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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75174 ***
SONS OF FIRE
A Novel
By Mary Elizabeth Braddon
THE AUTHOR OF
"LADY AUDLEY'S SECRET," "VIXEN,"
"ISHMAEL," ETC.
_IN THREE VOLUMES_
VOL. II.
LONDON
SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON, KENT & CO.
LIMITED
STATIONERS' HALL COURT
[_All rights reserved_]
LONDON:
PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
I. FATE INTERVENES
II. "BEFORE THE NIGHT BE FALLEN ACROSS THY WAY"
III. WHILE LEAVES WERE FALLING
IV. "LET NO MAN LIVE AS I HAVE LIVED"
V. "CHANCE CANNOT CHANGE MY LOVE, NOR TIME IMPAIR"
VI. AT EVENSONG
VII. "THE DEAD MAN TOUCH'D ME FROM THE PAST"
VIII. "WHAT WAS A SPECK EXPANDS INTO A STAR"
IX. "A WHITE STAR MADE OF MEMORY LONG AGO"
X. "AND THAT UNREST WHICH MEN MISCALL DELIGHT"
XI. "WHO KNOWS WHY LOVE BEGINS?"
XII. "THAT WAY MADNESS LIES"
SONS OF FIRE.
CHAPTER I.
FATE INTERVENES.
The return of Geoffrey Wornock made no essential difference in the
lives of the lovers. Suzette continued her organ practice; Allan
continued his visits to the Manor House; and Suzette and Allan were
much oftener Mrs. Wornock's companions than her son, whose restless
temper did not allow of his remaining long in any one place, and for
whom monotony of any kind was intolerable.
He stayed in London for a week buying horses, and having brought home
a string of four, every one supposed to be matchless, he began hunting
with the vigour of a man whose appetite for that British sport had
only been sharpened by paper-chases and polo in the tropics. Not
content with the South Sarum, he travelled up and down the line, hunted
with the Vine from Basingstoke, and with the H. H. from Winchester. He
was up and away in the grey November mornings after a seven-o'clock
breakfast, and seldom home in time for an eight-o'clock dinner.
On the days when there was no hunting to be had, he flung himself
into the delights of the music-room with all the ardour of a musical
fanatic, and Allan and Suzette were content to listen in meek
astonishment to performances which were far above the drawing-room
amateur, although marked by certain imperfections and carelessnesses
which seemed inevitable in a player whose ardour was too fitful for the
drudgery of daily practice.
These musical days were the bright spots in Mrs. Wornock's existence,
the chief bond of union between mother and son; as if music were the
only spell which could hold this volatile spirit within the circle of
domestic love.
"I like my mother to accompany me," said Geoffrey. "I have played with
some prodigious swells, but not one of them has had her sympathetic
touch, her instantaneous comprehension of my spontaneities. They
expected me to be faultily faultless, instead of which I play de Beriot
as Chopin used to play Chopin, indulging every caprice as to time."
Geoffrey was occasionally present when one of the organ lessons was
in progress. He was interested, but not so much so as to sit still
and listen. He carried Allan off to the billiard-room, or the stable,
before the lesson was half over.
"What a happy little family we are," he said laughingly one day, as he
and Allan were strolling stablewards. "My mother is almost as fond of
your _fiancée_ as if she were her daughter."
"Your mother is a very amiable woman, as well as a gifted woman."
"Gifted? yes, that's the word. She is all enthusiasm. There have been
no spiritualists or supernatural people here lately, I suppose?"
"No."
"I'm glad of that. My poor mother loses her head when that kind of
people are in the way. She is ready to believe in their nonsense. She
wants to believe. She wants to see visions and dream dreams. She has
secluded herself from the world of the living, and she would give
half her fortune if she could bring the dead into her drawing-room.
Poor dear mother! How many weary hours she has spent waiting for
materializations that have never materialized! I have never been able
to convince her that all her spiritualistic friends are pretenders and
comedians. She tells me she knows that some are charlatans; but she
believes that their theories are based upon eternal truths. She rebukes
my scepticism with an appeal to the Witch of Endor. I dare not shock
her by confessing that I have my doubts even about the Witch of Endor."
He had a way of making light of his mother's fancies and eccentricities
which had in its gaiety no touch of disrespect. Gaiety was the chief
characteristic of his temperament, as it was with Suzette. He brought a
new element of mirthfulness into the life at Discombe Manor; but with
this happy temperament there was the drawback of an eager desire for
change and movement which disturbed the atmosphere of a house whose
chief charm to Allan's mind had been its sober quiet, its atmosphere of
old-world peace.
Allan studied this young man's character closely, studied him and
thought of him much more than he wanted to think of him, and vainly
struggled against an uneasy feeling that in every superiority of this
new acquaintance there lurked a danger to his own happiness.
"He is handsomer than I am," mused Allan, in one of his despondent
moods. "He has a gayer temper--Suzette's own temper--which sees all
things in the happiest light. I sit and watch them, listen to them,
and feel myself worlds away from them both; and yet if she were free
to-morrow he could never love her as I love her. There, at least, I am
the superior. He has no such power of concentration as I have. To his
frivolous nature no woman could ever be all in all."
These despondent moods were luckily not of long duration. On Suzette's
part there had not been the faintest sign of wavering; and Allan felt
ashamed of the jealous fears which fell ever and anon like a black
cloud across the sunny prospect of his life. However valiantly he might
struggle against that lurking jealousy, there were occasions upon which
he could not master it, and his darkest hours were those during which
he sat in the music-room at Discombe, and heard Suzette and Geoffrey
playing concertante duets for violin and piano. It seemed to him as the
violinist bent over the pretty dark head, to turn a leaf, or to explain
a passage in the piano score, that for these two there was a language
which he knew not, a language in which mind spoke to mind, and perhaps
heart to heart. Who could keep the heart altogether out of the question
when that most eloquent of all languages was making its impassioned
appeal? Every long-drawn legato chord upon the Strad, every delicate
diminuendo of the sighing strings, the tremulous bow so lightly held in
the long lissom fingers, sounded like an avowal.
"I love you, I love you, I love you," sobbed the violin; "how can
you care for that dumb brute yonder, while I am telling my love in
heavenliest sounds, in strains that thrill along every nerve, and
tremble at the door of your heart? How can you care for that dumb dog,
or care how you hurt him by your inconstancy?"
Possessed by these evil fancies, Allan started up from his seat in
a remote window, and began to pace the room in the midst of a de
Beriot sonata, to which Suzette had been promoted after a good deal of
practice in less brilliant music.
"What's the matter, old fellow?" asked Geoffrey, noting that impatient
promenade; "was I out of tune?"
"No, you were only too much in tune."
"How do you mean? I don't understand----"
"Is it likely you can understand me--or I you?" cried Allan,
impetuously. "You have a language which I have not, a sense which
is lacking in me. You and Suzette are in a paradise whose gate I
can't open. Don't think me an envious, churlish kind of fellow, if I
sometimes grudge you your happiness."
"But, my dear Allan, you are fond of music--you like listening----"
"No, I don't. I have had too much listening, too much of being out of
it. Put on your hat, Suzette, and come for a walk. I am tired to death
of your de Beriot."
Mrs. Wornock was sitting a little way from the piano, reading. She
looked up wonderingly at this outburst. Never before had Allan been
guilty of such rough speech in her presence. Never before had he spoken
with such rude authority to Suzette.
"If our music has not the good fortune to please you, I would suggest
that there are several rooms in this house where you would not hear
it," said Geoffrey, laying down his fiddle.
All the brightness had faded from his countenance, leaving it very
pale. Suzette looked from one to the other with an expression of
piteous distress. The two young men stood looking at each other,
Allan flushed and fiery, Geoffrey's pallid face fixed and stern, with
an anger which was stronger than the occasion warranted. They were
sufficiently alike to make any ill-will between them seem like a
brother's quarrel.
"You are very good, but I would rather be out-of-doors. Are you coming,
Suzette?"
"Not till I have finished the sonata," she answered quietly, with a
look which reproved his rudeness, and then began to play.
Geoffrey took up his fiddle, and the performance was resumed as if
nothing had happened.
Mrs. Wornock rose and went to Allan.
"Will you come for a stroll with me, Allan?" she asked, taking up the
warm Indian shawl which lay on a chair near the window. "It is not too
cold for the garden."
He could not refuse such an invitation as this, though it tortured him
to leave those two alone at the piano. He opened the window, wrapped
Mrs. Wornock in her shawl, and followed her to the lawn.
"Allan, why were you angry just now?" she asked.
"Why? Perhaps I had better tell you the truth. I am miserable when I
see the woman I love interested and enthralled by an art in which your
son is a master--and of which I know hardly the A, B, C. I ask myself
if she can care for a creature so inferior as I am--if she can fail to
perceive his superiority."
"Jealous, Allan! Oh, I am so sorry. It was I who proposed that they
should play duets. It was not Geoffrey's idea. I thought it would
encourage Suzette to go on practising. You don't know the delight a
pianist feels in accompanying a violin----"
"I think I can imagine it. Suzette takes very kindly to the concertante
practice."
"She has improved so much since I first knew her. She has such a talent
for music. It never occurred to me that you could object."
"It never occurred to you that I could be a jealous fool. You might
just as well say that, for no doubt you think it."
"Yes, I think you are foolish to be jealous. Suzette is as true as
steel; and I don't believe Geoffrey has the slightest inclination to
fall in love with her."
"Not at this moment, perhaps; but who knows what tender feelings
those dulcet strains may bring? However, Suzette will be leaving the
neighbourhood, I hope, in a few days."
"Leaving us, you hope!"
"Yes. My mother has written to invite her to Fendyke. She is to see the
White Farm, and get acquainted with all our Suffolk neighbours, who
declare themselves dying to see her, while I am shooting my father's
pheasants."
"You are both going away then? I shall miss you sadly."
"You will have Geoffrey."
"One day out of six, perhaps. He will be hunting or shooting all the
rest of the week."
"We shall not be away very long. I don't suppose General Vincent will
spare us his daughter for more than a fortnight or three weeks."
"Suzette told me nothing about the invitation."
"She has not received the letter yet. The post had not come in when she
left home. I met the postman on my way here, and read my letters as I
came along. De Beriot has been too absorbing to allow of my telling
Suzette about my mother's letter to me. Shall we go back? Unless that
sonata is interminable, it must have come to an end before now."
Mrs. Wornock turned immediately. She saw Allan's uneasiness, and
sympathized with him. They went back to the music-room, where there
was only silence. Suzette had left the piano, and had put on her hat
and jacket. Geoffrey was still standing in front of the music-stand,
turning the leaves of the offending sonata.
"Good-bye, dear Mrs. Wornock," said Suzette, kissing her friend. "Now,
Allan, I am quite ready."
Allan and Geoffrey shook hands at parting, but not with the usual
smiling friendliness.
"How could you be so dreadfully rude, Allan?" Suzette said with a
pained voice, as they walked away from the house. "You were quite
hateful."
"I know that. I am astounded at my own capacity for hatefulness."
"I shall play no more concertante duets, though I have enjoyed them
more than anything in the way of music. It was only the most advanced
pupils at the Sacré Cœur who ever had accompanying lessons--and such
happiness never fell to my share."
"I should be very sorry to interfere with your--happiness; but I think,
Suzette, if you cared for me half as much as I care for you, you would
understand how it hurts me to see you so completely in sympathy with
another man, and happy with a happiness which I cannot share."
"Why should you not share our happiness, Allan? You are fond of music,
I know."
"Fond of music--yes; but I am not a musician. I cannot make music as
that young man can. I cannot speak to you as he speaks to you, in that
language which is his and yours, and not mine. I am standing outside
your world. I feel myself thrust far off from you, while he is so near."
"Allan!" cried Suzette, with a smile that was a pale shadow of her old
sportiveness, "can you actually be jealous?"
"I'm afraid I can."
"Jealous about a man who is nothing to me except my dear friend's son.
You know how fond I am of Mrs. Wornock--the only real friend I have
made since I left the convent--and you ought to understand that I like
her son for her sake. And I have been pleased to take my part in the
music they both love. But that is all over now. I will not allow myself
to be misconstrued by you, Allan. There shall be no more duets."
They were still in Mrs. Wornock's domain, in a wooded drive where the
leafless branches overarched the way; and the scene was lonely enough
and sheltered enough to allow of Allan taking his sweetheart to his
breast and kissing her in a rapture of penitent love.
"My darling, forgive me! If I did not know the pricelessness of my
treasure, I should not be so full of unworthy fears. We won't stop the
duets for ever, Susie. I must get accustomed to the idea of a gifted
wife, who has many talents which I have not. But I hope your musical
studies at Discombe may be suspended for a month or so. When you go
home, you will find a letter from my mother inviting you to Fendyke.
She loves you already, and she wants to know more of you, so that you
may really be to her the daughter she has been wishing for ever since
I was born. You will go, won't you, Suzette, if the good General will
spare you; and I think he will?"
"Are you to be there too?"
"Yes, I am to be there; but you shall not see too much of me. Ours
is a shooting county, and I shall be expected to be tramping with my
gun nearly every day. I think you will like Fendyke. The house is a
fine old house, and the neighbourhood is pretty after a fashion, just
as some parts of Holland and Belgium are pretty--sleepy, contented,
prosperous, useful."
He walked home with her and stayed to luncheon, so as to secure
General Vincent's consent upon the spot. This was obtained without
difficulty. The General, having had to dispense with his daughter for
at least three-fourths of her existence, was not dependent upon her for
society, though he liked to see the bright young face smiling at him
across the table at his luncheon and his dinner, and he liked to be
played to sleep after dinner, or to have Suzette as a listener when he
was in the mood for talking. The greater part of his life was spent
out-of-doors--hunting, shooting, fishing, golfing--so that he could
afford to be amiable upon this occasion.
"Yes, yes, Suzette, accept the invitation, by all means. The change
will do you good. Lady Emily is a most estimable person, and it is only
right that you should become better acquainted with her."
"I am very fond of her already," said Suzette. "Then I am really to go,
Allan? Lady Emily suggests Saturday--three days from now."
"Well, you are ready, I suppose," said her father. "You have the frocks
and things that are necessary."
"Yes, father, I think I have frocks enough; unless you are dreadfully
fashionable in Suffolk, Allan."
"The less said about our fashion the better. If you have a stout
cloth skirt short enough to keep clear of our mud, that is all you
need trouble about. I suppose I shall be allowed to escort Suzette,
General?"
"Well, yes, I don't see any objection to your taking care of her on
the journey; but I have very lax notions of etiquette. I must ask my
sister. Suzie will take her maid, of course; and Suzie's maid is a
regular dragon."
* * * * *
Allan walked homeward with a light step and a light heart. The idea of
having Suzette as a visitor in his own home, growing every day nearer
and dearer to his parents, was rapture. No more concertante duets, no
more long-drawn sobbings and sighings on the Stradivarius! He would
have his sweetheart all to himself, to pace the level meadow paths, and
saunter by the modest river, and loiter by rustic mills and bridges,
which Constable may have painted. And in that atmosphere of homely
peacefulness he might draw his sweetheart closer to his heart, win her
more completely than he had won her yet, and persuade her to consent to
a nearer date for their marriage than that far-off summer of the coming
year. He counted much on home influences, on his mother's warmhearted
affection for the newly adopted daughter.
"A telegram, sir," said the servant who opened the door, startling him
from a happy day-dream. "It came nearly an hour ago."
Allan tore open the envelope and glanced carelessly at the message,
expecting some trivial communication.
"Your father is dangerously ill. Come at once. I am writing to
postpone Miss Vincent's visit.--Emily Carew."
CHAPTER II.
"BEFORE THE NIGHT BE FALLEN ACROSS THY WAY."
A sudden end to a happy day-dream. A hurried preparation and a swift
departure. Allan had just time to write to Suzette while his servant
was packing a portmanteau and the dog-cart horse was being harnessed
for the drive to the station.
He loved his father too well to have room for any selfish thoughts
about his own disappointment; but he tried to be hopeful and to think
that his mother's alarm had exaggerated the evil, and that the word
"dangerously" was rather the expression of her own panic than of the
doctor's opinion. It was only natural that she should summon him, the
only son, to his father's sick-bed. The illness must be appalling in
its suddenness; for in her letter, written on the previous day, she had
described him as in his usual health. The suddenness of the attack was
in itself enough to scare a woman of Lady Emily's temperament.
Allan telegraphed from Liverpool Street, and was met at the quiet
little terminus, where the tiny branch line came to an end on the edge
of a meadow, and a hundred yards from a rustic road. The journey to
Cambridge had been one of the swiftest, the twenty miles on the branch
line of the slowest; a heart-breaking journey for a man whose mind was
racked with fears.
It was dark when he arrived; but out of the darkness which surrounded
the terminus there came the friendly voice of a groom and the glare of
carriage-lamps.
"Ah, is that you, Moyle? Is my father any better?"
His heart sank as he asked the question, with agonizing dread of the
reply.
"No, sir; I'm afraid he ain't no better. The doctor from Abbeytown is
coming again to-night. Will you drive, sir?"
"No. Get me home as fast as you can, for God's sake!"
"Yes, sir. I brought your old bay mare. She's the fastest we've got."
"Poor old Kitty! Good to the last, is she? Get on."
They were bowling along the level road behind bay Kitty, the first
hunter Allan had bought on his own account in his old college days,
when his liberal allowance enabled him to indulge his taste in
horseflesh. Kitty had distinguished herself in a small way as a
steeplechaser before Allan picked her up at Tattersall's, and she was
an elderly person when he came into his fortune; so he had left her in
the home stables as a general utility horse.
Kitty carried him along the road at a splendid pace, and hardly
justified impatience even in the most anxious heart.
His mother was waiting in the porch when he alighted.
"Dear mother," he said, as he kissed and soothed her and led her into
the house, "why do you stand out in the cold? You are shivering."
"Not with cold, Allan."
"Poor mother! Is he very ill? Is it really so serious?"
"It could not be more serious, Allan. They thought this morning that he
was dying. They told me--to be prepared--for the worst."
The sentence was broken by sobs. She hid her face on her son's breast
and sobbed out her grief unchecked by him, only soothed by the gentle
pressure of his arm surrounding and, as it were, protecting her from
the invincible enemy.
"Doctors are such alarmists, mother; they often take fright too soon."
"Not in this case, Allan; I was with him all through his sufferings.
I saw him struggling with death. I knew how near death was in those
dreadful hours. It is his heart, Allan. You remember Dr. Arnold's
death--how we have cried over the story in Stanley's book. It was
like that--sudden, intense suffering. Yesterday he was sitting in his
library, placid and at ease among his books. We dined together last
night. He was cheerful and full of interesting talk. And this morning
at daybreak he was fighting for his life. It was terrible."
"But the danger is past, mother. The struggle is over, please God, and
he will be well again."
"Never, never again, Allan. The doctors hold out little hope of that.
The awful agony may return at any hour. The mischief is deep seated. We
have been living in a fool's paradise. Oh, my dear son, I never knew
how fondly I have loved your father till to-day. I thought we should
grow old together, go down to the grave hand-in-hand."
"Dear mother, hope for the best. I cannot think--remembering how young
a man he seemed the other day at Beechhurst--I cannot think that we
are to lose him."
Tears were streaming down Allan's cheeks, tears of which he was
unconscious. He dearly loved the father whose mild affection had
made his childhood and youth so smooth and easy, the father who had
understood every youthful desire, every unexpressed feeling, who in his
tenderness and forethought had been as sympathetic as a loving woman.
"Oh, Allan, you will find him aged by ten years since those happy
days at Beechhurst. One day of suffering has altered him. It seems as
if some invisible writing--the lines of disease and death--had come
suddenly out upon his face--lines I never saw till this day."
"Mother, we won't despair. We are passing through the valley of the
shadow of death, perhaps--but only passing through. The fight may be
hard and bitter; but we shall conquer the enemy; we shall carry our
dearest safely over the dark valley. May I see him? I will be very
calm and quiet. I am so longing to see him, to hold his dear hand."
"We ought to wait for the doctors, Allan. They both warned me that he
must be kept as quiet as possible. He is terribly exhausted. They will
be here at eleven o'clock. It might be safer to wait till then."
"Yes, I will wait. Who is with him now?"
"A nurse from the Abbeytown hospital."
"And he is out of pain, and at rest?"
"He was sleeping when I left him--sleeping heavily, worn out with pain,
and under the influence of opium."
"Well, we must wait. There is nothing to be done."
Mother and son waited patiently, almost silently, through the slow
hours between eight and eleven. They sat together in Lady Emily's
morning-room, which was next to the sick man's bedroom. There was a
door of communication, and though this was shut, they could hear if
there were much movement in the adjoining room.
Lady Emily mooted the question of dinner for the traveller. She urged
him to go down to the dining-room and take some kind of meal after his
journey; but he shook his head with the first touch of impatience he
had shown since his arrival.
"You will wear yourself out, Allan?" she remonstrated.
"No, mother--there is plenty of wear in me. I almost hate myself for
being so strong and so full of life while he is lying there----"
Tears ended the sentence.
At last the hands of the clock, which mother and son had both been
watching, pointed to eleven, and the hour struck with slow and silvery
sound. Then came ten minutes of expectancy, and then the cautious tread
of the family practitioner and the consulting physician coming upstairs
together.
Allan and his mother went out to the corridor to see them. A few
murmured words only, and the two dark figures vanished through the door
of the sick-room, and mother and son were alone once more, waiting,
waiting with aching hearts and strained ears, that listened for every
sound on the other side of the closed door.
The doctors were some time with the patient, and then they went
downstairs, and were closeted together in the library for a time
that seemed very long to those who waited for the result of their
consultation. Those anxious watchers had followed them downstairs, and
were standing beside the expiring fire in the hall, waiting as for
the voice of fate. The dining-room door was open. A table laid for
supper, with glass and silver shining under the lamplight, and the glow
of a blazing fire, suggested comfort and good cheer--and seemed to
accentuate the gloom in the hearts of the watchers.
What were they talking about, those two in the closed room yonder,
Allan wondered. Was their talk all of the sufferer upstairs, and the
means of alleviating pain and staving off the inevitable end? or did
they wander from that question of life and death to the futilities of
everyday conversation--and so lengthen out the agony of those who were
waiting for their verdict? At last the door opened, and the two doctors
came out into the hall, very grave still, but less gloomy than they had
looked in the morning, Lady Emily thought.
"He is better--decidedly better than he was twelve hours ago," said the
physician. "We have tided over the immediate peril."
"And he is out of danger?" questioned Allan, eagerly.
"He is out of danger for the moment. He may go on for some time without
a recurrence of this morning's attack; but I am bound to tell you that
the danger may recur at any time. What has happened must be regarded--I
am sorry to be obliged to say it--as the beginning of the end."
There was a silence, broken only by the wife's stifled sobs.
"My God, how sudden it is! and you say it is hopeless?" said Allan,
stunned by the sentence of doom.
"To you the thing is sudden; but the mischief is a work of many years.
The evil has been there, suspected by your father, but never fully
realized. He consulted me ten years ago, and I gave him the best advice
the case allowed--prescribed a regimen which I believe he carefully
followed--a regimen which consisted chiefly in quietness and careful
living. I told him as much as it was absolutely necessary to tell,
taking care not to frighten him."
"You did not tell me that he was a doomed man," Lady Emily said
reproachfully.
"My dear lady, to have done that would have been to lessen his chance
of cheerful surroundings, to run the risk of sad looks where it was
most needful he should find hopefulness. Besides, at that stage of
the disease, one might hope for the best--even for a long life, under
favourable conditions."
"And now--what is the limit of your hope?" asked Allan.
"I cannot measure the sands in the glass. Another attack like that of
to-day would, I fear, be fatal. It is a wonder to me that he survived
the agony of this morning."
"And you have told us--that agony may return at any hour. Nothing you
can do can prevent its recurrence?"
"I fear not; but we shall do the uttermost."
"May I see him?"
"Not till to-morrow. He is still under the influence of an opiate.
Let him rest for to-night undisturbed by one agitating thought. His
frame is exhausted by suffering. Mr. Travers will be here again early
to-morrow; and if he find his patient as I hope he will find him, then
you and Lady Emily can see him for a few minutes. But I must beg that
there may be no emotional talk, and that he may be kept very quiet all
to-morrow. I will come again early on Saturday."
Mother and son hung upon the physician's words. He was a man whom both
trusted, and even in this great strait the idea of other help hardly
occurred to either. Yet in the desire to do the uttermost, Allan
ventured to say--
"If you would like another opinion, I would telegraph for any one you
might suggest--among London specialists."
"A specialist could do nothing more than we have done. The battle is
fought and won so far--and when the fight begins again the same weapons
will have to be used. The whole college of physicians could do nothing
to help us."
And then the doctors went into the dining-room, the physician to
fortify himself for a ten-mile drive, the family practitioner to
prepare himself for the possibilities of the night. Allan went in with
them, at his mother's urgent request, and tried to eat some supper; but
his heart was heavy as lead.
He thought of Mrs. Wornock--remembering that pale face looking out
of the autumn night, so intense in its searching gaze, the dark grey
eyes seeming to devour the face they looked upon--his father sitting
unconscious all the while--knowing not how near love was--the romantic
love of his younger years, the love which still held all the elements
of poetry, the love which had never been vulgarized or out-worn by the
fret and jar of daily life.
He would die, perhaps, without ever having seen the face of his early
love, without ever having heard the end of her history--die, perhaps,
believing that she had given him up easily because she had never
really cared for him. The son had felt it in somewise his duty to keep
those two apart for his mother's sake; but now at the idea that his
father might die without having seen his early love or heard her story
from her own lips, it seemed to him that he had acted cruelly and
treacherously towards the parent he loved.
There was a further improvement in the patient next morning, and Allan
spent the greater part of the day beside his father's bed. There was to
be very little conversation; but Allan was told he might read aloud,
provided the literature was of an unemotional character. So at his
father's request Allan read Chaucer, and the quaint old English verse,
with every line of which the patient was familiar, had a soothing and
a cheering influence on the tired nerves and brain. There was progress
again the day after, and the physician and local watch-dog expressed
themselves more than satisfied. The patient might come downstairs on
Sunday--might have an airing on the sunniest side of the garden, should
there be any sunshine on Monday; but everything was to be done with
precautions that too plainly indicated his precarious condition.
"Do you take a more hopeful view than you did the other night?" Allan
asked the physician, after the consultation.
"Alas! no. The improvement is greater than I expected; but the
substantial facts remain the same. There is deep-seated mischief, which
may culminate fatally at any time. I should do wrong to conceal the
nature of the case--or its worst possibilities--from you. It is best
you should be prepared for the end--for Lady Emily's sake especially,
in order that you may lighten the blow for her."
"And the end is likely to come suddenly?"
"Most likely--better perhaps that it should so come. Your father is
prepared for death. He is quite conscious of his danger. Better that
the end should be sudden--if it spare him pain?"
"Yes, better so. But it is a hard thing. My father is not forty-eight
years of age--in the prime of life, with a fine intellect. It is a hard
thing."
"Yes, it is hard, very hard. It seems hard even to me, who have seen so
many partings. I think you ought to spare your mother as much as you
can. Spare her the agony of apprehension; let her have her husband's
last days of sunshine and peace. But it is best that you should know.
You are a man, and you can suffer and be strong."
"Yes, I can suffer. He seemed so much better this morning. Might he not
go on for years, with the care which we shall take of him?"
"He might--but it is scarcely probable."
"We were to have had a young lady visitor here to-day," said Allan,
with some hesitation, "the lady who is to be my wife. Her visit has
been postponed on account of my father's illness; but I am very anxious
that she should know more of my father and mother, and I have been
wondering if next week we might venture to have her here. She is very
gentle and sympathetic, and I know her society would be pleasant to my
father."
"I would not risk it, Mr. Carew, if I were you."
"You think it might be bad for my father?"
"I think it might be hazardous for the young lady. Were a fatal end to
come suddenly, you would not like the girl you love to be subjected to
the horror of the scene, to be haunted perhaps for years by the memory
of that one tragic hour. There is no necessity for her presence here.
You can go and see her."
"Yes, and risk being absent in my father's dying hours."
"Better that risk than the risk of her unhappiness, should the end
come while she were in the house."
"Yes, I suppose that is so; but I can't help hoping that the end may be
far off."
The doctor pressed his hand in silence, and nodded good-bye as he
stepped into his carriage. It was not for him to forbid hope, even if
he knew that it was a delusive hope.
CHAPTER III.
WHILE LEAVES WERE FALLING.
Fondly as he loved his betrothed wife, Allan felt that affection and
duty alike forbade him to leave his father while the shadow of doom
hung over the threshold, while there could be no assurance from day
to day that the end would not come before sundown. There had been
enough in the physician's manner to crush hopefulness even in the most
sanguine breast; and it was in vain that Allan tried to argue within
himself against the verdict of learning and experience. He knew in
his inmost heart that the physician was right. The ordeal through
which George Carew had passed had changed him with the change that too
palpably foreshadows the last change of all. In the hollow eyes, the
blue-veined forehead and pale lips, in the inert and semi-transparent
hands, in the far-off look of the man whose race is run and who has
nothing more to do with active life, Allan saw the sign manual of the
destroyer. He had need to cherish and garner these quiet days in his
father's company, to hang fondly on every word from those pale lips,
to treasure each thought as a memory to be hereafter dear and sacred.
Whatever other love there might be for him upon this earth--even the
love of her whom he had made his second self, upon whom he depended for
all future gladness--no claim could prevail against the duty that held
him here, by the side of the father whose days were numbered.
"I am so glad to have you with me, Allan," Mr. Carew said, in the grave
voice which had lost none of its music, though it had lost much of
its power. "It seems selfish on my part to keep you here, away from
that nice girl, your sweetheart; but though you are making a sacrifice
now----"
"No, no, no," interrupted Allan, "it is no sacrifice. I had rather be
here than anywhere in the world. Thank God that I am here, that no
accident of distance has kept me from you."
"Dear boy, you are so good and true--but it is a sacrifice all the
same. This is the spring-time of your life, and you ought to be with
the girl who makes your sunshine. It is hard for you two to be parted;
and I should like her to be here; only this is a house of gloom. God
knows what might happen to chill that young heart. It is better that
you and I should be alone together, prepared for the worst: and in the
days to come, in the far-off days, you will be glad to remember how
your love lightened every burden for your dying father."
"Father, my dear father!"
The son uttered words of hope, declared his belief that Heaven would
grant the dear patient renewed strength; but the voice in which he
spoke the words of cheerfulness was broken by sobs.
"My dear Allan, don't be down-hearted. I am resigned to the worst that
can happen. I won't say I am glad that the end is near. That would be
base ingratitude to the best of wives, to the dearest of sons, and
to Providence which has given me so many good things. This world and
this life have been pleasant to me, Allan; and it does seem hard to be
called away from such peaceful surroundings, from the home where love
is, even though through all that life there has run a dark thread. I
think you have known that, Allan. I think that sensitive nature of
yours has been conscious of the shadow on my days."
"Yes, I have known that there was a shadow."
"A stronger character would have risen superior to the sorrow that has
clouded my life, Allan. I have no doubt that some of the greatest and
many of the most useful men the world has known have suffered just such
a disappointment as I suffered in my early manhood, and have risen
superior to their sorrow. You remember how Austin Caxton counsels his
son to live down a disappointed love--how he appeals to the lives of
men who have conquered sorrow? 'You thought the wing was broken. Tut,
tut, 'twas but a bruised feather.' But in my own case, Allan, the
wing _was_ broken. I had not the mental stamina, I had not the power
of rebound which enables a man to rise superior to the sorrow of his
youth. I could not forget my first love. I gave up a year of my life
to the search for the girl I loved--who had forsaken me in a foolish
spirit of self-sacrifice because she had been told that my marriage
with her would be social ruin. She was little more than a child in
years--quite a child in ignorance of the world, and of the weight
and measure of worldly things. We were both cruelly used, Allan. My
mother was a good woman, and a woman who would do nothing which she
could not reconcile to her conscience and her own ideas of piety. She
acted conscientiously, after her own narrow notions, in bringing about
the parting which blighted my youth, and she thought me a wicked son
because for two years of my life I held myself aloof from her."
"And in all that time could you find no trace of your lost love?"
"None. I advertised in English and Continental newspapers, veiling my
appeal in language which would mean little to the outside world though
it would speak plainly to her. I wandered about the Continent--Italy,
Switzerland--all along the Rhine, and the Danube, to every place
that seemed to offer a chance of success. I had reason to believe
that she had been sent abroad, and I thought that her exile would be
fixed in some remote district, out of the beaten track. It may be
that my research was conducted feebly. I was out of health for the
greater part of my wanderings, and I had no one to help me. Another
man in my position might have employed a private detective, and might
have succeeded where I failed. I was summoned home by the news of my
mother's dangerous illness, and I returned remorseful and unhappy.
At the thought that she might die unforgiving and unforgiven, my
resentment vanished. I recalled all that my mother had been to my
childhood and boyhood, and I felt myself an ungrateful son. Thank God,
I was home in time to cheer her sick-bed, and to help towards her
recovery by the assurance of my unaltered affection. I found that she
too had suffered, and I discovered the strength of maternal love under
that outward hardness, and allied with those narrow views which had
wrecked my happiness. In my gladness at her recovery from a long and
dangerous illness, I began to think that the old heart-wound was cured;
and when she suggested my marriage with Emily Darnleigh, my amiable
playfellow of old, I cheerfully fell in with her views. The union was
in every respect suitable, and for me in every respect advantageous.
Your mother has been a good and dear wife to me, and never had man
less reason to complain against Fate. But there has been the lingering
shadow of that old memory, Allan, and you have seen and understood; so
it is well you should know all."
Allan tearfully acknowledged the trust confided in him.
"When I am gone, if you care to know the story of my first love, you
will find it fully recorded in a manuscript which was written some
years ago. Heaven knows what inspired me to go over that old ground,
to write of myself almost as I might have written of another man.
It was the whim of an idle brain. I felt a strange sad pleasure in
recalling every detail of my brief love-story--in conjuring up looks
and tones, the very atmosphere of the commonplace surroundings through
which my sweet girl and I moved. No touch of romance, no splendour of
scenery, no gaiety of racecourse or public garden made the background
of our love. A dull London street, a dull London parlour were all we
had for a paradise, and God knows we needed no more. You will smile at
a middle-aged man's folly in lingering fondly over the record of his
own love-story, instead of projecting himself into the ideal world
and weaving a romance of shadows. If I had been a woman, I might have
found a diversion for my empty days in writing novels, in every one of
which my sweetheart and I would have lived again, and loved and parted
again, under various disguises. But I had not the feminine capacity
for fiction. It pleased me to write of myself and my love in sober
truthfulness. You will read with a mind in touch with mine, Allan;
and though you may smile at your father's folly, there will be no
scornfulness in your smile."
"My dear, dear father, God knows there will be no smile on these lips
of mine if I am to read the story--after our parting. God grant the day
for that reading may be far off."
"I will do nothing to hasten it, Allan. Your companionship has renewed
my pleasure in life. You can never know how I missed you when this
house ceased to be your home. It was different when you were at
the University--the short terms, the short distance between here
and Cambridge, made parting seem less than parting. But when you
transferred yourself to a home of your own, and half a dozen counties
divided us, I began to feel that I had lost my only son."
"You had but to summon me."
"I know, I know. But I could not be so selfish as to bring you away
from your pleasant surroundings, the prettier country, the more
genial climate, your hunting, your falconry, your golf, and your new
neighbours. A sick man is a privileged egotist; but even now I feel I
am wrong in letting you stay here and lose the best part of the hunting
season--to say nothing of that other loss, which, no doubt, you feel
more keenly, the loss of your sweetheart's society."
"You need not think about it, father, for I mean to stay. Please regard
me as a fixture. If you keep as well next week as you are to-day, I
may take a run to Wilts, just to see how Suzette and her father are
getting on, and to look round my stable; but I shall be away at most
one night."
"Go to-morrow, Allan. I know you are dying to see her."
"Then, perhaps, to-morrow. You really are wonderfully well, are you
not?"
"So well that I feel myself an impostor when I am treated as an
invalid."
"I may go then; but it will only be to hurry back," said Allan.
His heart beat faster at the thought of an hour with Suzette--an hour
in which to look into the frank bright face, to see the truthful eyes
looking up at him in all confidence and love, to be assured that three
weeks' absence had made no difference, that not the faintest cloud had
come between them in their first parting. Yes, he longed to see her,
with a lover's heart-sickness. Deeply, tenderly as he treasured every
hour of his father's society, he felt that he must steal just as much
time from his home duty as would give him one hour with Suzette.
He pored over time-tables, and so planned his journey as to leave
Fendyke in the afternoon of one day, and to return in time for luncheon
the day after. This was only to be effected by leaving Matcham at
daybreak; but a young man who was in the habit of leaving home in the
half-light of a September dawn to ride ten miles to a six-o'clock meet
was not afraid of an early train.
He caught a fast evening train for Salisbury, and was at Matcham
soon after eight. He had written to General Vincent to announce his
intention of looking in after dinner, apologizing in advance for so
late a visit. His intention was to take a hasty meal, dress, and drive
to Marsh House; but at Beechhurst he found a note from the General
inviting him to dinner, postponed till nine o'clock on his account; so
he made his toilet in the happiest mood, and arrived at Marsh House ten
minutes before the hour.
He found Suzette alone in the drawing-room, and had her all to himself
for just those ten minutes which he had gained by extra swiftness
at his toilet. For half those minutes he had the gentle fluttering
creature in his arms, the dark eyes full of tears, the innocent heart
all tenderness and sympathy.
"Why would not you let me go to you, Allan?" she remonstrated. "I
wanted to be with you and Lady Emily in your trouble. I hope you
don't think I am afraid of sickness or sorrow, where those I love are
concerned."
"Indeed, dearest, I give you credit for all unselfishness. But I was
advised against your visit. The hazard was too awful."
"What hazard, Allan?"
"The possibility of my father's sudden death."