonishment to the life!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Was the locket thus returned through the
-post in obedience to her father's orders, after
-he had probably discovered the contents of it?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Shafto demolished this hope by drawing
-his attention to the tenor of the pithy
-scrap of paper, which precluded the idea that
-it had been done under any other influence
-than her own change of mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor Florian!' sneered Shafto, as he
-prepared to take his departure for Craigengowan;
-'now you had better proceed at once to
-cultivate the wear-the-willow state of mind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian made no reply. His ideas of faith
-and truth and of true women were suddenly
-and cruelly shattered now!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She has killed all that was good in me,
-and the mischief of the future will be at her
-door!' he exclaimed, in a low and husky
-voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, Florian, don't say that,' said Shafto,
-who actually did feel a little for him; and
-just then, when they were on the eve of
-separation, even his false and artful heart did
-feel a pang, with the sting of fear, at the
-career of falsehood to which he had committed
-himself; but his ambition, innate greed,
-selfishness, and pride urged him on that
-career steadily and without an idea of flinching.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After Mr. Kippilaw's remarks concerning
-how the face of Florian interested him, and
-actually that he bore a likeness to the dead
-Major&mdash;to his own father, in fact&mdash;Shafto
-became more than desirous to be rid of him
-in any way. He thought with dread of the
-discovery and fate of 'the Claimant,' and of
-the fierce light thrown by the law on that
-gigantic imposture; but genuine compunction
-he had none!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well,' he muttered, as he drove away from
-the hotel with his portmanteau, 'I must
-keep up this game at all hazards now. I
-have stolen&mdash;not only Florian's name&mdash;but
-his place, so let him paddle his own
-canoe!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I'll write you from Craigengowan,' were
-his parting words&mdash;a promise which he never
-fulfilled. Shafto, who generally held their
-mutual purse now, might have offered to
-supply the well-nigh penniless lad with money,
-but he did not. He only longed to be rid of
-him&mdash;to hear of him no more. He had a
-dread of his presence, of his society, of his
-very existence, and now had but one hope,
-wish, and desire&mdash;that Florian Melfort should
-cross his path never again. And now that
-he had achieved a separation between him
-and Dulcie, he conceived that Florian would
-never again go near Revelstoke, of which
-he&mdash;Shafto&mdash;had for many reasons a nervous
-dread!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Full of Dulcie and her apparently cruel
-desertion of him, which he considered due to
-calm consideration of his change of fortune&mdash;or
-rather total want of it&mdash;Florian felt numbly
-indifferent to the matter Shafto had in hand
-and all about himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While very nearly moved to girlish tears at
-parting from one with whom he had lived
-since infancy&mdash;with whom he had shared the
-same sleeping-room, shared in the same sports
-and studies&mdash;with whom he had read the
-same books to some extent, and had ever
-viewed as a brother&mdash;Florian was rather
-surprised, even shocked, by the impatience
-of that kinsman, the only one he had in all
-the wide world, to part from him and begone,
-and to see he was calm and hard as flint or
-steel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Different natures have different ways of
-showing grief, I suppose,' thought the simple
-Florian; 'or can it be that he still has a
-grudge at me because of the false but winsome
-Dulcie? If affection for me is hidden
-in his heart, it is hidden most skilfully.' No
-letter ever came from Craigengowan. The
-pride of Florian was justly roused, and he
-resolved that he would not take the initiative,
-and attempt to open a correspondence with
-one who seemed to ignore him, and whose
-manner at departing he seemed to see more
-clearly and vividly now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fact soon became grimly apparent.
-He could not remain idling in such a fashionable
-hotel as the Duke of Rothesay, so he
-settled his bill there, and took his portmanteau
-in his hand, and issued into the streets&mdash;into
-the world, in fact.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XI.
-<br /><br />
-SHAFTO IN CLOVER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-About six months had elapsed since Shafto
-and Florian parted, as we have described, at
-Edinburgh.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was June now. The luxurious woods
-around Craigengowan were in all their leafy
-beauty, and under their shadows the dun
-deer panted in the heat as they made their
-lair among the feathery braken; the emerald
-green lawn was mowed and rolled till it was
-smooth as a billiard-table and soft as
-three-pile velvet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The air was laden with the wafted fragrance
-of roses and innumerable other flowers; and
-the picturesque old house, with its multitude
-of conical turrets furnished with glittering
-vanes, its crow-stepped gables and massive
-chimneys, stood boldly up against the deep
-blue sky of summer; and how sweetly peaceful
-looked the pretty village, seen in middle
-distance, through a foliated vista in the
-woodlands, with the white smoke ascending
-from its humble hearths, the only thing that
-seemed to be stirring there; and how beautiful
-were the colours some of its thatched
-roofs presented&mdash;greenest moss, brown lichen,
-and stonecrop, now all a blaze of gold, while
-the murmur of a rivulet (a tributary of the
-Esk), that gurgled under its tiny arch, 'the
-auld brig-stane' of Lennard's boyhood, would
-be heard at times, amid the pleasant voices
-of some merrymakers on the lawn, amid the
-glorious shrubberies, and belts of flowers
-below the stately terrace, that had long since
-replaced the moat that encircled the old
-fortified mansion, from whence its last Jacobite
-lord had ridden forth to fight and die for
-James VIII., on the field of Sheriffmuir&mdash;King
-of Scotland, England, France, and
-Ireland, as the unflinching Jacobites had it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A gay and picturesquely dressed lawn-tennis
-party was busy tossing the balls from
-side to side among several courts; but apart
-from all, and almost conspicuously so&mdash;a
-young fellow, in a handsome light tennis suit
-of coloured flannels, and a beautiful girl were
-carrying on a very palpable flirtation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The gentleman was Shafto, and his companion
-was Finella Melfort, Cosmo's orphan
-daughter (an heiress through her mother),
-who had returned a month before from a
-protracted visit in Tyburnia. They seemed
-to be on excellent terms with each other, and
-doubtless the natural gaiety of the girl's
-disposition, her vivacity of manner, and their
-supposed mutual relationship, had opened the
-way to speedy familiarity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was a dark-haired and dark-eyed, but
-very white-skinned little beauty, with a perfect
-<i>mignonne</i> face, a petite but round and compact
-figure, gracefully formed, and very
-coquettish and <i>spirituelle</i> in all her ways.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had received her peculiar Christian
-name at the special request of her grandfather,
-that silly peer being desirous that her name
-might go down in the peerage in connection
-with that of the famous Finella of Fettercairn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A winsome pair they would make,' was
-the smiling remark of Mr. Kenneth Kippilaw,
-who was of the party (with three romping
-daughters from Edinburgh), to Lord Fettercairn,
-who smirked a grim assent, as if it
-was a matter of indifference to him, which
-it was not, as his legal adviser very well
-knew; and my Lady Drumshoddy, who heard
-the remark, bestowed upon him a bright
-and approving smile in return for a knowing
-glance through the glasses of his gold
-<i>pince-nez</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In Craigengowan the adventurous Shafto
-Gyle had found his veritable Capua&mdash;he was
-literally 'in clover.' Yet he never heard
-himself addressed by his assumed name
-without experiencing a strange sinking and
-fluttering of the heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The once-despised Lennard Melfort's
-sword, his commission, and his hard-won
-medals earned in Central India and the Terai
-of Nepaul were now looked upon as precious
-relics in his mother's luxurious boudoir at
-Craigengowan, and reclaimed from the
-lumber-attic, his portrait, taken in early life,
-was again hung in a place of honour in the
-dining-hall.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a fool my old uncle was to lose his
-claim on such a place as this, and all for the
-face of a girl!' was the exclamation of Shafto
-to himself when first he came to Craigengowan,
-and then he looked fearfully around
-him lest the word <i>uncle</i> might have been
-overheard by some one; and he thought&mdash;'If
-rascally the trick I have played my simple
-and love-stricken cousin&mdash;and rascally it was
-and is&mdash;surely it was worth while to be the
-heir of this place, Craigengowan. To reckon
-as mine in future all this grand panorama of
-heath-clad hills, of green and golden fields,
-of purple muirland, and stately woods of oak
-and pine where the deer rove in herds; as
-mine the trout-streams that flow towards the
-Bervie; the cascades that roar down the
-cliffs; the beautiful old house, with its stables,
-kennels, and terrace; its cellars, pictures,
-plate, and jewellery, old china and vases of
-marble and jasper, china and Japanese work;
-and I possess all that rank and wealth can
-give!' and so thought this avaricious rascal,
-with a capacity for evil actions far beyond his
-years.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the fair inheritance he had come to
-steal he could not, however, add as his the
-blue sky above it, or the waves of the German
-Sea, which the North Esk flowed to join;
-but he was not without sense appreciative
-enough to enjoy the fragrance of the teeming
-earth, of the pine forests where the brown
-squirrels leaped from branch to branch, and
-on the mountain side the perfume of the
-golden whin and gorse.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Appraising everything, these ideas were
-ever recurring to his mind, and it was full of
-them now as he looked around him, and at
-times, like one in a dream, heard the pretty
-babble of the high-bred, coquettish girl, who,
-to amuse herself, made <i>œillades</i> at him; who
-called him so sweetly 'Cousin Shafto,' and
-who, with her splendid fortune, he was now
-beginning to include among the many goods
-and chattels which must one day accrue to him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord and Lady Fettercairn were, of course,
-fully twenty years older than when we saw
-them last, full of wrath and indignation at
-Lennard for his so-called <i>mésalliance</i>. Both
-were cold in heart and self-absorbed in nature
-as ever. The latter was determined to be a
-beauty still, though now upon the confines of
-that decade 'when the cunning of cosmetics
-can no longer dissemble the retribution of
-Time the avenger.' The former was bald
-now, and the remains of his once sandy-coloured
-hair had become grizzled, and a
-multitude of puckers were about his cold,
-grey eyes, while there was a perceptible
-stoop in his whilom flat, square shoulders.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was as full of family pride as ever, and
-the discovery of an unexpected and authentic
-heir and grandson to his title, that had never
-been won in the field or cabinet, but was
-simply the reward of bribery and corruption,
-and for which not one patriotic act had been
-performed by four generations, had given
-him intense satisfaction, and caused much
-blazing of bonfires and consumption of alcohol
-about the country-side; and smiles that were
-bright and genuine frequently wreathed the
-usually pale and immobile face of Lady
-Fettercairn when they rested on Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We all know how the weak and easy adoption
-of a pretender by a titled mother in a
-famous and most protracted case not many
-years ago caused the most peculiar
-complications; thus Lady Fettercairn was more
-pardonable, posted up as she was with
-documentary evidence, in accepting Shafto Gyle
-as her grandson.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have described her as being singularly,
-perhaps aristocratically, cold. As a mother,
-she had never been given to kissing, caressing,
-or fondling her two sons (as she did a
-succession of odious pugs and lap-dogs), but,
-throwing their little hearts back upon
-themselves, left nurses and maids to 'do all that
-sort of tiresome thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Finella, though an heiress, came in for
-very little of it either, with all her sweetness,
-beauty, and pretty winning ways, even
-from Lord Fettercairn. In truth, the man
-who cared so little for his own country and
-her local and vital interests was little likely
-to care much for any flesh and blood that did
-not stand in his own boots.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Fettercairn heard from her 'grand-son'
-from time to time with&mdash;for her&mdash;deep
-apparent sympathy, and much genuine aristocratic
-regret and indignation, much of the
-obscure story of his boyhood and past life, at
-least so much as he chose to tell her; and
-she bitterly resented that Lennard Melfort
-should have sought to put the 'nephew of
-that woman, Flora MacIan,' into the army,
-while placing 'his own son' Shafto into the
-office of a miserable village lawyer, and so
-forth&mdash;and so forth!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fortunate it was, she thought, that all this
-happened in an obscure village in Devonshire,
-and far away from Craigengowan and all its
-aristocratic surroundings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She also thought it strange that
-Shafto&mdash;('Whence came that name?' she would
-mutter angrily)&mdash;should be so unlike her
-dark and handsome Lennard. His eyebrows
-were fair and heavy; his eyes were a pale,
-watery grey; his lips were thin, his neck
-thick, and his hair somewhat sandy in hue.
-Thus, she thought, he was not unlike what
-her husband, the present Lord Fettercairn,
-must have been at the same age.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for the Peer himself, he was only too
-thankful that an heir had turned up for his
-ill-gotten coronet, and that now&mdash;so far as one
-life was concerned&mdash;Sir Bernard Burke would
-not rate it among the dormant and attainted
-titles&mdash;those of the best and bravest men that
-Scotland ever knew.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for their mutual scheme concerning
-Shafto and their granddaughter Finella, with
-her beauty and many attractive parts, the
-former was craftily most desirous of furthering
-it, knowing well that, <i>happen what might</i>
-in the future, she was an heiress; that
-marriage with her would give him a firm
-hold on the Fettercairn family, though the
-money of her mother was wisely settled on
-the young lady herself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, Finella had not been many
-weeks home from London, at Craigengowan,
-before Lady Fettercairn opened the trenches,
-and spoke pretty plainly to him on the
-subject.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Waving her large fan slowly to and fro,
-and eyeing Shafto closely over the top of it,
-she said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope, my dearest boy, that you will find
-your cousin Finella&mdash;the daughter of my
-dead darling Cosmo&mdash;a lovable kind of girl.
-But even were she not so&mdash;and all say she
-is&mdash;you must not feel a prejudice against her,
-because&mdash;because&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, grandmother?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because it is our warmest desire that you
-may marry her.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why, haven't I money enough?' asked
-Shafto, with one of his dissembling smiles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course, as the heir of Fettercairn; but
-one is always the better to have more, and
-you must not feel&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What?' asked Shafto, with affected impatience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Please not to interrupt me thus. I mean
-that you must not be prejudiced against her
-as an expected<i> parti</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why should I?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'One hears and reads so much of such
-things.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In novels, I suppose; but as she is so
-pretty and eligible, why the dickens&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shafto!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What now?' he asked, with some irritability,
-as she often took him to task for his
-solecisms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dickens is not a phrase to use. Exclamations
-that were suited to the atmosphere
-of Mr. Carlyon's office in Devonshire will
-not do in Craigengowan!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well&mdash;she won't look at me with your
-eyes, grandmother.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How&mdash;her eyes&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They will never seem so bright and
-beautiful.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, you flattering pet!' exclaimed my
-Lady Fettercairn, with a smile and pleased
-flush on her old wrinkled face, for her 'pet'
-had soon discovered that she was far from
-insensible to adulation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto certainly availed himself of the
-opportunities afforded by 'cousinship,'
-propinquity, and residence together in a country
-house, and sought to gain a place in the good
-graces or heart of Finella; but with all his
-cunning and earnest wishes in the matter&mdash;apart
-from the wonderful beauty of the girl&mdash;he
-feared that he made no more progress
-with her than he had done with Dulcie Carlyon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She talked, played, danced, and even
-romped with him; they rambled and read
-together, and were as much companions as
-any two lovers would be; but he felt nearly
-certain that though she flirted with him,
-because it was partly her habit to appear to
-do so with most men, whenever he attempted
-to become tender she openly laughed at him
-or changed the subject skilfully; and also
-that if he essayed to touch or take her hand
-it was very deliberately withdrawn from his
-reach, and never did she make him more
-sensible of all this than when he contrived to
-draw her aside to the terrace on the afternoon
-of the lawn-tennis party.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had long ere this been made perfectly
-aware that love and marriage were objects of
-all his attention, yet she amused herself with
-him by her coquettish <i>œillades</i> and waggish
-speeches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Finella,' said he, in a low and hesitating
-voice, as he stooped over her, 'I hope that
-with all your flouting, and pretty, flippant
-mode of treating me, you will see your way
-to carry out the fondest desire of my heart
-and that of our grandparents.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Such a fearfully elaborate speech! And
-the object to which I am to see my way is to
-marry you, cousin Shafto?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes,' said he, bending nearer to her
-half-averted ear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks very much, dear Shafto; but I
-couldn't think of such a thing.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why? Am I so distasteful to you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all; but for cogent reasons of my own.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And these are?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Firstly, people should marry to please
-themselves, not others. Grandpapa and
-grandmamma did, and so shall I; and I am
-quite independent enough to do as I please
-and choose.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In short, you will not or cannot love me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have not said so, you tiresome Shafto!'
-said she, looking upward at him with one of
-her sweetest and most bewitching smiles.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then I have some hope, dear Finella?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have not said that either.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You may yet love me, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; not as you wish it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have no right to ask me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His fair beetling eyebrows knit, and a
-gleam came into his cold, grey eyes as he
-asked, after a pause:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is there anyone else you prefer?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have no right to inquire,' replied she,
-and a keener observer might have detected
-that his question brought a tiny blush to her
-cheek and a fond smile to her curved lips; 'so
-please to let this matter drop, once and for
-ever, dear Shafto, and we can be such
-delightful friends&mdash;such jolly cousins.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so ended one of many such conversations
-on this topic&mdash;conversations that
-developed indifference, if not quite aversion,
-on the part of Finella, the clue to which
-Shafto was fated to find in a few weeks after.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XII.
-<br /><br />
-VIVIAN HAMMERSLEY.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The persistent attentions of Shafto were
-alternately a source of amusement and worry
-to Finella Melfort; and when she found them
-become the latter, she had more than once
-retreated to the residence of her maternal
-grandmother, Lady Drumshoddy, though she
-infinitely preferred being at Craigengowan,
-where the general circle was more refined
-and of a much better style; for Lady
-Drumshoddy&mdash;natheless her title&mdash;was not quite
-one of the 'upper ten,' being only the widow
-of an advocate, who, having done without
-scruple the usual amount of work to please
-his party and the Lord Advocate, had been
-rewarded therefor by an appointment (and
-knighthood) in Bengal, where he had gone,
-at a lucky time, with the old advice and
-idea&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'They bade me from the Rupee Tree<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pluck India's endless riches,<br />
- And then I swore that time should see<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Huge pockets in my breeches.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Thus Sir Duncan Drumshoddy's pockets
-were so well filled that when he came home
-to die, his daughter was heiress enough to be
-deemed a 'great catch' by the Fettercairn
-family, though her grandfather had been&mdash;no
-one knew precisely what.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now Finella, by education, careful
-training, and by her own habit of thought,
-was naturally so refined that, with all her
-waggery and disposition to laughter and
-merriment, Shafto's clumsy love-speeches
-occasionally irritated her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have somewhere read,' said he, 'that a
-man may get the love of the girl he wants,
-even if she cares little for him, if he only
-asks her at the right time; but, so far as you
-are concerned, Finella, the right moment has
-not come for me, I suppose.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nor ever will come, I fear, cousin Shafto,'
-she replied, fanning herself, and eyeing him
-with mingled fun and defiance sparkling in
-her dark eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere Shafto could resume on this occasion
-Lord Fettercairn came hurriedly to him, saying,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, by-the-bye, young Hammersley,
-from London, will arrive here to-morrow for
-a few weeks' grouse-shooting before he
-leaves for his regiment in Africa. You will
-do your best to be attentive to him, Shafto.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course,' said the latter, rather sulkily,
-however, all the more so that he was quick
-enough to detect that, at the mention of the
-visitor's name, a flush like a wave of colour
-crossed the cheek of Finella.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something in his tone attracted the
-attention of Lord Fettercairn, who said,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After the 12th I hope you will find a
-legitimate use for your gun&mdash;you know what
-I mean.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto coloured deeply with annoyance, as
-his grandfather referred to a mischievous act
-of his, which was deemed a kind of outrage
-in the neighbourhood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the ruins of Finella's Castle at Fettercairn
-a pair of majestic osprey had built their
-nest, guarded by the morass around them,
-and there they bred and reared a pair of
-beautiful eaglets. No one had been allowed
-to approach them, so that nothing should
-occur to break the confidence of safety which
-the pair of osprey acquired in their lonely
-summer haunt, till soon after Shafto came to
-Craigengowan, and by four rounds from his
-breech-loader he contrived to shoot them all,
-to the indignation of the neighbourhood and
-even of my Lord Fettercairn.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not that the latter cared a straw about
-these eagles as objects of natural history; but
-the fact of their existence formed the subject
-of newspaper paragraphs, and his vanity was
-wounded on finding that one of his family
-had acted thus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So on the morrow, at luncheon, the family
-circle at Craigengowan had two or three
-accessions to its number&mdash;friends invited for
-the 12th of August&mdash;among others Mr. Kippilaw
-the younger, a spruce and dapper
-Edinburgh Writer to the Signet, 'who,'
-Shafto said, 'thought no small beer of
-himself;' and Vivian Hammersley, a captain of
-the Warwickshire regiment, a very attractive
-and, to one who was present, most decided
-addition to their society.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His regular features were well tanned by
-the sun in Natal; his dark hair was shorn
-short; his moustaches were pointed well out;
-and his dark eyes had a bright and merry yet
-firm and steady expression, as those of a man
-born to command men, who had more than
-once faced danger, and was ready to face it
-again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was in his twenty-seventh year, and
-was every way a courteous and finished
-English gentleman, though Shafto, in his
-secret heart, and more than once in the
-stables, pronounced him to be 'a conceited
-beast.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley had fished in Norway, shot
-big game in Southern Africa, hunted in the
-English shires, taking his fences&mdash;even double
-ones&mdash;like a bird; he had lost and won with a
-good grace at Ascot and the Clubs, flirted 'all
-round,' and, though far from rich, was a good
-specimen of a handsome, open-handed, and
-open-hearted young officer, a favourite with
-all women, and particularly with his regiment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After luncheon he was seated beside Lady
-Fettercairn; he was too wise in his generation
-to have placed himself where he would have
-wished, beside Finella, whose little hand, on
-entering, Shafto thought he retained in his
-rather longer than etiquette required; for if
-Shafto's eyes were shifty, they were particularly
-sharp, and he soon found that though
-Finella, to a certain extent, had filled up her
-time by flirting in a cousinly way with himself,
-'now that this fellow Hammersley had come,'
-he was 'nowhere' as he thought, with a very
-bad word indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We have said that Finella had paid a
-protracted and&mdash;to her&mdash;most enjoyable visit
-to Tyburnia. There at balls, garden parties,
-and in the Row she had met Vivian Hammersley
-repeatedly; and these meetings had
-not been without a deep and tender interest
-to them both; and when they were parted
-finally by her return to Craigengowan, though
-no declaration of regard had escaped him, he
-had been burning to speak to her in that
-sweet and untutored language by which the
-inmost secrets of the loving heart can be read;
-and now that they had met again, they had
-a thousand London objects to talk about
-safely in common, which made them seem to
-be what they were, quite old friends in fact,
-and erelong Lady Fettercairn began, like
-Shafto, to listen and look darkly and doubtfully on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But when they were alone, which was seldom,
-or merely apart from others, there was
-between them a new consciousness now&mdash;a
-secret but sweet understanding, born of eye
-speaking to eye&mdash;all the sweeter for its
-secrecy and being all their own, a conscious
-emotion that rendered them at times almost
-afraid to speak or glance lest curious eyes or
-ears might discover what that secret was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What was to be the sequel to all this?
-Hammersley was far from rich according to
-the standard of wealth formed by Lady
-Fettercairn, and the latter had destined her
-granddaughter with all her accumulated
-wealth to be the bride of Shafto.
-Hammersley knew nothing of this; he only knew
-his own shortcoming in the matter of 'pocketability;'
-but then youth, we are told, 'is
-sanguine and full of faith and hope in an
-untried future. It looks out over the pathway
-of life towards the goal of its ambition, seeing
-only the end desired, and giving little or no
-heed to hills and dales, storms and accidents,
-that may be met with on the way.' So,
-happy in the good fortune that threw him
-once more in the sweet society of bright
-Finella Melfort, Captain Hammersley gave
-full swing in secret to the most delightful of
-day-dreams.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In all this, however, we are somewhat
-anticipating our narrative.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But, like a wise man, while the luncheon
-lasted he was most attentive to his hostess,
-from whose old but still handsome face, like
-that of Tennyson's Maud, 'so faultily faultless,
-icily regular, and splendidly null,' he ever and
-anon turned to that of Finella&mdash;that <i>mignonne</i>
-face, which was so full of varying expression,
-warmth, light, and colour.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Try that Madeira, Captain Hammersley,'
-said Lord Fettercairn. 'You will scarcely
-credit how long I have had it in the cellar.
-I bought a whole lot of it&mdash;when was it,
-Grapeston?' he asked, turning to the solemn
-old butler behind him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The year Mr. Lennard left home, my Lord.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Everything at Craigengowan seems to
-take date before or after that event,' said
-Lord Fettercairn, with knitted brow. 'Do
-you mean for India, Grapeston?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, my lord,' replied the butler, who
-had carried 'Master Lennard' in his arms as a baby.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Such a rich flavour it has, and just glance
-at the colour.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley affected to do so, but his eyes
-were bent on the face of Finella.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I hope you won't find Craigengowan dull,
-but every place is so after London.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'True, we live so fast there that we never
-seem to have time to do anything.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, understanding that Shafto was
-to be his chief companion at the covies on
-the morrow, Hammersley talked to him of
-hammerless guns, of central fire, of the mode
-of breaking in dogs, training setters, and so
-forth; and as these subjects had not been
-included in Shafto's education at Lawyer
-Carlyon's office, he almost yawned as he
-listened with irritation to what he could not comprehend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'If you care for fishing, Hammersley,' said
-Lord Fettercairn, 'the Bervie yields capital
-salmon, sea and yellow trout. Finella has
-filled more than one basket with the latter,
-but Shafto is somewhat of a duffer with his
-rod&mdash;he breaks many a rod, and has never
-landed a salmon yet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And the shootings?' said Hammersley inquiringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, the best in the county are Drumtochty,
-Fasque, Hobseat, and my own, as I
-hope you will find to-morrow.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks&mdash;indeed, I am sure I shall.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have close on 5,000 acres, and the
-probable bag of grouse and black game is
-from 400 to 500 brace.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After dinner that evening Finella was
-found singing at the piano&mdash;singing, as she
-always did, without requiring pressure and
-apparently for the mere pleasure of it, as a
-thrush on a rose bush sings; but now she
-sang for Vivian Hammersley, Shafto felt
-instinctively that she did so, and his bitterness
-was roused when he heard her, in a pause, whisper:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Please, Captain Hammersley, let Shafto
-turn the leaves. He likes to do it, though he
-can do little else in the way of music.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This kind of confidence seemed to imply
-foregone conclusions and a mutual understanding,
-however slight; but, to some extent,
-Finella had a kind of dread of Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley smiled and drew back, after
-placing a piece of music before her; but not
-before remarking:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This song you are about to sing is not a new one.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No&mdash;it is old as the days when George
-IV. was king&mdash;it is one you gave me some
-weeks ago in London, you remember?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Am I likely to forget?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Turn the leaves, Shafto, please,' said
-Finella, adjusting her dress over the
-music-stool; 'but don't talk to me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It interrupts one so; but turn the leaves
-at the proper time.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Captain Hammersley will do that better
-than I,' said Shafto, drawing almost sulkily
-away, while the former resumed his place by
-Finella, with an unmistakable smile rippling
-over his face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This song, which, it would seem, Hammersley
-had given her, was an old one, long
-since forgotten, named the 'Trysting Place,'
-and jealous anger gathered in Shafto's heart
-as he listened and heard Hammersley's voice
-blend with Finella's in the last line of each
-verse:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'We met not in the sylvan scene<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where lovers wish to meet,<br />
- Where skies are bright and woods are green,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And bursting blossoms sweet;<br />
- But in the city's busy din,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where Mammon holds his reign,<br />
- Sweet intercourse we sought to win<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'Mid fashion, guile, and gain;<br />
- Above us was a murky sky,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Around a crowded space,<br />
- Yet dear, my love, to thee and me,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Was this, our <i>trysting place</i>.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'They are who say Love only dwells<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'Mid sunshine, light, and flowers;<br />
- Alike to him are gloomy cells<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or gay and smiling bowers;<br />
- Love works not on insensate things<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His sweet and magic art;<br />
- No outward shrine arrests his wings,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His home is in the heart;<br />
- And dearest hearts like <i>thine</i> and <i>mine</i>,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With rapture must retrace&mdash;<br />
- How often Love has deigned to shine<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On this our <i>trysting place</i>.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-'Miss Melfort, you have sung it more
-sweetly than ever!' said Hammersley in a
-low voice as he bent over her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Confound him!' muttered Shafto to himself;
-'where was this trysting place? I feel
-inclined to put a charge of shot into him
-to-morrow. I will, too, if the day is foggy!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finella, though pressed, declined to sing
-more, as the Misses Kippilaw, who were
-rather irrepressible young ladies, now
-proposed a carpet-dance, and she drew on her
-gloves; and while she fumbled away, almost
-nervously, with the buttoning of one, she knew
-that Hammersley's eyes were lovingly and
-admiringly bent on her, till he came to the
-rescue, and did the buttoning required; and
-to Shafto it seemed the process was a very
-protracted one, and was a pretty little
-connivance, as in reality it was.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Miss Prim, Lady Fettercairn's companion,
-was summoned, and she&mdash;poor creature&mdash;had
-to furnish music for the occasion, till at
-last Finella good-naturedly relieved her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So a carpet-dance closed the evening, and
-then Shafto, though an indifferent waltzer,
-thought he might excel in a square dance
-with Finella; but he seldom shone in conversation
-at any time, and on this occasion his
-attempts at it proved a great failure, and
-when he compared this with the animation of
-Hammersley and Finella in the Lancers, he
-was greatly puzzled and secretly annoyed.
-The former did not seem to undergo that
-agony so often felt by Shafto, of having
-out-run all the topics of conversation, or to have
-to rack his brain for anecdotes or jokes, but
-to be able to keep up an easy flow of
-well-bred talk on persons, places, and things,
-which seemed to amuse Finella excessively,
-as she smiled brightly and laughed merrily
-while fanning herself, and looking more
-sparkling and piquante than ever.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What the deuce can he find to say to
-her?' thought Shafto; but Hammersley was
-only finding the links&mdash;the threads of a dear
-old story begun in London months ago.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So passed the first day of Hammersley's
-arrival at Craigengowan, and Finella laid her
-head on her pillow full of bright and happy
-thoughts, in which 'Cousin Shafto' bore no
-share.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But while these emotions and events were
-in progress, where, in the meantime, was
-Florian? Ay, Shafto Gyle, where?
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIII.
-<br /><br />
-AMONG THE GROUSE.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Nathless the vengeful thoughts of the
-unamiable Shafto and his threats muttered in
-secret, the shooting next day passed off
-without any peril being encountered by
-the unconscious Hammersley&mdash;unconscious at
-least of the enmity his presence was inspiring.
-However, it was not so the second; and
-Finella and her fair friends agreed that if he
-looked so well and handsome in his heather-coloured
-knickerbocker shooting-dress, with
-ribbed stockings of Alloa yarn, his gun under
-his arm, and shot-belt over his shoulder, how
-gallant must he look when in full uniform.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the field the vicinity of Shafto was
-avoided as much as possible, as he shot wildly
-indeed. By the gamekeepers, servants, and
-people generally on the estate he was simply
-detested for the severity of his manner, his
-tyranny, his disposition to bully, and meanness
-in every way; though at first, when he came
-to Craigengowan, they had laboured in vain,
-and vied with each other in their attempts
-to initiate him into those field-sports so dear
-to Britons generally, and to the Scots in
-particular; but when shooting grouse
-especially, the beaters or 'drivers' had genuine
-dread of him, and, when fog was on, sometimes
-refused to attend him, and he was, as
-they said among themselves, 'a new
-experience i' the Howe o' the Mearns.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I've seen as fu' a haggis toomed on a
-midden,' said the old head-gamekeeper wrathfully,
-as he drew his bonnet over his beetling
-brows, 'but I'll keep my mind to mysel', and
-tell my tale to the wind that blaws o'er
-Craigengowan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though well past sixty now, Lord Fettercairn,
-hale and hearty, was in the field with
-his central-fire gun with fine Damascus
-barrels. Shafto, Hammersley, young Kippilaw,
-and four others made up the party.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The morning was a lovely one, and lovely
-too was the scenery, for August is a month
-richly tinted with the last touches of summer,
-blended with the russet tones of autumn; the
-pleasant meadows are yet green, and over the
-ripened harvest the breeze murmurs like the
-ocean when nearly asleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Apart from the joyous exhilaration of
-shooting, and that out-door exercise so dear
-to every English gentleman, Vivian
-Hammersley felt all that which comes from the
-romantic beauty of his surroundings&mdash;the
-scenery of the Howe of the Mearns, which
-is a low champaign and highly cultivated
-country, studded with handsome mansions,
-and ornamented by rich plantations and
-thriving villages.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ere long the open muirs were reached, and
-the hill-sides, the steep, purple ridges of
-which the sportsmen had to breast; and,
-keen sportsman though he was, Hammersley
-had soon to admit that grouse-shooting was
-the most fatiguing work he had yet
-encountered; but soon came the excitements of
-the first point, the first brood, and the first
-shot or two.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the eye chiefly accustomed to brown
-partridges, grouse look dusky and even black,
-and they seem to hug the purple heather, but
-when one becomes accustomed to them they
-are as easy to knock over as the tame birds;
-and now the crack of the guns began to ring
-out along the hill-slopes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto and Hammersley were about twenty
-yards apart, and twice when a bird rose
-before the latter, it was brought down
-wounded but not killed by the former.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley felt that this was 'bad form,'
-as Shafto should not have fired, unless he
-had missed or passed it; but he only bit his
-lip and smiled disdainfully. Lord Fettercairn
-remarked the discourtesy, and added,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shafto, I do wish you would take an
-example from Captain Hammersley.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'In what way?' grumbled Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He kills his game clean&mdash;few birds
-run from him with broken wings and so
-forth.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I am glad to hit when I can,' said Shafto,
-whose mode of life in Devonshire had made
-him rather soft, and he was beginning to
-think that nerves of iron and lungs like a
-bagpipe were requisite for breasting up the
-hill-slopes, and then shoot straight at anything.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley worked away silently, neither
-looking to his right nor left, feeling that
-though several elements are requisite for
-'sport,' the chief then was to kill as much
-grouse as possible in a given time, but was
-more than once irritated and discomposed by
-Shafto, and even young Kippilaw, shooting in
-a blundering way along the line even when
-the birds were not flying high; and he
-proceeded in a workmanlike way to bring
-down one bird as it approached, the next
-when it was past him, and so on.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first portion of the day the Fettercairn
-party shot to points, and then to drivers, and
-in their fear of Shafto's wild shooting, the
-latter kept shouting while driving, and, as he
-loathed the whole thing, and was now
-'completely blown&mdash;pumped out,' as he phrased it,
-he was not sorry when the magic word
-'lunch' was uttered; and Hammersley
-certainly hailed it, for with the lunch came
-Finella, and with her arrival&mdash;to him&mdash;the
-most delightful part of the day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She came tooling along the sunny pathway
-that traversed the bottom of a glen, driving
-with her tightly gauntleted and deft little
-hands a pair of beautiful white ponies, which
-drew the daintiest of basket-phaetons,
-containing also Mr. Grapeston and an ample
-luncheon-basket; and the place chosen for
-halting was a green oasis amid the dark
-heather, where a spring of deliciously cool
-water was bubbling up, called Finella's Well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now, gentlemen,' said Lord Fettercairn,
-'please to draw your cartridges. I was once
-nearly shot in this very place by a stupid
-fellow who omitted to do so. So glad you
-have come, Finella darling, we are all hungry
-as hawks, and thirsty too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lovely indeed did the piquante girl look
-in her coquettish hat and well-fitting jacket,
-while the drive, the occasion, and the touch
-of Hammersley's hand as he assisted her to
-alight gave her cheek an unwonted colour,
-and lent fresh lustre to her dark eyes, and
-the soldier thought that certainly there was
-nothing in the world so pleasant to a man's
-eye as a young, well-dressed, and beautiful girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You have had good sport,' said she to the
-group, while her eye rested on Hammersley,
-and then on the rows of grouse laid by braces
-on the grass; and she 'brought a breeze
-with her,' as the gentlemen thought, and had
-a pleasant remark for each. Her mode of
-greeting the members of the party was
-different, as to some she gave her hand like
-a little queen, while to others she smiled, or
-simply bowed; but provoked an angry snort
-from Shafto by expressing a hope that he
-'had not shot anyone yet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And then he grew white as he recalled his
-angry thoughts of the preceding night.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why did you take the trouble to drive
-here?' he asked her, in a low voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because I chose to come; and I do so
-love driving these plump darlings of ponies,'
-replied the girl, patting the sleek animals
-with her tiny, slim hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Old Grapeston would have done well
-enough; and why did you not bring one of
-the Kippilaw girls?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They are at lawn-tennis. If I thought I
-could please you&mdash;not an easy task&mdash;I should
-have tried to bring them all, though that is
-rather beyond the capacities of my phaeton.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto never for a moment doubted that
-she had come over to superintend the
-luncheon because 'that fellow Hammersley'
-was one of the party; and in this suspicion
-perhaps he was right.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As for Hammersley, being ignorant of
-Shafto's antecedents, his present hopes, and
-those of Lady Fettercairn, he could not
-comprehend how the grandson and heir-apparent
-of a peer came to be 'such bad form&mdash;bad
-style, and all that sort of thing,' as he
-thought; and all that became rather worse
-when Shafto was under the influence of
-sundry bumpers of iced Pommery Greno
-administered by Mr. Grapeston.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the sportsmen lounged on the grass,
-and the luncheon proceeded under the
-superintendence of old Jasper Grapeston,
-Finella, the presiding goddess, looked
-unusually bright and happy&mdash;a consummation
-which Shafto never doubted, in his rage and
-jealousy, came of the presence of Vivian
-Hammersley, and that her brilliance was all
-the result of another man's society&mdash;not his
-certainly, and hence he would have preferred
-that she was not light-hearted at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could see that with all her <i>espieglerie</i>
-Finella found no occasion to laugh at
-Hammersley or tease or snub that gentleman as
-she did himself, but the attentions of
-Hammersley were delicately and seductively paid.
-Deferential and gentle at all times, to all
-women, he had always been so to Finella
-Melfort, and she was able to feel more than
-his words, looks, or manner suggested to
-others; and he imagined&mdash;nay, he was
-becoming certain&mdash;and a glow of great joy came
-with the certainty&mdash;that Finella's sweet dark
-eyes grew brighter at his approach; that a
-rose-leaf tinge crossed her delicate cheek, and
-there came a slight quiver into her voice
-when she replied to him,
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Was it all really so?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Fate was soon to decide that which he had
-been too slow or timid to decide for himself.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he said one of the merest commonplaces
-to her, their eyes met.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was only one lingering glance!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But looks can say so much more than the
-voice, the eyes surpassing the lips, breaking
-or revealing what the silence of months, it
-may be years, has hidden, and leading heart
-to heart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Grandpapa,' said Finella, suddenly, and
-just before driving off, 'do you shoot over
-this ground to-morrow?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To a certain extent we shall&mdash;but why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shall I bring the luncheon here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, pet, to Finella's Well.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So, then, this shall be our trysting-place!'
-said she, with a bow to all, and a merry
-glance which included most certainly Vivian
-Hammersley, to whom the landscape seemed
-to darken with her departure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Now is the time for shooting to advantage,'
-said Lord Fettercairn, who knew
-by old experience that when the afternoon
-shadows, and more especially those of evening,
-begin to lengthen, the slopes of the hills are
-seen better, that the birds, too, lie better,
-and that as the air becomes more fresh and
-cool, men can shoot with greater care and
-deliberation than in the heat of noon. But
-Hammersley, full of his own thoughts, full of
-the image of Finella and that tale-telling
-glance they had exchanged, missed nearly
-every bird, to the great exultation of Shafto,
-who made an incredible number of bad and
-clumsy jokes thereon&mdash;jokes which the young
-Englishman heard with perfect indifference
-and equanimity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto, however, scarcely foresaw the
-result of the next day's expedition, and
-certainly Hammersley did not do so either.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIV.
-<br /><br />
-THE TWO FINELLAS.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Next day, when the grouse-shooting had
-been in progress for an hour or two, a
-mishap occurred to Hammersley. He twisted
-his ankle in a turnip-field, fell heavily on
-one side, and staggered up too lame to take
-further share in the sport for that day at
-least.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When Finella comes with the lunch in
-the pony-phaeton, she will drive you home,'
-said Lord Fettercairn, who then desired
-one of the beaters to give Hammersley
-the assistance of an arm to the well,
-where the repast was to be laid out as
-before.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Shafto saw his rival limping he was
-delighted, and thought, 'This will mar his
-waltzing for a time at least;' but he was less
-delighted when he heard of Lord Fettercairn's
-natural suggestion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is likely a cunning dodge,' was his next
-thought, 'to get a quiet drive with her to
-Craigengowan.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Finella's look and exclamation of
-alarm and interest were not lost upon him
-when she arrived and found Hammersley
-seated on the grass by the side of the well,
-and saw the difficulty with which he rose to
-greet her, propping himself upon his unloaded
-gun as he did so; and soft, indeed, was the
-blush of pleasure that crossed her delicate
-face when she heard of 'grandpapa's arrangement;'
-and certainly it met, secretly, with the
-entire approbation of Hammersley, who
-anticipated with delight the drive home with such
-a companion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-After a time the luncheon&mdash;though skilfully
-protracted by Shafto&mdash;was over, and
-Finella and her 'patient' were together in
-the phaeton, and she, with a smile and farewell
-bow, whipped up her petted ponies, Flirt
-and Fairy, whom every day she fed with
-apples and carrots.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto thought jealously and sulkily that
-she was in great haste to be gone; but more
-sulky would he have been had he seen, or
-known that when once an angle of the glen
-was reached where the road dipped out of
-sight, the ponies were permitted to go at
-their own pace, which ere long dwindled into
-a walk, till they passed the vast ruined castle
-of Fettercairn. Finella and Hammersley
-were, however, if very happy, very silent,
-though both enjoyed the drive in the bright
-sunshine amid such beautiful scenery, and he
-quite forgot his petty misfortune in contemplating
-the delicate profile and long drooping
-eyelashes of the girl who sat beside him, and
-who, with a fluttering heart, was perhaps
-expecting the avowal that trembled on his lips,
-especially when he placed his hand on hers,
-in pretence of guiding the ponies, which
-broke into a rapid trot as the lodge gates
-were passed; and glorious as the opportunity
-accorded him had been, Hammersley's heart,
-while burning with passionate ardour, seemed
-to have lost all courage, for he had a sincere
-dread of Lady Fettercairn, and suspected
-that her interests were naturally centred in
-Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At seven-and-twenty a man, who has
-knocked about the world, with a regiment
-especially, for some nine years or so, does
-not fall over head and ears in love like a
-rash boy, or without calculating his chances
-of general success; and poor Hammersley,
-though he did not doubt achieving it with
-Finella herself, saw deadly rocks and breakers
-ahead with her family, and his spirit was a
-proud one. To make a declaration was to
-ruin or lose everything, for if the family were
-averse to his suit he must, he knew, quit
-their roof for ever, and Finella would be lost
-to him, for heiresses seldom elope now, save
-in novels; and he knew that in her circle the
-motives for marriage are more various and
-questionable than with other and untitled
-ranks of life. Rank and money were the
-chief incentives of such people as the
-Melforts of Fettercairn. 'Venal unions,'
-says an essayist, 'no doubt occur in the
-humbler classes, but love is more frequently
-the incentive, while with princes and
-patricians the conjugal alliance is, in nine
-instances out of ten, a mere matter of <i>expedience</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Craigengowan was reached, and not a
-word of the great secret that filled his heart
-had escaped him, for which he cursed his
-own folly and timidity when the drive ended,
-and a groom took the ponies' heads.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Yet the day was not over, nor was a
-fresh opportunity wanting. Lady Fettercairn
-and all her female quests had driven to a
-flower-show at the nearest town&mdash;even
-Mrs. Prim was gone, and the house was empty!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Everything in and about Craigengowan
-seemed conducive to love-talk and
-confidences. The great and picturesque house
-itself was charming. The old orchards
-would ere long be heavy with fruit, and were
-then a sight to see; on the terrace the
-peacocks were strutting to and fro; there were
-fancy arbours admirably adapted for flirtation,
-and a quaint old Scottish garden (with a sun
-and moon dial) now gay with all the flowers
-of August.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On a lounge near an open window facing
-the latter Hammersley was reclining, when
-Finella, after changing her driving dress,
-came into the drawing-room, and finely her
-costume suited her dark and piquante style
-of beauty. She wore a cream-coloured silk,
-profusely trimmed with filmy lace, and a
-cluster of scarlet flowers on the left shoulder
-among the lace of the collarette that encircled
-her slender neck; and Hammersley, as he
-looked at her, thought that 'beauty
-unadorned' was rather a fallacy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His undisguised expression of admiration
-as he partly rose to receive her caused her to
-colour a little, as she inquired if his hurt was
-easier now; but, instead of replying, he
-said, while venturing slightly to touch her
-hand:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell me, Miss Melfort, how you came by
-your dear pretty name of Finella? Not
-from Finella in "Peveril of the Peak"?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Ah, I am very unlike her!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are certainly quite as charming!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But neither dumb nor pretending to be
-so,' said the girl, with one of her silvery little
-laughs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Finella!' said Hammersley, as if to
-himself, in a low and unconsciously loving
-tone; 'whence the name? Is it a family one?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Don't you know?' she asked.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How could I know? I know only that I
-will never forget it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course you could not know. The
-origin of my name is one of the oldest legends
-of the Howe of the Mearns.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Howe&mdash;that is Scotch for "hollow," I
-believe.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; "hollow" is the English for <i>howe</i>,'
-replied Finella, laughing, as she recalled a
-quip of Boucicault's to the same purpose.
-'You saw the great old castle we passed in
-our drive home?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Well, I am called Finella from a lady who
-lived there.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After it fell into ruin?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; before it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then she must have lived a precious long
-time ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She certainly did&mdash;some&mdash;nearly a
-thousand years ago.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What a little quiz you are! Now, Miss
-Melfort, what joke is this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No joke at all,' said she, quite seriously;
-'you can read about it in our family history&mdash;or
-I shall read it to you in the "Book of
-Fettercairn."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She took from a table near a handsome
-volume, which her grandfather&mdash;to please
-whom she was named Finella&mdash;had in a
-spirit of family vanity prepared for private
-circulation, and as if to connect his title with
-antiquity, prefaced by a story well known in
-ancient Scottish history, though little known
-to the Scots of the present day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We give it from his Lordship's book
-verbatim as she read it to Vivian
-Hammersley, who&mdash;cunning rogue&mdash;was not
-indisposed with such a charming and
-sympathetic companion as Finella to make the
-most of his fall, and reclined rather luxuriously
-on the velvet lounge, while she, seated in a
-dainty little chair, read on; but he scarcely
-listened, so intent was he on watching her
-sweet face, her white and perfect ears, her
-downcast eyelids with their long lashes&mdash;her
-whole self!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Melforts, Lords Fettercairn (Strathfinella)
-and of that Ilk, take their hereditary
-title from the old castle of that name, which
-stands in the Howe of the Mearns, and is
-sometimes called the Castle of Finella. It
-is situated on an eminence, and is now
-surrounded on three sides by a morass. It
-is enclosed within an inner and an outer wall
-of oblong form, and occupying half an acre of
-ground. The inner is composed of vitrified
-matter, but no lime has been used in its
-construction. The walls are a congeries of
-small stones cemented together by some
-molten matter, now harder than the stones
-themselves; and the remarkable event for
-which this castle is celebrated in history is
-the following:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When Kenneth III., a wise and valiant
-king (who defeated the Danes at the battle
-of Luncarty, and created on that field the
-Hays, Earls of Errol, Hereditary Constables
-of Scotland, and leaders of the Feudal
-cavalry, thus originating also the noble
-families of Tweeddale and Kinnoull), was on
-the throne, his favourite residence was the
-castle of Kincardine, the ruins of which still
-remain about a mile eastward of the village
-of Fettercairn, and from thence he went
-periodically to pay his devotions at the
-shrine of St. Palladius, Apostle of the Scots,
-to whom the latter had been sent by Pope
-Celestine in the sixth century to oppose
-the Pelagian heresy, and whose bones at
-Fordoun were enclosed in a shrine of gold
-and precious stones in 1409 by the Bishop of
-St. Andrews.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The king had excited the deadly hatred
-of Finella, the Lady of Fettercairn, daughter
-of the Earl of Angus, by having justly put to
-death her son, who was a traitor and had
-rebelled against him in Lochaber; and, with
-the intention of being revenged, she prepared
-at Fettercairn a singular engine or 'infernal
-machine,' with which to slay the king.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This engine consisted of a brass statue,
-which shot out arrows when a golden apple
-was taken from its hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Kenneth was at Kincardine, engaged in
-hunting the deer, wolf, the badger and the
-boar, when she treacherously invited him to
-her castle of Fettercairn, which was then,
-as Buchanan records, 'pleasant with shady
-groves and piles of curious buildings,' of
-which there remained no vestiges when he
-wrote in the days of James VI.; and thither
-the king rode, clad in a rich scarlet mantle,
-white tunic, an eagle's wing in his helmet,
-and on its crest a glittering <i>clach-bhuai</i>, or
-stone of power, one of the three now in the
-Scottish regalia.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dissembling her hate, she entertained the
-king very splendidly, and after dinner
-conducted him out to view the beauties of the
-place and the structure of her castle; and
-Kenneth, pleased with her beauty (which her
-raiment enhanced), for she wore a dress of
-blue silk, without sleeves, a mantle of fine
-linen, fastened by a brooch of silver, and all
-her golden hair floating on her shoulders,
-accompanied her into a tower, where, in an
-upper apartment, and amid rich festooned
-arras and 'curious sculptures' stood the
-infernal machine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She courteously and smilingly requested
-the king to take the golden apple from the
-right hand of the statue; and he, amazed by
-the strange conceit, did so; on this a rushing
-sound was heard within it as a string or cord
-gave way, and from its mouth there came
-forth two barbed arrows which mortally
-wounded him, and he fell at her feet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finella fled to Den Finella, and Kenneth
-was found by his retinue '<i>bullerand in his
-blude</i>.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Den Finella, says a writer, is said, in the
-genuine spirit of legendary lore, to have
-obtained its name from this princess, who,
-the more readily to evade her pursuers,
-stepped from the branches of one tree to
-those of another the whole way from her
-castle to this den, which is near the sea, in
-the parish of St. Cyres, as all the country
-then was a wild forest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Buchanan deems all this story a fable,
-though asserted by John Major and Hector
-Boece, and thinks it more probable that the
-king was slain near Fettercairn in an ambush
-prepared by Finella.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So ended the legend.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the girl read on, Vivian Hammersley
-had bent lower and lower over her, till the
-tip of his moustache nearly touched her rich
-dark hair, and his arm all but stole round
-her. Finella Melfort was quite conscious of
-this close proximity, and though she did not
-shrink from it, that consciousness made her
-colour deepen and her sweet voice become unsteady.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is the story of Finella of Fettercairn,'
-said she, closing the book.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And to this awful legend of the dark
-ages, which only wants blue-fire, lime-light,
-and a musical accompaniment to set it off,
-you owe your name?' said he, laughingly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes&mdash;it was grandfather's whim.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is odd that you&mdash;the belle of the last
-London season, should be named after such a
-grotesque old termagant!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She looked up at him smilingly, and then,
-as their eyes met, the expression of that
-glance exchanged beside the well on the hills
-came into them again; heart spoke to heart;
-he bent his face nearer hers, and his arm
-went round her in earnest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Finella, my darling!' escaped him, and as
-he kissed her unresisting lips, her blushing
-face was hidden on his shoulder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And <i>this</i> tableau was the result of the two
-days' shooting&mdash;a sudden result which neither
-Shafto nor Hammersley had quite foreseen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of how long they remained thus neither
-had any idea. Time seemed to stand still
-with them. Finella was only conscious of
-his hand caressing hers, which lay so willingly
-in his tender, yet firm, clasp.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley in the gush of his joy felt
-oblivious of all the world. He could think
-of nothing but Finella, while the latter
-seemed scarcely capable of reflection at all
-beyond the existing thought that he loved
-her, and though the avowal was a silent and
-unuttered one, the new sense of all it admitted
-and involved, seemed to overwhelm the girl;
-her brightest day-dreams had come, and she
-nestled, trembling and silent, by his side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The unwelcome sound of voices and also
-of carriage-wheels on the terrace roused
-them. He released her hand, stole one
-more clinging kiss, and forgetful of his fall
-and all about it started with impatience to
-his feet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lady Fettercairn and her lady guests had
-returned from the flower-show, and to avoid
-them and all the world, for a little time yet,
-the lovers, with their hearts still beating too
-wildly to come down to commonplace, tacitly
-wandered hand in hand into the recesses of a
-conservatory, and lingered there amid the
-warm, flower-scented atmosphere and shaded
-aisles, in what seemed a delicious dream.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finella was conscious that Vivian
-Hammersley was talking to her lovingly and
-caressingly, in a low and tender voice as he
-had never talked before, and she felt that
-she was 'Finella'&mdash;the dearest and sweetest
-name in the world to him&mdash;and no more
-Miss Melfort.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It would be difficult, and superfluous
-perhaps, to describe the emotions of these
-two during the next few days.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though now quite aware that Finella and
-Hammersley had met each other frequently
-before, Shafto's surprise at their intimacy,
-though apparently undemonstrative, grew
-speedily into suspicious anger. He felt
-intuitively that <i>his</i> presence made not the
-slightest difference to them, though he did
-not forget it; and he failed to understand
-how 'this fellow' had so quickly
-gained his subtle and familiar position with
-Finella.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It galled him to the quick to see and feel
-all this, and know that he could never please
-her as she seemed to be pleased with
-Hammersley; for her colour heightened, her eyes
-brightened, and her eyelashes drooped and
-flickered whenever he approached or
-addressed her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto thought of his hopes of gaining
-Finella and her fortune against any discovery
-that might be made of the falsehood of his
-position, and so wrath and hatred gathered
-in his heart together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was baffled at times by her bright
-smiles and pretty, irresistible manner, but
-nevertheless he 'put his brains in steep' to
-scheme again.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XV.
-<br /><br />
-AT REVELSTOKE AGAIN.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Meanwhile sore trouble had come upon
-Dulcie Carlyon in her Devonshire home.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her father had been dull and gloomy of
-late, and had more than once laid his hand
-affectionately on her ruddy golden hair, and
-said in a prayerful way that 'he hoped he
-might soon see her well married, and that she
-might never be left friendless!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why such thoughts, dear papa?' she would
-reply.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie had felt a sense of apprehension for
-some time past. Was it born of her father's
-forebodings, or of the presentiment about
-which she had conversed with Florian? A
-depression hung over her&mdash;an undefinable
-dread of some great calamity about to happen.
-At night her sleep was restless and broken,
-and by day a vague fear haunted her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The evil boded was to happen soon now.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With these oppressive thoughts mingled
-the memory of the tall and handsome dark-eyed
-lad she loved&mdash;it seemed so long ago,
-and she longed to hear his voice again, and
-for his breast to lay her head upon. But
-where was Florian now? Months had passed
-without her hearing of him, and she might
-never hear again!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Little could she have conceived the foul
-trick that Shafto had played them both in the
-matter of the locket; but, unfortunately for
-herself, she had not seen the last of that
-enterprising young gentleman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She felt miserably that her heart was lonely
-and heavy, and that, young as she was, light
-and joy, with the absence and ruin of Florian,
-had gone out of her life. She was alone
-always with her great sorrow, and longed
-much for tears; but as her past life had been
-a happy and joyous one, Dulcie Carlyon had
-been little&mdash;if at all&mdash;given to them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One morning her father did not appear at
-breakfast as usual. As yet undressed her
-red-golden hair, that the old man loved to stroke
-and caress, was floating in a great loose mass
-on her back and shoulders, and her blue eyes
-looked bright and clear, if thoughtful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had, as was her daily wont, arranged
-his letters, cut and aired the morning papers
-for him, adjusted a vase of fresh flowers on
-the table, with a basket of delicate peaches,
-which she knew he liked, from the famous
-south wall of the garden, with green fig
-leaves round them, for Dulcie did everything
-prettily and tastefully, however trivial. Then
-she cut and buttered his bread, poured out his
-tea, and waited.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Still he did not appear. She knocked on
-his bedroom door, but received no answer,
-and saw, with surprise, that his boots were
-still on the mat outside.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She peeped in and called on him&mdash;'Papa,
-papa!' but there was no response.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The room was empty, and the morning sun
-streamed through the uncurtained window.
-The bed had not been slept in! Again she
-called his name, and rushed downstairs in
-alarm and affright.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The gas was burning in his writing-room;
-the window was still closed as it had been
-overnight; and there, in his easy chair, with
-his hands and arms stretched out on the table,
-sat Llewellen Carlyon, with his head bent
-forward, asleep as Dulcie thought when she saw him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Poor papa,' she murmured; 'he has actually
-gone to sleep over his horrid weary work.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She leaned over his chair; wound her soft
-arms round his neck and bowed grey head&mdash;her
-lovely blue eyes melting with tenderness,
-her sweet face radiant with filial love, till, as
-she laid her cheek upon it, a mortal chill
-struck her, and a low cry of awful dismay escaped her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is this&mdash;papa?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She failed to rouse him, for his sleep was
-the sleep of death!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was disease of the heart, the doctors
-said, and he had thus passed away&mdash;died in
-harness; a pen was yet clutched in his right
-hand, and an unfinished legal document lay beneath it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie fainted, and was borne away by the
-servants to her own room&mdash;they were old and
-affectionate country folks, who had been long
-with Llewellen Carlyon, and loved him and
-his daughter well.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Poor Dulcie remained long unconscious,
-the sudden shock was so dreadful to her, and
-when she woke from it, the old curate,
-Mr. Pentreath, who had baptized Florian and
-herself, was standing near her bed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor bruised lamb,' said he, kindly
-and tenderly, as he passed his wrinkled hand
-over her rich and now dishevelled tresses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What has happened?' she asked wildly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You fainted, Dulcie.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why&mdash;I never fainted before.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She don't seem to remember, sir,' whispered
-an old servant, who saw the vague and
-wild inquiring expression of her eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Drink this, child, and try to eat a morsel,'
-said the curate, putting a cup of coffee and
-piece of toast before her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Something happened&mdash;something
-dreadful&mdash;what was it&mdash;oh, what was it?' asked
-Dulcie, putting her hands to her throbbing temples.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Drink, dear,' said the curate again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She drank of the coffee thirstily; but
-declined the bread.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I beat up an egg in the coffee,' said he;
-'I feared you might be unable to eat yet.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her blue eyes began to lose their wandering
-and troubled look, and to become less
-wild and wistful; then suddenly a shrill cry
-escaped her, and she said, with a calmness
-more terrible and painful than fainting or hysterics:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, I remember now&mdash;papa&mdash;poor papa&mdash;dead!
-Found dead! Oh, my God! help
-me to bear it, or take me too&mdash;take me too!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Do not speak thus, child,' said Mr. Pentreath gently.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How long ago was it&mdash;yesterday&mdash;a
-month ago, or when? I seem&mdash;I feel as if
-I had grown quite old, yet you all look just
-the same&mdash;just the same; how is this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My child,' said the curate, with dim eyes,
-'your dire calamity happened but a short time
-ago&mdash;little more than an hour since.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her response was a deep and heavy sob,
-that seemed to come from her overcharged
-heart rather than her slender throat, and
-which was the result of the unnatural tension
-of her mind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Come to my house with me,' said the
-kind old curate; but Dulcie shook her head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I cannot leave papa, dead or alive. I
-wish to be with him, and alone.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I shall not leave you so; it is a mistake
-in grief to avoid contact with the world.
-The mind only gets sadder and deeper into
-its gloom of melancholy. If you could but
-sleep, child, a little.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sleep&mdash;I feel as if I had been asleep for
-years; and it was this morning, you tell
-me&mdash;only this morning I had my arms round
-his neck&mdash;dead&mdash;my darling papa dead!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She started to her feet as if to go where
-the body lay under the now useless hands of
-the doctor, but would have fallen had she not
-clutched for support at Mr. Pentreath, who
-upheld and restrained her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The awful thought of her future loneliness
-now that she had thus suddenly lost her
-father, as she had not another relation in the
-world, haunted the unhappy Dulcie, and
-deprived her of the power of taking food or
-obtaining sleep.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In vain her old servants, who had known
-her from infancy, coaxed her to attempt
-both, but sleep would not come, and the food
-remained untasted before her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'A little water,' she would say; 'give me
-a little water, for thirst parches me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-All that passed subsequently seemed like
-one long and terrible dream to Dulcie. She
-was alone in the world, and when her father
-was laid in his last home at Revelstoke, within
-sound of the tumbling waves, in addition to
-being alone she found herself well-nigh penniless,
-for her father had nothing to leave her
-but the old furniture of the house they had
-inhabited.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That was sold, and she was to remain with
-the family of the curate till some situation
-could be procured for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She had long since ceased to expect any
-letter from or tidings of Florian. She began
-to think that perhaps, amid the splendour of
-his new relations, he had forgotten her. Well,
-it was the way of the world.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Never would she forget the day she quitted
-her old home. Her father's hat, his coat and
-cane were in the hall; all that he had used and
-that belonged to him were still there, to bring
-his presence before her with fresh poignancy,
-and to impress upon her that she was fatherless,
-all but friendless, and an orphan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The superstitious people about Revelstoke
-now remembered that in Lawyer Carlyon's
-garden, blossom and fruit had at the same time
-appeared on more than one of his apple-trees,
-a certain sign of coming death to one of his
-household. But who can tell in this
-ever-shifting world what a day may bring forth!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-One evening&mdash;she never forgot it&mdash;she had
-been visiting her father's grave, and was
-slowly quitting the secluded burial-ground,
-when a man like a soldier approached her
-in haste.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Florian!' She attempted to utter his
-name, but it died away on her bloodless lips.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVI.
-<br /><br />
-''TIS BUT THE OLD, OLD STORY.'
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-A poet says:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Not by appointment do we meet delight<br />
- And joy: they need not our expectancy.<br />
- But round some corner in the streets of life,<br />
- They on a sudden clasp us with a smile.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Florian it was who stood before her, but
-though he gazed at her earnestly, wistfully,
-and with great pity in his tender eyes as he
-surveyed her pale face and deep mourning,
-he made no attempt to take the hands she
-yearningly extended towards him. She saw
-that he was in the uniform of a private soldier,
-over which he wore a light dust-coat as a sort
-of disguise, but there was no mistaking his
-glengarry&mdash;that head-dress which is odious
-and absurd for English and Irish regiments,
-and which in his instance bore a brass
-badge&mdash;the sphinx, for Egypt.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He looked thin, gaunt, and pale, and anon
-the expression of his eye grew doubtful and
-cloudy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Florian!' exclaimed Dulcie in a piercing
-voice, in which something of upbraiding
-blended with tones of surprise and grief; and
-yet the fact of his presence seemed so unreal
-that she lingered for a moment before she
-flung herself into his arms, and was clasped
-to his breast. 'Oh, what is the meaning of
-this dress?' she asked, lifting her face and
-surveying him again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It means that I am a soldier&mdash;like him
-whose son I thought myself&mdash;a soldier of the
-Warwickshire Regiment,' replied Florian with
-some bitterness of tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh, my God, and has it come to this!'
-said Dulcie wringing her interlaced fingers.
-'Could not Shafto&mdash;your cousin&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shafto cast me off&mdash;seemed as if he could
-not get rid of me too soon.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How cruel, when he might have done so
-much for you, to use you so!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I had no other resort, Dulcie; I would
-not stoop to seek favours even from him, and
-our paths in life will never cross each other
-again; but a time may come&mdash;I know not
-when&mdash;in which I may seek forgiveness of
-enemies as well as friends&mdash;the bad and the
-good together&mdash;for a soldier's life is one of
-peril.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of horror&mdash;to me!' wailed Dulcie, weeping
-freely on his breast.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This tenderness is strange, Dulcie! Why
-did you cast me off in my utter adversity and
-return to me my locket?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie looked up in astonishment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What <i>do</i> you mean, Florian&mdash;have you
-lost your senses?' she asked in sore perplexity.
-'Where have you come from last?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Plymouth; in a paper there I saw a notice
-of your terrible loss, and resolved to see, even
-if I could not speak with you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you came&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'To see you, my lost darling, once again.
-Oh, Dulcie, I thought I should die if I left
-England and sailed for Africa without doing
-so. I got a day's leave and am here.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But why have you done this?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This&mdash;what?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Soldiering!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Penniless, hopeless, what else could I
-do?&mdash;besides, I thought you had cast me off
-when you sent me back this locket,' he added,
-producing the gift referred to.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That locket was stolen from me on the
-night you left Revelstoke&mdash;literally wrenched
-from my neck, as I told you in my letter&mdash;the
-letter you never answered.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I received no letter, Dulcie&mdash;but your
-locket was taken from you by whom?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shafto.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The double villain! He must have intercepted
-that letter, and utilised the envelope
-with its postmarks and stamps to deceive me,
-and effect a breach between us.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank God you came, dearest Florian!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I thought you had renounced me, Dulcie,
-and now I almost wish you had.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is little use to remember me now&mdash;I
-am so poor and hopeless.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'After all,' said she, taking his face between
-her hands caressingly, 'what does poverty
-matter if we love each other still?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And you love me, Dulcie&mdash;love me yet!'
-exclaimed Florian passionately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And shall never, never cease to do so.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But I am so much beneath you now in
-position, Dulcie&mdash;and&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;' his voice
-broke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What, darling?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'May never rise.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would I be a true woman if I forsook you
-because you were unfortunate?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No; but you are more than a woman,
-Dulcie&mdash;you are a golden-haired angel!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My poor Florian, how gaunt and hollow
-your cheeks are! You have suffered&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Much since last we parted here in dear
-old Devonshire. But Shafto's villainy
-surpasses all I could have imagined!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And where is Shafto now?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'With his grand relations, I suppose. I
-am glad that we have unravelled that which
-was to me a source of sorrow and dismay&mdash;the
-returned locket. So you cannot take
-back your heart, Dulcie, nor give me mine?'
-said Florian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Nor would I wish to do so,' she replied,
-sweetly and simply. 'Though poor, we are
-all the world to each other now.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hard and matter-of-fact as our every-day
-existence is, there is&mdash;even in these
-railway times&mdash;much of strange and painful
-romance woven up with many a life; and
-so it seems to be with mine&mdash;with ours,
-Dulcie.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh that I were rich, Florian, or that you
-were so!' exclaimed the girl, as a great pity
-filled her heart, when she thought of her
-lover's blighted life, their own baffled hopes,
-and the humble and most perilous course that
-was before him in South Africa, where the
-clouds of war were gathering fast. 'I, too,
-am poor, Florian&mdash;very poor; dear papa died
-involved, leaving me penniless, and I must
-cast about to earn my own bread.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'This is horrible&mdash;how shall I endure it?'
-said he fiercely, while regarding her with a
-loving but haggard expression in his dark eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What would you have done if you had not
-met me by chance here?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Loafed about till the last moment, and
-then done something desperate. I <i>would</i> have
-seen you, and after that&mdash;the Deluge! In
-two days we embark at Plymouth,' he added,
-casting a glance at the old church of
-Revelstoke and its burying-ground. 'There our
-parents lie, Dulcie&mdash;yours at least, and those
-that I, till lately, thought were mine. There
-is something very strange and mysterious in
-this change of relationship and position
-between Shafto and myself. I cannot understand
-it. Why was I misled all my life by
-one who loved me so well? How often have
-I stood with the Major by a gravestone
-yonder inscribed with the name of Flora
-MacIan and heard him repeat while looking
-at it&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'A thousand would call the spot dreary<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where thou takest thy long repose;<br />
- But a rude couch is sweet to the weary,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the frame that suffering knows.<br />
- I never rejoiced more sincerely<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Than at thy funeral hour,<br />
- Assured that the one I loved dearly<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Was beyond affliction's power!<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Why did he quote all this to me, and tell
-me never to forget that spot, or who was
-buried there, if she was only Shafto's aunt,
-and not my mother?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian felt keenly for the position of
-Dulcie Carlyon, and the perils and mortifications
-that might beset her path now; but
-he was too young, too healthy and full of
-animal life and spirits, to be altogether
-weighed down by the thought of his humble
-position and all that was before him; and
-now that he had seen her again, restored to
-her bosom the locket, and that he knew she
-was true to him, and had never for a moment
-wavered in her girlish love, life seemed to
-become suddenly full of new impulses and
-hopes for him, and he thought prayerfully
-that all might yet be well for them both.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But when?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To Dulcie there seemed something noble
-in the hopeful spirit that, under her influence,
-animated her grave lover now. He seemed
-to become calm, cool, steadfast, and, hap
-what might, she felt he would ever be true
-to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He seemed brave and tender and true&mdash;'tender
-and true' as a Douglas of old, and
-Dulcie thought how pleasant and glorious it
-would be to have such a handsome young husband
-as he to take care of her always, and see
-that all she did was right and proper and wise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A long embrace, and he was gone to catch
-the inexorable train. She was again alone,
-and for the first time she perceived that the
-sun had set, that the waves looked black as
-they rounded Revelstoke promontory, and
-that all the landscape had grown dark,
-desolate, and dreary.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What a hopeless future seemed to stretch
-before these two creatures, so young and so
-loving!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian was gone&mdash;gone to serve as a
-private soldier on the burning coast of Africa.
-It seemed all too terrible, too dreadful to
-think of.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Every morning and evening I shall pray
-for you, Florian,' wailed the girl in her heart;
-'pray that you may be happy, good, and
-rich, and&mdash;and that we shall yet meet in
-heaven if we never meet on earth.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On the second morning after this separation,
-when Dulcie was pillowed in sleep, and
-the rising sun was shining brightly on the
-waves that rolled in Cawsand Bay and
-danced over the Mewstone, a great white
-'trooper' came out of Plymouth Sound under
-sail and steam, with the blue-peter flying at
-its foremasthead, her starboard side crowded
-with red coats, all waving their caps and
-taking a farewell look at Old England&mdash;the
-last look it proved to many&mdash;and, led by Bob
-Edgehill, a joyous, rackety, young private of
-the Warwickshire, hundreds of voices joined
-chorusing:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'Merrily, my lads, so ho!<br />
- They may talk of a life at sea,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But a life on the land<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With sword in hand<br />
- Is the life, my lads, for me!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-But there was one young soldier whose
-voice failed him in the chorus, and whose
-eyes rested on Stoke Point and the mouth of
-the Yealm till these and other familiar features
-of the coast melted into the widening
-Channel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie was roused to exertion from the
-stupor of grief that had come upon her by
-tidings that a situation had been found for
-her as companion&mdash;one in which she would
-have to make herself useful, amiable, and
-agreeable in the family of a lady of rank and
-wealth, to whom she would be sent by
-influential friends of Mr. Pentreath in London.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The poor girl thought tearfully how desolate
-was her lot now, cast to seek her bread
-among utter strangers; and if she became ill,
-delicate, or unable to work, what would become
-of her?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her separation from Florian seemed now
-greater than ever; but, as Heine has it:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Tis but the old, old story,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet it ever abideth new;<br />
- And to whomsoever it cometh<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The heart it breaks in two.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-To leave Revelstoke seemed another wrench.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie had been born and bred there,
-and all the villagers in Revelstoke loved
-and knew Lawyer Carlyon well, and were
-deeply interested in the future of his daughter;
-thus, on the day of her departure no one
-made any pretence of work or working.
-Heads were popping out and in of the windows
-of the village street all morning, and a
-cluster&mdash;a veritable crowd&mdash;of kindly folks
-accompanied Mr. Pentreath and the weeping
-girl to the railway station, for she wept freely
-at all this display of regard and sympathy,
-especially from the old, whom she might
-never see again.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the train swept her away, and she
-lost sight of the last familiar feature of her
-native place, a strange and heavy sense of
-utter desolation came over poor Dulcie, and
-but for the presence of other passengers she
-would have stooped her head upon her hot
-hands and sobbed aloud, for she thought of
-her dead parents&mdash;when did she not think of
-them now?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Oh!' exclaims a writer, 'if those who have
-loved and gone before us can see afar off
-those they have left, surely the mother who
-had passed from earth might tremble now
-for her child, standing so terribly alone in the
-midst of a seething sea of danger and temptations?'
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVII.
-<br /><br />
-AT CRAIGENGOWAN.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-With the new understanding&mdash;the tacit
-engagement that existed between herself and
-Vivian Hammersley&mdash;Finella writhed with
-annoyance when privately and pointedly
-spoken to on the subject of her 'cousin'
-Shafto's attentions and hopes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Grandmamma,' said she to Lady Fettercairn,
-'I don't see why I may not marry
-whom I please. I am not like a poor girl
-who has nothing in the world. Indeed, in
-that case I am pretty sure that neither you
-nor cousin Shafto would want me.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'She must settle soon,' said Lady Fettercairn,
-when reporting this plain reply to
-Lady Drumshoddy. 'I certainly shall not
-take her to London again, yet awhile.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are right,' replied that somewhat
-grim matron; 'and when once this Captain
-Hammersley, who, to my idea, is somewhat
-too <i>èpris</i> with her, is gone, you can easily
-find some pretext for remaining at Craigengowan;
-or shall I have her with me?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As you please,' replied Lady Fettercairn,
-who knew that the Drumshoddy <i>mènage</i> did
-not always suit the taste of Finella; 'but I
-think she is better here&mdash;propinquity and all
-that sort of thing may be productive of good.
-I know that poor Shafto's mind is quite made
-up, and, as I said before, she must settle
-soon. We can't have twenty thousand a year
-slipping out of the family.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finella thought little of their wishes or
-those of Shafto. She thought only of that
-passionate hour in the lonely drawing-room,
-where she was alone with Vivian, and his lips
-were pressed to hers; of the close throb of
-heart to heart, and that the great secret of
-her young girl's life was his now and hers no
-longer, but aware of the opposition and
-antagonism he would be sure to encounter just
-then, she urged upon him a caution and a
-secrecy of the engagement which his proud
-spirit somewhat resented.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He thought it scarcely honourable to take
-advantage of Lord Fettercairn's hospitality,
-and gain the love of Finella without his
-permission; but as both knew that would
-never be accorded&mdash;that to ask for it would
-cut short his visit, and as he was so soon
-going on distant service, with Finella he
-agreed that their engagement should be kept
-a secret till his return.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And to blind the eyes of the watchful or
-suspicious he actually found himself flirting
-with one of the Miss Kippilaws, three young
-ladies who thought they spoke the purest
-English, though it was with that accent which
-Basil Hall calls 'the hideous patois of
-Edinburgh;' and, perceiving this, Lady
-Fettercairn became somewhat contented, and
-Finella was excessively amused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not so the astute Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is all a d&mdash;&mdash;d game!' muttered that
-young gentleman; 'a red herring drawn
-across the scent.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Why do you look so unhappy, dearest?'
-asked Finella one evening, when she and her
-lover found themselves alone for a few
-minutes, during which she had been
-contemplating his dark face in silence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My leave of absence is running out so
-fast&mdash;by Jove, faster than ever apparently
-now!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Is that the sole reason?' asked the girl
-softly and after a pause, her dark eyes
-darkening and seeming to become more
-intense.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'No,' he replied, with hesitation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Tell me, then&mdash;what is the other?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You know how I love you&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I&mdash;you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But in one sense my love is so liable to
-misconstruction&mdash;so hopeless of proof.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hopeless, Vivian&mdash;after all I have
-admitted?' she asked reproachfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I mean because I am almost penniless as
-compared to you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What does that matter? Surely I have
-enough for two,' said she, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I fear the bitter opposition of your
-family.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So do I; but don't mind it,' said the
-independent little beauty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have heard a rumour that one of the
-Melforts who made a pure love-marriage was
-cut off root and branch.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That was poor Uncle Lennard, before I
-was born. Well&mdash;they can't cut <i>me</i> off.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They will never consent; and when I am
-far away, as I soon shall be, if their evil
-influence&mdash;&mdash;'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Should prevail with me? Oh, Vivian!'
-exclaimed the girl, her dark eyes sparkling
-through their unshed tears. 'Think not of
-their influencing me, for a moment.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank you a thousand times for the
-assurance, my love. It was vile of me to
-think of such things. I have a sure conviction
-that your cousin Shafto dislikes me most
-certainly,' said Hammersley, after a pause.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't doubt it,' said she.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They mean you for him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'They&mdash;who?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your grandparents.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I know they do&mdash;but don't tease me by
-speaking of a subject so distasteful,' exclaimed
-Finella, making a pretty moue expression of
-disdain.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He pressed a kiss on her brow, another on
-her hair, and his lips quickly found their way
-to hers, after they had been pressed on her
-snow-white eyelids.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I love you with my whole heart, Finella,'
-he exclaimed passionately.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And I you,' said the artless girl again, in
-that style of iteration of which lovers never
-grow weary, with an adoring upward glance,
-which it was a pity the gathering gloom
-prevented him from seeing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they walked slowly towards the house,
-she quickly withdrew her hands, which were
-clasped clingingly to his arm, as Shafto
-approached them suddenly. He saw the abrupt
-act, and drew his own conclusions therefrom,
-and, somewhat to Finella's annoyance, turned
-abruptly away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'So that is the amiable youth for whom
-they design you,' said he in a whisper.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Did I not say you were not to speak of
-him? To tell you the truth, I am at times
-somewhat afraid of him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My darling&mdash;I must give you an amulet&mdash;a
-charm against his evil influence,' said
-Hammersley, laughing, as he slipped a ring
-on her wedding-finger, adding, 'I hope it fits.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is this&mdash;oh, Vivian! actually a
-wedding-ring&mdash;but I cannot wear, though I
-may keep it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Then wear this until you can, when I
-return, darling,' said he, as he slipped a
-gemmed ring on the tiny finger, and
-stooping, kissed it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My heart's dearest!' cooed the girl
-happily. 'Well, Vivian, none other than the
-hoop you have now given me shall be my
-wedding-ring!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Had Lady Fettercairn overheard all this
-she would have had good reason to fear that
-Finella's twenty thousand a year was slipping
-away from the Craigengowan family, all the
-more so that the scene of this tender
-interview was a spot below the mansion-house,
-said to be traditionally fatal to the Melforts
-of Fettercairn, the Howe of Craigengowan&mdash;for
-there a terrible adventure occurred to the
-first Lord, he who sold his Union vote, and of
-whom the men of the Mearns were wont to
-say he had not only sold his country to her
-enemies, but that he had also sold his soul to
-the evil one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It chanced that in the gloaming of the
-28th of April, 1708, the first anniversary of
-that day on which the Scottish Parliament
-dissolved to meet no more, he was walking
-in a place which he had bought with his
-Union bribe&mdash;the Howe of Craigengowan,
-then a secluded dell, overshadowed by great
-alders and whin bushes&mdash;when he saw at the
-opposite end the figure of a man approaching
-pace for pace with himself, and his outline
-was distinctly seen against the red flush of
-the western sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they neared each other slowly, a strange
-emotion of superstitious awe stole into the
-hard heart of Lord Fettercairn. So strong
-was this that he paused for a minute, and
-rested on his cane. The stranger did
-precisely the same.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The peer&mdash;the ex-Commissioner on Forfeited
-Estates&mdash;'pulled himself together,'
-and put his left hand jauntily into the silver
-hilt of his sword&mdash;a motion imitated exactly,
-and to all appearance mockingly, by the
-other, whose gait, bearing, and costume&mdash;a
-square-skirted crimson coat, a long-flapped
-white vest, black breeches and stockings
-rolled over the knee, and a Ramillie wig&mdash;were
-all the same in cut and colour as his
-own!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lord Fettercairn afterwards used to assert
-that he would never be able to describe the
-undefinable, the strange and awful sensation
-that crept over him when, as they neared
-each other, pace by pace, he saw in the
-other's visage the features of himself
-reproduced, as if he had been looking into a
-mirror.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A cold horror ran through every vein.
-He knew and felt that his own features were
-pallid and convulsed with mortal terror and
-dismay, while he could see that those of his
-dreadful counterpart were radiant with spite
-and triumphant malice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Himself seemed to look upon himself&mdash;the
-same in face, figure, dress; every
-detail was the same, save that the other
-clutched a canvas bag, inscribed '£500'
-the price of the Union vote (or, as some
-said, the price of his soul)&mdash;on seeing which
-my Lord Fettercairn shrieked in an agony
-of terror, and fell prone on his face&mdash;a
-fiendish yell and laugh from the other making
-all the lonely Howe re-echo as he did so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-How long he lay there he knew not precisely;
-but when he opened his eyes the pale
-April moon was shining down the Howe,
-producing weird and eerie shadows, the alder
-and whin bushes looked black and gloomy,
-and the window lights were shining redly in
-the tall and sombre mass of Craigengowan,
-the gables, turrets, and vanes of which stood
-up against the starry sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He never quite recovered the shock, but
-died some years after; and even now on
-dark nights, when owls hoot, ravens croak,
-toads crawl, and the clock at Craigengowan
-strikes twelve, something strange&mdash;no one
-can exactly say what&mdash;is to be seen in the
-Howe, even within sound of the railway
-engine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But to resume our own story:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though a day for parting&mdash;for a separation
-involving distance, time, and no small
-danger to one&mdash;was inexorably approaching,
-Finella was very happy just then, with a
-happiness she had never known before, and
-with a completeness that made life&mdash;even to
-her who had known London for a brilliant
-season&mdash;seem radiant. She had been joyous
-like a beautiful bird, and content, too, before
-the renewal and fuller development of her
-intimacy with Vivian Hammersley; but she
-was infinitely more joyous and content now.
-''Twas but the old, old story' of a girl's love,
-and in all her sentiments and all her hopes
-for the future Vivian shared.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The beautiful dreams of a dual life had
-been partly&mdash;if not fully&mdash;realised through
-him, who seemed to her a perfect being, a
-perfect hero: though he was only a smart
-linesman, a handsome young fellow like a
-thousand others, yet he possessed every
-quality to render a girl happy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto felt that Hammersley had quite
-'cut the ground from under his feet' with
-Finella, as he phrased it; and hating him in
-consequence, and being a master in cunning
-and finesse, wonderfully so for his years, he
-resolved to get 'the interloper's' visit to
-Craigengowan cut short at all hazards, and
-he was not long in putting his scheme in
-operation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The lovers thus were not quite unconscious
-of being watched by eyes that were quickened
-by avarice, passion, and jealousy; yet, withal,
-they were very, very happy&mdash;in Elysium, in
-fact.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Finding that Hammersley had suddenly
-become averse to gambling, after a long day
-among the grouse, Shafto strove hard to lure
-him into play one evening in the smoke-room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hammersley declined, aware that Shafto
-was remarkably sharp at cards, having become
-somewhat efficient after years of almost
-nightly play in the bar-room of the Torrington
-Arms at Revelstoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto's manner on this evening became
-almost insulting, and he taunted him with
-'taking deuced good care of such money as
-he had.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-''Pon my soul, young fellow, do you know
-that you are rather&mdash;well&mdash;ah&mdash;rude?' said
-Hammersley, removing his cigar for a
-moment and staring at the speaker.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Sorry, but it's my way,' replied Shafto.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Perhaps you had better make that your
-way,' said Hammersley, his brown cheek
-reddening as he indicated the room-door with
-his cigar. Then suddenly remembering that
-he must preserve certain amenities, and as
-guest&mdash;especially one circumstanced as he was
-secretly&mdash;he pushed his cigar-case towards
-Shafto, saying&mdash;'Try one of these&mdash;they are
-Rio Hondos, and are of the best kind.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks, I prefer my own,' said Shafto, sulkily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last, piqued by the manner of the latter,
-and having been lured into drinking a little
-more brandy and soda than was good for him
-after dinner, the unsuspecting Englishman
-sat down to play, and though he did so
-carelessly, his success was wonderful, for, while
-not caring to win, he won greatly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Higher and higher rose the stakes, till a
-very considerable sum had passed into his
-hands, and, handsome though Shafto's
-quarterly allowance from his 'grandfather,' paid
-duly by Mr. Kippilaw, he could not help the
-lengthening of his visage, and the growing
-pallor of it, while his shifty eyes rolled about
-in his anxiety and anger; and Lord Fettercairn
-and young Kippilaw, who were present,
-looked on&mdash;the former with some annoyance,
-and the latter with amused interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Quite suddenly, Kippilaw exclaimed:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hey&mdash;what the deuce is this? Captain
-Hammersley, you have dropped a card.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And he picked one up from that officer's
-side, and laid it on the table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The ace of spades! By heaven, you have
-<i>already</i> played that card!' exclaimed Shafto,
-with fierce triumph.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is not mine!' said Hammersley, hotly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whose, then?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How the devil should I know?' asked
-Hammersley, eyeing him firmly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Your luck has been marvellous, but not
-so much so when we know that you play with
-double aces,' said Shafto, throwing down his
-cards and starting from the table, as the other
-did, now pallid with just rage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Would you dare to insinuate?' began the
-officer, in a hoarse tone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I insinuate nothing; but the disgraceful
-fact speaks for itself; and I think you have
-been quite long enough among us in
-Craigengowan,' he added, coarsely.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Vivian Hammersley was pale as death,
-and speechless with rage. He thought first
-of Finella and then of his own injured
-honour; and we know not what turn this
-episode might have taken had not Lord
-Fettercairn, who, we have said, had been
-quietly looking on from a corner, said gravely,
-sharply, and even with pain, as he started
-forward:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Shafto! I saw you drop <i>that card</i>, where
-Mr. Kippilaw picked it up&mdash;drop it, whether
-purposely or not I do not say&mdash;but drop it
-you did.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Impossible, sir!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'It is <i>not</i> impossible,' said the peer, irately;
-'and I am not blind or liable to make
-mistakes; and you too manifestly did so;
-whence this foul accusation of a guest in
-my own house&mdash;a gentleman to whom
-you owe a humble and most complete
-apology.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Shafto was speechless with rage and baffled
-spite at the new and sudden turn his scheme
-had taken, and at being circumvented in his
-own villainy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'My Lord Fettercairn, from my soul I
-thank you!' said Hammersley, drawing himself
-up proudly, looking greatly relieved in
-mind, and, turning next to Shafto, evidently
-waited for the suggested apology.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But in that he was disappointed, as the
-'heir' of Fettercairn turned abruptly on his
-heel and left the room, leaving his lordship
-to make the <i>amende</i>, which he did in very
-graceful terms.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As it was impossible now for both to remain
-longer under the same roof after a fracas of
-this kind, Hammersley proposed at once to
-take his departure for the south by a morning
-train; but Lord Fettercairn, who, with all his
-selfish shortcomings, had been shocked by the
-episode, and by several other ugly matters
-connected with his newly found 'grandson,'
-would by no means permit of that
-movement; and in this spirit of hospitality even
-Lady Fettercairn joined, pressing him to
-remain and finish his visit, as first intended,
-while Shafto, in a gust of baffled rage and
-resentment, greatly to the relief of Finella
-and of the domestics, betook himself to
-Edinburgh, thus for a time leaving his rival more
-than ever in full possession of the field.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Whether she is influenced by Captain
-Hammersley I cannot say,' were the parting
-words of Lady Fettercairn to this young
-hopeful; 'but you seem by this last untoward
-affair to have lost even her friendship, and it
-will be a dreadful pity, Shafto, if all her
-money should be lost to you too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And Shafto fully agreed with his 'dear
-grandmother' that it would be a pity
-indeed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a gentleman and man with a keen sense
-of honour, Hammersley disliked exceedingly
-the secrecy of the engagement he had made
-with Finella, and felt himself actually colour
-more than once when Lord Fettercairn
-addressed him; but his compunctions about it
-grew less when he thought of the awful
-escape he had made from a perilous accusation,
-that might have 'smashed' him in the
-Service, and of the trickery of which Shafto
-was capable&mdash;a trickery of which he had not
-yet seen the end.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-<br /><br />
-AT THE BUFFALO RIVER.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The evening of the 10th January was closing
-in, and the blood-red African sun, through a
-blended haze of gold and pale green, red and
-fiery, seemed to linger like a monstrous
-crimson globe at the horizon, tinging with
-the same hues the Buffalo River as its broad
-waters flowed past the Itelizi Hill towards
-Rorke's Drift.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There a picquet of the Centre or Second
-column of infantry (of the army then
-advancing into Zululand), under Colonel Richard
-Glyn of the 24th Regiment, was posted for
-the night. The main body of the picquet,
-under Lieutenant Vincent Sheldrake, a smart
-young officer, was bivouacked among some
-mealies at a little distance from the bank of
-the river, along the margin of which his
-advanced sentinels were posted at proper
-distances apart, and there each man stood
-motionless as a statue, in his red tunic and
-white tropical helmet, with his rifle at the
-'order,' and his eyes steadily fixed on that
-quarter in which the Zulu army was supposed
-to be hovering.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To reach the Buffalo River the various
-columns of Lord Chelmsford's army could
-not march by regular roads, as no such thing
-exists in Zululand, and the sole guides of our
-officers in selecting the line of advance
-through these savage regions were the
-grass-covered ruts left by the waggon-wheels of
-some occasional trader or sportsman in past
-times.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As the column had been halted for the
-night, at a considerable distance in rear of
-the outlying picquet, the men of the latter
-had their provisions with them ready cooked,
-and were now having their supper in a grassy
-donga or hollow. The earthen floor was
-their table, and Lieutenant Sheldrake, being
-more luxurious than the rest, had spread
-thereon as a cloth an old sheet of the <i>Times</i>;
-but the appetites of all were good, and their
-temperament cheery and hearty. Their rifles
-were piled, and they brewed their coffee over
-a blazing fire, the flame of which glowed on
-their sun-burned and beardless young faces,
-and a few Kaffirs squatted round their own
-fire, jabbered, gesticulated, and swallowed
-great mouthfuls of their favourite liquor
-'scoff.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sheldrake was too ill or weary to attend
-closely to his own duties, and the moment
-the evening meal was over, he desired the
-sergeant of the picquet to 'go round the
-advanced sentries.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The sergeant, a young and slender man,
-and who was no other than Florian, touched
-the barrel of his rifle and departed on his
-mission&mdash;to visit the sentinels in rotation by
-the river bank, and see that they were in
-communication with those of the picquets on
-the right and left.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The scenery around was savage and
-desolate; long feathery grass covered the
-veldt for miles upon miles. The chief features
-in it were some blue gum trees, and on a
-koppie, or little eminence, the deserted ruins
-of a Boer farm under the shadow of a clump
-of eucalyptus trees; and in the foreground
-were some bustards and blue Kaffir cranes
-by the river bank.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Short service and disease had given Florian
-rapid promotion; for our soldiers, if brave,
-had no longer the power of manly endurance
-of their predecessors under the old system.
-According to General Crealock, the extreme
-youth of our soldiers in South Africa rendered
-their powers for toil very small; while the
-Naval Brigade, composed of older men, had
-scarcely ever a man in hospital. The Zulu
-campaign was a very trying one; there were
-the nightly entrenchments, the picquet duty
-amid high grass, and the absence of all
-confidence that discipline and that long mutual
-knowledge of each other give in the ranks.
-He added most emphatically that our younger
-soldiers were unfit for European campaigning;
-that half the First Division were 'sick;'
-there were always some 200 weak lads in
-hospital, 'crawling about like sick flies,' and,
-like him, every officer was dead against the
-short-service system.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The face of our young sergeant was handsome
-as ever; but it was strangely altered
-since late events had come to pass. There
-was a haggard and worn look in the features,
-particularly in the eyes. The latter looked
-feverish and dim&mdash;their brightness less at
-times, while a shadow seemed below them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian having, as he now deemed, no
-right to the name of Melfort, or even that of
-MacIan, had enlisted under the latter name,
-as that by which he had been known from
-infancy, lest he might make a false
-attestation. The name of Gyle he shrank from,
-even if it was his&mdash;which at times he doubted!
-His regiment was the brave old 24th, or
-Second Warwickshire, which had been raised
-in the eventful year 1689 by Sir Edward
-Dering, Bart, of Surrenden-Dering, head of
-one of the few undoubted Saxon families in
-England, and it was afterwards commanded
-in 1695 by Louis, Marquis de Puizar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Second to none in the annals of war during
-the reigns of Anne and the early Georges,
-the 24th in later times served with valour at
-the first capture of the Cape of Good Hope,
-in the old Egyptian campaign, in the wars of
-Spain and India, and now they were once
-again to cover themselves with a somewhat
-clouded and desperate glory in conflict with
-the gallant Zulus.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian in his new career found himself
-occasionally among a somewhat mixed and
-rough lot&mdash;the raw, weedy soldiers of the
-new disastrous system&mdash;but there were many
-who were of a better type; and the thought
-of Dulcie Carlyon&mdash;the only friend he had in
-the world, the only human creature who loved
-him&mdash;kept him free from the temptations and
-evil habits of the former; and he strove to
-live a steady, pure, and brave life, that he
-might yet be worthy of her, and give her no
-cause to blush for him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He got through his drilling as quickly as
-he could, and soon discovered that the sooner
-a soldier takes his place in the ranks the
-better for himself. He found that though
-many of his comrades were noisy, talkative,
-and quarrelsome, that the English soldier
-quicker than any other discovers and appreciates
-a gentleman. His officers soon learned
-to appreciate him too, and hence the rapidity
-with which he won his three chevrons, and
-Mr. Sheldrake felt that, young though he
-was, he could trust Florian to go round the
-sentinels.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Each was at his post, and the attention of
-each increased as the gloom after sunset
-deepened, for none knew who or what might
-be approaching stealthily and unseen among
-the long wavy grass and mossy dongas that
-yawned amid the country in front.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Hush, Bob!' said he to his comrade, Edgehill,
-whom he heard singing merrily to himself,
-'you should be mute as a fish on outpost
-duty, and keep your ears open as well as your
-eyes. What have you got in your head,
-Bob, that makes you so silly? But, as the
-author of the "Red Rag" says, we soldiers
-have not much in our heads at any time, or
-we wouldn't go trying to stop cannon balls
-or bullets with them.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Right you are, Sergeant,' replied Bob,
-'but I can't think what made you&mdash;a
-gentleman&mdash;enlist.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Because I was bound to be a soldier, I
-suppose. And you?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Through one I wish I never had seen?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Who was that?'
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;'The handsome young girl,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With her fringe in curl,<br />
- That worked a sewing-machine,'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-&mdash;sung the irrepressible Bob; and Florian
-returned to report 'all right' to Mr. Sheldrake.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Though the actual cause of the Zulu war
-lies a little apart from our story, it may be
-necessary to mention that we invaded the
-country of Cetewayo after giving him a
-certain time, up to the 11th of January, to
-accept our ultimatum; to adopt an alternative
-for war, by delivering up certain of his subjects
-who had violated British territory, attacked a
-police-station, and committed many outrages,&mdash;among
-others, carrying off two women, one
-of whom they put to a barbarous death near
-the Buffalo River.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But instead of making any apology, or
-giving an indemnity, Cetewayo prepared to
-defend himself at the head of an enormous
-army of hardy Zulu warriors, all trained in a
-fashion of their own, divided into strong
-regiments, furnished with powerful shields
-of ox-hide, and armed with rifles, war clubs,
-and assegais&mdash;a name with which we are now
-so familiar. The shaft of this weapon averages
-five feet in length, with the diameter of
-an ordinary walking-stick, cut from the assegai
-tree, which is not unlike mahogany in its fibre,
-and furnished with a spear-head. Some are
-barbed, some double-barbed, and the tang of
-the blade is fitted&mdash;when red-hot&mdash;into the
-wood, not the latter into the blade, which is
-then secured by a thong of wet hide, and
-is so sharp that the Zulu can shave his
-head with it; and it is a weapon which
-they can launch with deadly and unerring
-skill.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Zulu king, says Captain Lucas, was
-unable to sign his own name, 'and was as
-ignorant and as savage as our Norman kings,'
-and he thought no more of putting women,
-'especially young girls, to death, than Bluff
-King Hal' himself; yet a little time after all
-this was to see him presented at Osborne,
-and to become the petted and fêted exile of
-Melbury Road, Kensington.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This night by the Buffalo River was
-Florian's first experience of outpost duty,
-and he felt&mdash;though not the responsible
-party&mdash;anxious, wakeful, and weary after a
-long and toilsome day's march.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew enough of military matters to be
-well aware that the importance of outposts,
-especially when dealing with a wily and savage
-enemy, could scarcely be exaggerated, for no
-force, when encamped in the field, can be
-deemed for a moment safe without them.
-Thus it was a maxim of Frederick the Great
-that it was pardonable to be defeated, but
-never to be surprised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't understand all this change that
-has come over my life,' thought he, as he
-stretched himself on the bare earth near the
-picquet fire; 'but I wonder if my father and
-mother can see and think of me where they
-are. Yet I sometimes feel,' he added, with
-a kind of boyish gush in his heart, 'as if they
-were near me and watching over me, so they
-must see and think too.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Where was Dulcie, then, and what was she
-doing? How supporting herself, as she said
-she would have to do? Had she found
-friends, or, months ago, been trodden, with
-all her tender beauty, down in the mire of
-misfortune and adversity?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-These were maddening thoughts for one
-so far away and so utterly powerless to help
-her as Florian felt himself, and rendered him
-at times more reckless of his own existence
-because it was useless to her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The air around was heavy with the dewy
-fragrance of strange and tropical plants, and
-vast, spiky, and fan-shaped leaves cast their
-shadows over him as he strove to snatch the
-proverbial 'forty winks' before again going
-'the rounds,' or posting the hourly reliefs, for
-they are always hourly when before an enemy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And when our weary young soldier did
-sleep, he dreamt, not of the quick-coming
-strife, nor even of blue-eyed Dulcie, with
-her wealth of red golden hair, but, as the
-tender smile on his lips might have showed,
-of the time when his mother watched him in
-his little cot, with idolizing gaze, and when he,
-the now bronzed and moustached soldier, was
-a little child, with rings of soft dusky hair
-curling over his white forehead; when his
-cheeks had a rosy flush, and his tiny mouth
-a smile, and she fondly kissed the little hands
-that lay outside the snow-white coverlet her
-own deft fingers had made&mdash;the two wee
-hands that held his mother's heart between
-them&mdash;the heart that had long since mouldered
-by Revelstoke Church.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And so he slept and dreamed till roused
-by the inevitable cry of 'Sentry, go!' and,
-that duty over, as he composed himself to
-sleep again, with his knapsack under his
-head for a pillow, he thought as a soldier&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'To-day is ours. To-morrow never yet<br />
- On any human being rose or set!'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XIX.
-<br /><br />
-ELANDSBERGEN.
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Next morning when the picquet was relieved
-young Sheldrake, who paid Hammersley's
-company in absence of the latter, who was soon
-expected with a strong draft from England,
-said to Florian&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look here, MacIan, I've made a stupid
-mistake. The company's money I have left
-among my heavier baggage in the fort beyond
-Elandsbergen, and I have got the Colonel's
-permission to send you back for it. This
-is just like me&mdash;I've a head, and so has a
-pin! The Quartermaster will lend you his
-horse, and you can have my spare revolver
-and ammunition. Have a cigar before you
-go,' he added, proffering his case, 'and look
-sharp after yourself and the money. There
-is a deuced unchancy lot in the quarter you
-are going back to. We don't advance from
-this till to-morrow, so you have plenty of
-time to be with us ere we cross the river, if
-you start at once.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Very good, sir,' replied Florian, as he
-saluted and went away to obtain the horse,
-the revolver, and to prepare for a duty which
-he intensely disliked, and almost doubted his
-power to carry out, as it took him rearward
-through a country of which he was ignorant,
-which was almost without roads, and where
-he would be single-handed, if not among
-savages, among those who were quite as
-bad, for in some of these districts, as in the
-Orange Free State and Boerland, there
-swarmed broken ruffians of every kind,
-many of them deserters; and, says an
-officer, 'so great, in fact, was the number
-of these undesirable specimens of our
-countrymen assembled in Harrysmith alone
-that night was truly made hideous with
-their howlings, respectable persons were
-afraid to leave their houses after nightfall,
-and the report of revolvers ceased to elicit
-surprise or curiosity. I have been in some
-of the most notorious camps and towns in
-the territories and mining districts of the
-United States, but can safely assert that I
-never felt more thankful than when I found
-my horse sufficiently rested here to continue
-my journey.' There were lions, too, in the
-wild plains, for some of our cavalry horses
-were devoured by them; the tiger-cat and
-the aarde-wolf also.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a knowledge of all this Florian
-loaded his revolver, looked carefully to the
-bridle and stirrup leathers of his horse,
-received a note from Mr. Sheldrake to the
-officer commanding the little fort near the
-foot of the Drakensberg, and left the camp
-of No. 2 column on his solitary journey,
-steering his way by the natural features of
-the country so far as he could recall them
-after the advance of the 10th January, and
-watching carefully for the wheel tracks or
-other indications of a roadway leading in a
-westerly direction; and many of his comrades,
-including Bob Edgehill, watched him with
-interest and kindly anxiety till his white
-helmet disappeared as he descended into a
-long grassy donga, about a mile from Rorke's
-Drift.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The evening passed and the following day
-dawned&mdash;the important 12th&mdash;when Zululand
-was to be invaded at three points by the three
-columns of Lord Chelmsford; the advance
-party detailed from Colonel Glyn's brigade
-to reconnoitre the ground in front got under
-arms and began to move off, and Sheldrake
-and others began to feel somewhat uneasy,
-for there was still no appearance of the
-absent one.
-</p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-* * * *
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The country through which Florian rode
-was lonely, and farmhouses were few and
-many miles apart. Its natural features were
-undulating downs covered with tall waving
-grass, furrowed by deep, reedy water-courses;
-here and there were abrupt rocky eminences,
-and dense brushwood grew in the rugged
-kloofs and ravines.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The air was delightful, and in spite of his
-thoughts the blood coursed freely through
-his veins; his spirits rose, and, exhilarated
-by the pace at which his horse went, he could
-not help giving a loud 'Whoop!' now and
-then when a gnu, with its curved horns and
-white mane, or a hartebeest appeared on the
-upland slopes, or a baboon grinned at him
-from amid the bushes of a kloof.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Before him stretched miles of open and
-grassy veldt, and the flat-topped hills of the
-Drakensberg range closed the horizon. The
-vast stretch of plain, across which ever and
-anon swept herds of beautiful little antelopes,
-was covered with luxuriant grass, which
-seemed smooth as a billiard-table, and over it
-went the track, which he was always afraid of
-losing. But, if pleasant to look upon, the
-veldt was treacherous ground, for hidden by
-the grass were everywhere deep holes
-burrowed by the ant-bears, and into these his
-horse's forelegs sank ever and anon, to the
-peril of the animal and his rider too. Thus
-Florian was compelled to proceed at a canter
-with his reins loose, while he sat tight and
-prepared for swerving when his nag, which was a
-native horse, prepared to dodge an apparent
-hole, which they can do with wonderful sagacity.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So Florian was not sorry when he left the
-veldt behind him, and after a ride of about
-thirty miles saw the earthworks of the small
-fort at the foot of Drakensberg appear in
-front with a little Union Jack fluttering on a
-flagstaff.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was about mid-day.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Anxious to return as soon as he could rest
-his horse, he lost no time in delivering
-Sheldrake's note to the officer in command,
-and with the key of a trunk indicated
-therein among his best uniform, and amid
-girls' photos, bundles of letters, old button
-bouquets, rare pipes, and an omnium-gatherum
-of various things, the bag was found,
-with the company's money, and delivered to
-Florian, who, after a two hours' halt, set out
-on his return journey; but he had not
-proceeded many miles when he found that his
-horse was utterly failing him, and, regretting
-that he had not remained at the post for the
-night, he resolved to spend it in the little
-town of Elandsbergen, towards which he bent
-his way, leading the now halting nag by the
-bridle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Elandsbergen consisted of a few widely
-detached cottages studding both sides of a
-broad pathway, amid a vast expanse of veldt
-or prairie, with fragmentary attempts at
-cultivation here and there; and how the people
-lived seemed somewhat of a mystery. Rows
-of stunted oaks lined the street, if such it
-could be called, and through it flowed a rill of
-pure water, at which the poor nag drank
-thirstily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Elandsbergen boasted of one hostelry,
-dignified by the title of the Royal Hotel,
-where 'civil entertainment for man and beast'
-was promised by the landlord, 'Josh Jarrett.' It
-was a somewhat substantial edifice of two
-storeys, built of baked brick, square in form,
-with a flat roof composed of strong lattice-work,
-covered with half-bricks and with clayey
-mortar to render it impervious to the torrents
-of the South African rainy season.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In some of the windows were glass panes;
-in others sheepskin with the wool off, which,
-in consequence of extreme tension, attains a
-certain transparency. Giving his horse to a
-Kaffir ostler, whose sole raiment was a
-waistcoat made of a sleeveless regimental tunic,
-Florian somewhat wearily entered the 'hotel,'
-the proprietor of which started and changed
-colour at the sight of his red coat, as well he
-might, for, though disguised by a bushy beard,
-sedulously cultivated, and a shock head of
-hair under his broad-leaved hat, he was one
-of the many deserters from our troops,
-already referred to, and, though apparently
-anxious to appear civil, was secretly a ruffian
-of the worst kind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The room into which he ushered Florian
-was bare-walled, the furniture was of the
-plainest and rudest kind, and the floor was
-formed of cow-dung over wet clay, all
-kneaded, trodden, and hardened till it could
-be polished, a process learned from the Zulus
-in the construction of their kraals.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A fly-blown map of Cape Colony, a cheap
-portrait of Sir Bartle Frere, and the skull of
-an eland with its spiral horns were the only
-decorations of the apartment, and the literature
-of 'the day' was represented by three
-tattered copies of the <i>Cape Argus</i>, <i>Natal
-Mercury</i>, and the <i>Boer Volksteem</i>.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Josh Jarrett was dressed like a Boer, and in
-person was quite as dirty as a Boer; his loose
-cracker-trousers were girt by a broad belt
-with a square buckle, whereat hung a leopard-skin
-pouch and an ugly hunting-knife with a
-cross hilt. In the band of his broad hat were
-stuck a large meerschaum pipe and the tattered
-remnant of an ostrich feather.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Kaffir ostler now came hurriedly in,
-and announced something in his own language
-to the landlord, who, turning abruptly to
-Florian, said&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are in something of a fix, Sergeant!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'How&mdash;what do you mean?' demanded Florian.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That your horse is dying.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Dying!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, of the regular horse-sickness.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian in no small anxiety and excitement
-hurried out to the stable, in which two other
-nags were stalled, and there he saw the poor
-animal he had ridden lying among the straw
-in strong convulsions, labouring under that
-curse of South Africa, the horse-sickness, a
-most mysterious disorder, which had suddenly
-attacked it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The animal had looked sullen and dull all
-morning, and in the stable had been assailed
-by the distemper and its usual symptoms,
-heaving flanks, disturbed breathing, glassy
-eyes, and a projecting tongue tightly clenched
-between the teeth. Then came the convulsions,
-and he was dead in half an hour,
-and Florian found that he would probably
-have to travel afoot for more than twenty
-miles before he could rejoin the column on
-the morrow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Where have you come from, Sergeant?'
-asked Josh Jarrett, when they returned to the
-public room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The fort at the Drakensberg, last.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Taking French leave, eh?' said Jarrett,
-with a portentous wink and a brightening eye.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Not at all!' replied Florian, indignantly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Fellows do so every day now in these
-short-service times.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I was going to the front, when my horse
-fell lame.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Belong to the Mounted Infantry?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The dismounted now, I think,' replied
-Florian. 'I should like to rest here for the
-night, and push on as best I can to-morrow;
-so what can I have for supper?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Josh Jarrett paused a moment, as if he
-thought a sergeant's purse would not go far
-in the way of luxuries, and then replied:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Rasher of bacon and eggs, or dried beef
-and a good glass of squareface or Cape smoke,
-which you please.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The first will do, and a glass of the
-squareface, which means Hollands, I suppose.
-Cape smoke is a disagreeable spirit,' replied
-Florian wearily, as he took off his helmet
-and seated himself in a large cane-bottomed
-chair.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Won't you lay aside your revolver?' asked
-Jarrett.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thanks&mdash;well, no&mdash;I am used to it.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'As you please,' said the other surlily, and
-summoning in a loud voice a female named
-'Nan,' left the room.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The latter laid the table, brought in the
-frugal supper, with a case bottle of squareface,
-and, instead of leaving the room, seated
-herself near a window and entered into conversation,
-with what object Florian scarcely knew,
-but he disliked the circumstance, till he began
-to remember that she probably considered
-herself his equal.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When his hasty repast was over, taking a
-hint from a remark that he was weary, she
-withdrew, and then Florian began to consider
-the situation.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was fully twenty miles from the regiment;
-a rough country, not to be traversed
-even by daylight, infested with wild animals,
-and many obnoxious things, such as
-puff-adders, perhaps Zulus, lay between; and
-unless Jarrett would accommodate him with
-a horse, which was very unlikely (he seemed
-such a sullen and forbidding fellow), he would
-have to travel the journey on foot, and begin
-betimes on the morrow as soon as dawn would
-enable him to see the track eastward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He examined Sheldrake's handsome revolver
-and its ammunition, reloading the six
-chambers carefully. Then he thought of the
-company's money; and tempted, he knew
-not by what rash impulse unless it was mere
-boyish curiosity, he untied the red tape by
-which the paymaster had secured the mouth
-of the bag to have a peep at the gold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He had never seen a hundred sovereigns
-before, and never before had so much money
-in his possession. Some of the glittering
-coins fell out on the clay floor; and as he
-gathered them up a sound made him look
-round, and from the window he saw a human
-face suddenly vanish outside, thus showing
-that some one had, hitherto unnoticed, been
-furtively watching him, and he strongly
-suspected it to be the woman Nan, prompted,
-perhaps, by idle curiosity, and in haste he
-concealed the gold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was the more convinced of the lurker
-being she when, soon after, she entered, retook
-her seat by the window, through which the
-evening sun was streaming now, and began
-to address him in a light and flippant manner,
-as if to get up a flirtation with him for ulterior
-purposes; but his suspicions were awakened
-now, and Florian was on his guard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He perceived that she had made some
-alterations and improvements in her tawdry
-dress, and had hung in her ears a pair of
-large old-fashioned Dutch ear-rings shaped
-like small rams' horns of real gold.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She seemed to be about thirty years of
-age, and was not without personal attractions,
-though all bloom was past, and the
-expression of her face was marred by its being
-alternately leering, mocking, and&mdash;even in
-spite of herself&mdash;cruel. Yet her eyes were
-dark and sparkling. She wore a fringe of
-thick brown hair close down to them,
-concealing nearly all her forehead. Her mouth,
-if large, was handsome, but lascivious-looking,
-and Florian, whose barrack-room
-experience had somewhat 'opened his eyes,'
-thought&mdash;though he was not ungallant
-enough to say so&mdash;that her absence would
-be preferable to her company, which she
-seemed resolved to thrust upon him. But
-guests were doubtless scarce in these parts,
-and the 'Royal Hotel,' Elandsbergen, had
-probably not many visitors.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She asked him innumerable questions&mdash;his
-age, country, regiment, and so forth&mdash;and all
-in a wheedling coaxing way, toyed with his
-hair, and once attempted to seat herself on
-his knee; but he rose and repelled her, and
-then it was that the unmistakably cruel
-expression came flashing into her eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You are too young and too handsome
-to be killed and disembowelled by the big
-Zulus,' said she after a pause; 'they could
-eat a boy like you. Why don't you desert
-and go to the Diamond Fields?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Thank you; I would die rather than do that!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And so you serve the Queen, my dear?'
-she said sneeringly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'For what reason do you fight the poor Zulus?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Honour,' replied Florian curtly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I have read&mdash;I have some book-knowledge,
-you see&mdash;that when a Swiss officer
-was reproached by a French one that he
-fought for pay, and not like himself for
-honour, "So be it," replied the Swiss, "we
-each of us fight for that which he is most in
-need of."'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't see the allusion in this instance:
-a soldier, I do my duty and obey orders.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Have a drop more of the squareface&mdash;you
-can't be so rude as to refuse a lady,'
-she continued, filling up a long glass, which
-she put to her lips, and then to those of
-Florian, who pretended to sip and then put
-the glass down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was at a loss to understand her and
-her advances. Vanity quite apart, he knew
-that he was a good-looking young fellow,
-and that his uniform 'set him off;' but he
-remembered the face at the window, and was
-on his guard against her in every way.
-Would she have acted thus with an officer? he
-thought; and in what relation did she
-stand to the truculent-looking landlord&mdash;wife,
-daughter, or sister? Probably none
-of them at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly her mood changed, or appeared
-to do so, and seating herself at a rickety old
-piano, which Florian had not noticed before,
-she, while eyeing him waggishly, proceeded
-to sing a once-popular flash song, long since
-forgotten in England, and probably taken
-out by some ancient settler, generations
-ago, to the Cape Colony:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'If I was a wife, and my dearest life<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Took it into his noddle to die,<br />
- Ere I took the whim to be buried with him,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I think I'd know very well <i>why</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'If poignant my grief, I'd search for relief&mdash;<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not sink with the weight of my care:<br />
- A salve might be found, no doubt, above ground,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And I think I know very well <i>where</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- 'Another kind mate should give me what fate<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would not from the former allow;<br />
- With him I'd amuse the hours you abuse,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And I think I'd know very well <i>how</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- ''Tis true I'm a maid, and so't may be said<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No judge of the conjugal lot;<br />
- Yet marriage, I ween, has a cure for the spleen,<br />
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And I think I know very well <i>what</i>.'<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-This she sang with a skill and power that
-savoured of the music hall, and then tried
-her blandishments again to induce Florian to
-drink of the fiery squareface; but he resisted
-all her inducement to take 'just one little
-glass more.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Why was she so anxious that he should
-imbibe that treacherous spirit, which he
-would have to pay for? And why did the
-landlord, who certainly seemed full of
-curiosity about him, leave him so entirely
-in her society?
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly the voice of the latter was heard
-shouting, 'Nan, Nan!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That is Josh,' said she impatiently;
-'bother him, what does he want now? Josh
-is getting old, and nothing improves by age.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Except brandy,' said Florian smiling, as
-he now hoped to be rid of her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Right; and squareface, perhaps. Have
-one glass more, dear, before I leave you.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But he turned impatiently away, and she
-withdrew, closing a scene which caused
-Florian much suspicion and perplexity. He
-remembered to have read, that 'man destroys
-with the horns of a bull, or with paws like a
-bear; woman by nibbling like a mouse, or
-by embracing like a serpent.' And he was
-in toils here unseen as yet!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The light faded out beyond the dark
-ridges of the Drakensberg, and Florian
-requested to be shown to his sleeping-apartment,
-which was on the upper storey.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You may hear a roaring lot here
-by-and-by,' said his host; 'but you are a soldier,
-and I dare say will sleep sound enough. You
-will be tired, too, after your ride.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The man had now a sneaking and wicked
-look in his eyes, which avoided meeting
-those of Florian, and which the latter did
-not like, but there was no help for it then.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You will call me early if I sleep too
-long,' said Florian, as Jarrett gave him a
-candle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The hand of the latter shook as he did
-so&mdash;he had evidently been drinking heavily,
-and his yellow-balled eyes were bloodshot,
-and his voice thick, as he said:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Good-night, Sergeant; you'll sleep sound
-enough,' and closed the door.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With a sigh almost of relief Florian found
-himself alone. He set down the sputtering
-candle, and turned to fasten the door. It
-was without a lock, and secured only by a
-latch, by which it could be opened from the
-outside as well as within.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On making this startling discovery, Florian's
-heart glowed with indignation and growing
-alarm! He felt himself trapped!
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-CHAPTER XX.
-<br /><br />
-BAFFLED!
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The room was small, low-ceiled, and its only
-furniture was a table, chair, and truckle-bed&mdash;all
-obviously of Dutch construction&mdash;and,
-unless he could find some means to secure
-his door, he resolved to remain awake till
-dawn. The only window in the room
-overlooked the roof of the stable where the
-dead horse lay. The sash was loose, and
-shook in the night wind, and he could see
-the bright and, to him, new constellations
-glittering in the southern sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian contrived to secure the door by
-placing the chair on the floor as a wedge or
-barrier between it and the bedstead, on the
-mattress of which&mdash;though not very savoury
-in appearance&mdash;he cast himself, for he was
-weary, worn, and felt that there was an
-absolute necessity for husbanding his strength,
-as he knew not what might be before him, so
-he extinguished the candle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Something in the general aspect and bearing
-of the man Josh Jarrett, and in those of the
-woman, with her efforts to intoxicate him, and
-something, too, in his general surroundings
-and isolated situation&mdash;for the few scattered
-houses of Elandsbergen were all far
-apart&mdash;together with the memory of the prying face
-he had seen at the window, at the very
-moment he was picking up the gold, all
-served to put Florian on his guard; thus he
-lay down without undressing, and, longing
-only for daylight, grasped ever and anon the
-butt of his pistol.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For some time past he had been unused
-to the luxury of even a truckle-bed or other
-arrangements for repose than his grey
-greatcoat and ammunition blanket, with a
-knapsack for a pillow; hence, despite his
-keen anxiety, he must have dropped asleep,
-for how long he knew not; but he suddenly
-started up as the sound of voices below came
-to his ear, and the full sense of his peculiar
-whereabouts rushed on him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Voices! They were coarse and deep, but
-not loud&mdash;voices of persons talking in low
-and concentrated tones in the room beneath,
-separated from him only by the ill-fitting boarding
-of the floor, between the joints of which
-lines of light were visible, and one bright
-upward flake, through a hole from which a
-knot had dropped out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Curse him, he's but a boy; I could
-smash the life out of him by one blow of
-my fist!' he heard his host, Josh Jarrett,
-say.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Others responded to this, but in low,
-stealthy, and husky tones. Certain that
-some mischief with regard to himself was on
-the <i>tapis</i>. Florian crept softly to the orifice
-in the floor, and looked down. Round a
-dirty and sloppy table, covered with
-drinking-vessels, pipes and tobacco-pouches, bottles
-of squareface and Cape smoke, were Josh
-Jarrett and three other ruffians, digger-like
-fellows, with Nan among them, all drinking;
-and a vile-looking quintette they were,
-especially the woman, with her hair all
-dishevelled now, and her face inflamed by
-that maddening compound known as Cape
-smoke.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'When I was ass enough to be in the
-Queen's service,' said Jarrett with a horrible
-imprecation, 'these 'ere blooming officers and
-non-comms. led me a devil of a life; they
-said it was my own fault that I was always
-drunk and in the mill. Be that as it may,
-I've one of the cursed lot upstairs, and I'll
-sarve him out for what they made me
-undergo, cuss 'em. One will answer my
-purpose as well as another. Nan, you did
-your best to screw him, but he was
-wary&mdash;infernally wary. Blest if I don't think the
-fellow is a Scotsman after all, for all his
-English lingo.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Yes, he did shirk his liquor,' hiccupped
-the amiable Nan; 'you should have drugged
-it, Josh.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'But then we didn't know that he had all
-this chink about him.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'That must be ours,' growled a fellow who
-had not yet spoken, but was prodding the
-table with a knife he had drawn from his
-belt; 'we'll give him a through ticket to the
-other world&mdash;one with the down train.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'And no return,' added Nan, laughing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Florian felt beads of perspiration on his
-brow; he was one against five&mdash;entrapped,
-baited, done to death&mdash;and if he did not
-appear at headquarters with the fatal money,
-what would be thought of him but that he
-had deserted with it, and his name would
-be branded as that of a coward and robber.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dulcie! The thought of Dulcie choked
-him, but it nerved him too.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another truculent-looking fellow now came
-in, making five men in all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'He has money galore on him&mdash;Nan saw
-the gold&mdash;money in a canvas bag. How
-comes he, a sergeant, to have all this in his
-grab, unless he stole it?' said Jarrett, in
-explanation to the new-comer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Of course he stole it&mdash;it's regimental
-money, and evidently he is deserting with
-it,' said the other, who was no doubt, like
-Jarrett, a Queen's bad bargain also; for he
-added, 'What the devil do Cardwell's short-service
-soldiers care about their chances of
-pension or promotion&mdash;that's the reason he
-has the bag of gold; so why shouldn't we
-make it ours? It is only dolloping a knife
-into him, and then burying him out in the
-veldt before daylight. Even if he was
-traced here, who is to be accountable for a
-deserter?'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And this practical ruffian proceeded at
-once to put a finer edge and point upon his
-long bowie knife.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'You forget that he has a revolver,' said Nan.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'I don't,' said Jarrett; 'but he ain't likely
-to use it in his sleep, especially when we pin
-him by the throat.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was but one against five armed and
-reckless desperadoes; and there was the
-woman, too, whose hands were ready for
-evil work. The stair that led to his room
-was narrow&mdash;so much so that there was but
-space for one on a step. The lower or outer
-door he knew to be securely locked and
-bolted. The window of his room, we have
-said, overlooked the lean-to roof of the
-stable, where he knew that two horses were
-in stall&mdash;a sure means of escape could he
-reach one; but the door, he was aware, was
-locked, and the key in possession of the
-Kaffir groom.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was maddened by the thought that his
-barbarous and obscure death would brand
-him with a double disgrace; and death is
-more than ever hard when suffered at the
-hands of cowards.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'What is the use of all this blooming
-talk?' said one, starting from the table; 'let
-us set about the job at once!'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Look you,' said Jarrett, 'if roused he'll
-perhaps try to escape by the stable-roof, so
-while you fellows go up the stair, I go round
-to the back of the house and cut off his
-retreat.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'The stable-roof,' thought Florian, 'my
-only chance lies that way.'
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He opened the window at the very
-moment that stealthy steps sounded on the
-wooden stair, and a red light streamed under
-the door, which their felon hands failed to
-force, so firmly was the chair wedged
-between it and the bed. He slid down the
-stable-roof, and dropped safely on the ground,
-to be faced by Josh Jarrett, who came rushing
-on, knife in hand, but Florian shot him
-down, firing two chambers into his very
-teeth, and then he sprang away like a hare
-out into the open veldt, leaving the ruffian
-wallowing in his blood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He knew not and cared not in what
-direction he ran at first, as he could hear the
-oaths and imprecations of his pursuers, over
-whom his youth, lightness, and activity gave
-him an advantage; but after a time red-dawn
-began to streak the eastern sky, and he
-knew that was the direction which, if he was
-spared, would take him to the bank of the
-Buffalo River.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He continued to run at a good steady
-double, saving his wind as he did so, and his
-courage and confidence rose when he found
-that he was distancing his pursuers so much
-that he could neither see nor hear anything
-of them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As he ran on he thought for a moment or
-two of the fierce gleaming eyes and glistening
-teeth of Jarrett&mdash;of the blood he had shed,
-and the life he had perhaps taken for the
-first time, remorsefully; but had he not acted
-thus, what would he have been? A gashed
-corpse!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-'Bah!' he said aloud, 'I am a soldier&mdash;why
-such thoughts at all? Why should I
-have mercy when these wretches would have
-had none?' and he began to regret that he
-had not fired a random shot or two through
-the room-door and knocked over some of
-them on the staircase.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A sound now struck his ear; it was the
-thud of galloping hoofs upon the veldt, and
-his heart sank as he remembered the two
-horses in the stable, where his dead nag was
-lying.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He looked back, and there, sure enough,
-in the grey dawn were two mounted men
-riding in scouting fashion, far apart, and he
-could not for a moment doubt they were two
-of Jarrett's companions in pursuit, thirsting
-with avarice and for revenge.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He made his way, stumbling wildly and
-breathlessly down a wooded ravine to elude
-their sight; on and on he strove till a vine
-root caught his foot: his hands outstretched
-beat the air for a moment, and then he fell
-headlong forward and downward into a
-donga full of brushwood.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a moment he had a sense of strange
-palms, and giant cacti, and of great plants
-with long spiky leaves being about him, and
-then he became unconscious as he lay there
-stunned and bleeding profusely from a wound
-in his forehead, which had come in contact
-with a stone.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-END OF VOL. I.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
-BILLING &amp; SONS, PRINTERS, GUILDFORD.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
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