Complete works of hall c.., p.504

Complete Works of Hall Caine, page 504

 

Complete Works of Hall Caine
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  Never as long as I live shall I forget the look in his lordship’s grey eyes when I gave this as my selection.

  “You mean Jerusalem — Nazareth — the Dead Sea and all that?” he asked.

  I felt my face growing red as at a frightful faux pas, but his lordship only laughed, called me his “little nun,” and said that since I had been willing to leave the choice to him he would suggest Egypt and Italy, and Berlin and Paris on the way back, with the condition that we left Ellan for London on the day of our marriage.

  After the party from Castle Raa had gone, leaving some of their family lace and pearls behind for the bride to wear at her wedding, and after Aunt Bridget had hoped that “that woman” (meaning Lady Margaret) didn’t intend to live at the Castle after my marriage, because such a thing would not fit in with her plans “at all, at all,” I mentioned the arrangements for the honeymoon, whereupon Betsy Beauty, to whom Italy was paradise, and London glimmered in an atmosphere of vermillion and gold, cried out as usual:

  “What a lucky, lucky girl you are!”

  But the excitement which had hitherto buoyed me up was partly dispelled by this time, and I was beginning to feel some doubt of it.

  TWENTY-SEVENTH CHAPTER

  As my wedding-day approached and time ran short, the air of joy which had pervaded our house was driven out by an atmosphere of irritation. We were all living on our nerves. The smiles that used to be at everybody’s service gave place to frowns, and, in Aunt Bridget’s case, to angry words which were distributed on all sides and on all occasions.

  As a consequence I took refuge in my room, and sat long hours there in my dressing-gown and slippers, hearing the hubbub that was going on in the rest of the house, but taking as little part in it as possible. In this semi-conventual silence and solitude, the excitement which had swept me along for three weeks subsided rapidly.

  I began to think, and above all to feel, and the one thing I felt beyond everything else was a sense of something wanting.

  I remembered the beautiful words of the Pope about marriage as a mystic relation, a sacred union of souls, a bond of love such as Christ’s love for His Church, and I asked myself if I felt any such love for the man who was to become my husband.

  I knew I did not. I reminded myself that I had had nearly no conversation with him, that our intercourse had been of the briefest, that I had seen him only three times altogether, and that I scarcely knew him at all.

  And yet I was going to marry him! In a few days more I should be his wife, and we should be bound together as long as life should last!

  Then I remembered what Father Dan had said about a girl’s first love, her first love-letter, and all the sweet, good things that should come to her at the time of her marriage.

  None of them had come to me. I do not think my thoughts of love were ever disturbed by any expectation of the delights of the heart — languors of tenderness, long embraces, sighs and kisses, and the joys and fevers of the flesh — for I knew nothing about them. But, nevertheless, I asked myself if I had mistaken the matter altogether. Was love really necessary? In all their busy preparations neither my father, nor my husband, nor the lawyers, nor the Bishop himself, had said anything about that.

  I began to sleep badly and to dream. It was always the same dream. I was in a frozen region of the far north or south, living in a ship which was stuck fast in the ice, and had a great frowning barrier before it that was full of dangerous crevasses. Then for some reason I wanted to write a letter, but was unable to do so, because somebody had trodden on my pen and broken it.

  It seems strange to me now as I look back upon that time, that I did not know what angel was troubling the waters of my soul — that Nature was whispering to me, as it whispers to every girl at the first great crisis of her life. But neither did I know what angel was leading my footsteps when, three mornings before my wedding-day, I got up early and went out to walk in the crisp salt air.

  Almost without thinking I turned down the lane that led to the shore, and before I was conscious of where I was going, I found myself near Sunny Lodge. The chimney was smoking for breakfast, and there was a smell of burning turf coming from the house, which was so pretty and unchanged, with the last of the year’s roses creeping over the porch and round the windows of the room in which I had slept when a child.

  Somebody was digging in the garden. It was the doctor in his shirt sleeves.

  “Good morning, doctor,” I called, speaking over the fence.

  He rested on his spade and looked up, but did not speak for a moment.

  “Don’t you know who I am?” I asked.

  “Why yes, of course; you must be. . . .”

  Without finishing he turned his head towards the porch and cried:

  “Mother! Mother! Come and see who’s here at last!”

  Martin’s mother came out of the porch, a little smaller, I thought, but with the same dear womanly face over her light print frock, which was as sweet as may-blossom.

  She held up both hands at sight of me and cried:

  “There, now! What did I tell you, doctor! Didn’t I say they might marry her to fifty lords, but she wouldn’t forget her old friends!”

  I laughed, the doctor laughed, and then she laughed, and the sweetest part of it was that she did not know what we were laughing at.

  Then I opened the gate and stepped up and held out my hand, and involuntarily she wiped her own hand (which was covered with meal from the porridge she was making) before taking mine.

  “Goodness me, it’s Mary O’Neill.”

  “Yes, it’s I.”

  “But let me have a right look at you,” she said, taking me now by both hands. “They were saying such wonderful things about the young misthress that I wasn’t willing to believe them. But, no, no,” she said, after a moment, “they didn’t tell me the half.”

  I was still laughing, but it was as much as I could do not to cry, so I said:

  “May I come in?”

  “My goodness yes, and welcome,” she said, and calling to the doctor to wash his hands and follow us, she led the way into the kitchen-parlour, where the kettle was singing from the “slowery” and a porridge-pot was bubbling over the fire.

  “Sit down. Take the elbow-chair in the chiollagh [the hearth place]. There! That’s nice. Aw, yes, you know the house.”

  Being by this time unable to speak for a lump in my throat that was hurting me, I looked round the room, so sweet, so homely, so closely linked with tender memories of my childhood, while Martin’s mother (herself a little nervous and with a touching softness in her face) went on talking while she stirred the porridge with a porridge-stick.

  “Well, well! To think of all the years since you came singing carols to my door! You remember it, don’t you? . . . Of course you do. ‘Doctor,’ I said, ‘don’t talk foolish. She’ll not forget. I know Mary O’Neill. She may be going to be a great lady, but haven’t I nursed her on my knee?’”

  “Then you’ve heard what’s to happen?” I asked.

  “Aw yes, woman, yes,” she answered in a sadder tone, I thought. “Everybody’s bound to hear it — what with the bands practising for the procession, and the bullocks roasting for the poor, and the fireworks and the illuminations, and I don’t know what.”

  She was silent for a moment after that, and then in her simple way she said:

  “But it’s all as one if you love the man, even if he is a lord.”

  “You think that’s necessary, don’t you?”

  “What, millish?”

  “Love. You think it’s necessary to love one’s husband?”

  “Goodness sakes, girl, yes. If you don’t have love, what have you? What’s to keep the pot boiling when the fire’s getting low and the winter’s coming on, maybe? The doctor’s telling me some of the fine ladies in London are marrying without it — just for money and titles and all to that. But I can’t believe it, I really can’t! They’ve got their troubles same as ourselves, poor things, and what’s the use of their fine clothes and grand carriages when the dark days come and the night’s falling on them?”

  It was harder than ever to speak now, so I got up to look at some silver cups that stood on the mantelpiece.

  “Martin’s,” said his mother, to whom they were precious as rubies. “He won them at swimming and running and leaping and climbing and all to that. Aw, yes, yes! He was always grand at games, if he couldn’t learn his lessons, poor boy. And now he’s gone away from us — looking for South Poles somewheres.”

  “I know — I saw him in Rome,” said I.

  She dropped her porridge-stick and looked at me with big eyes.

  “Saw him? In Rome, you say? After he sailed, you mean?”

  I nodded, and then she cried excitedly to the doctor who was just then coming into the house, after washing his hands under the pump.

  “Father, she saw himself in Rome after he sailed.”

  There was only one himself in that house, therefore it was not difficult for the doctor to know who was meant. And so great was the eagerness of the old people to hear the last news of the son who was the apple of their eye that I had to stay to breakfast and tell them all about our meeting.

  While Martin’s mother laid the tables with oat-cake and honey and bowls of milk and deep plates for the porridge, I told the little there was to tell, and then listened to their simple comments.

  “There now, doctor! Think of that! Those two meeting in foreign parts that used to be such friends when they were children! Like brother and sister, you might say. And whiles and whiles we were thinking that some day . . . but we’ll say no more about that now, doctor.”

  “No, we’ll say no more about that now, Christian Ann,” said the doctor.

  Then there was a moment of silence, and it was just as if they had been rummaging among half-forgotten things in a dark corner of their house, and had come upon a cradle, and the child that had lived in it was dead.

  It was sweet, but it was also painful to stay long in that house of love, and as soon as I had eaten my oat-cake and honey I got up to go. The two good souls saw me to the door saying I was not to expect either of them at the Big House on my wedding-day, because she was no woman for smart clothes, and the doctor, who was growing rheumatic, had given up his night-calls, and therefore his gig, so as to keep down expenses.

  “We’ll be at the church, though,” said Martin’s mother. “And if we don’t see you to speak to, you’ll know we’re there and wishing you happiness in our hearts.”

  I could not utter a word when I left them; but after I had walked a little way I looked back, intending to wave my farewell, and there they were together at the gate still, and one of her hands was on the doctor’s shoulder — the sweet woman who had chosen love against the world, and did not regret it, even now when the night was falling on her.

  I had to pass the Presbytery on my way home, and as I did so, I saw Father Dan in his study. He threw up the window sash and called in a soft voice, asking me to wait until he came down to me.

  He came down hurriedly, just as he was, in his worn and discoloured cassock and biretta, and walked up the road by my side, breathing rapidly and obviously much agitated.

  “The Bishop is staying with me over the wedding, and he is in such a fury that . . . Don’t worry. It will be all right. But . . .”

  “Yes?”

  “Did you see young Martin Conrad while you were in Rome?”

  I answered that I did.

  “And did anything pass between you . . . about your marriage, I mean?”

  I told him all that I had said to Martin, and all that Martin had said to me.

  “Because he has written a long letter to the Bishop denouncing it, and calling on him to stop it.”

  “To stop it?”

  “That’s so. He says it is nothing but trade and barter, and if the Church is willing to give its blessing to such rank commercialism, let it bless the Stock Exchange, let it sanctify the slave market.”

  “Well?”

  “The Bishop threatens to tell your father. ‘Who is this young man,’ he says, ‘who dares to . . .’ But if I thought there was nothing more to your marriage than . . . If I imagined that what occurred in the case of your dear mother . . . But that’s not all.”

  “Not all?”

  “No. Martin has written to me too, saying worse — far worse.”

  “What does he say, Father Dan?”

  “I don’t really know if I ought to tell you, I really don’t. Yet if it’s true . . . if there’s anything in it . . .”

  I was trembling, but I begged him to tell me what Martin had said. He told me. It was about my intended husband — that he was a man of irregular life, a notorious loose liver, who kept up a connection with somebody in London, a kind of actress who was practically his wife already, and therefore his marriage with me would be — so Martin had said — nothing but “legalised and sanctified concubinage.”

  With many breaks and pauses my dear old priest told me this story, as if it were something so infamous that his simple and innocent heart could scarcely credit it.

  “If I really thought it was true,” he said, “that a man living such a life could come here to marry my little . . . But no, God could not suffer a thing like that. I must ask, though. I must make sure. We live so far away in this little island that . . . But I must go back now. The Bishop will be calling for me.”

  Still deeply agitated, Father Dan left me by the bridge, and at the gate of our drive I found Tommy the Mate on a ladder, covering, with flowers from the conservatory, a triumphal arch which the joiner had hammered up the day before.

  The old man hardly noticed me as I passed through, and this prompted me to look up and speak to him.

  “Tommy,” I said, “do you know you are the only one who hasn’t said a good word to me about my marriage?”

  “Am I, missy?” he answered, without looking down. “Then maybe that’s because I’ve had so many bad ones to say to other people.”

  I asked which other people.

  “Old Johnny Christopher, for one. I met him last night at the ‘Horse and Saddle.’ ‘Grand doings at the Big House, they’re telling me,’ says Johnny. ‘I won’t say no,’ I says. ‘It’ll be a proud day for the grand-daughter of Neill the Lord when she’s mistress of Castle Raa,’ says Johnny. ‘Maybe so,’ I says, ‘but it’ll be a prouder day for Castle Raa when she sets her clane little foot in it.’”

  TWENTY-EIGHTH CHAPTER

  I should find it difficult now, after all that has happened since, to convey an adequate idea of the sense of shame and personal dishonour which was produced in me by Father Dan’s account of the contents of Martin’s letter. It was like opening a door out of a beautiful garden into a stagnant ditch.

  That Martin’s story was true I had never one moment’s doubt, first because Martin had told it, and next because it agreed at all points with the little I had learned of Lord Raa in the only real conversation I had yet had with him.

  Obviously he cared for the other woman, and if, like his friend Eastcliff, he had been rich enough to please himself, he would have married her; but being in debt, and therefore in need of an allowance, he was marrying me in return for my father’s money.

  It was shocking. It was sinful. I could not believe that my father, the lawyers and the Bishop knew anything about it.

  I determined to tell them, but how to do so, being what I was, a young girl out of a convent, I did not know.

  Never before had I felt so deeply the need of my mother. If she had been alive I should have gone to her, and with my arms about her neck and my face in her breast, I should have told her all my trouble.

  There was nobody but Aunt Bridget, and little as I had ever expected to go to her under any circumstances, with many misgivings and after much hesitation I went.

  It was the morning before the day of my marriage. I followed my aunt as she passed through the house like a biting March wind, scolding everybody, until I found her in her own room.

  She was ironing her new white cap, and as I entered (looking pale, I suppose) she flopped down her flat iron on to its stand and cried:

  “Goodness me, girl, what’s amiss? Caught a cold with your morning walks, eh? Haven’t I enough on my hands without that? We must send for the doctor straight. We can’t have you laid up now, after all this trouble and expense.”

  “It isn’t that, Auntie.”

  “Then in the name of goodness what is it?”

  I told her, as well as I could for the cold grey eyes that kept looking at me through their gold-rimmed spectacles. At first my aunt listened with amazement, and then she laughed outright.

  “So you’ve heard that story, have you? Mary O’Neill,” she said, with a thump of her flat iron, “I’m surprised at you.”

  I asked if she thought it wasn’t true.

  “How do I know if it’s true? And what do I care whether it is or isn’t? Young men will be young men, I suppose.”

  She went on with her ironing as she added:

  “Did you expect you were marrying a virgin? If every woman asked for that there would be a nice lot of old maids in the world, wouldn’t there?”

  I felt myself flushing up to the forehead, yet I managed to say:

  “But if he is practically married to the other woman. . . .”

  “Not he married. Whoever thinks about marriage in company like that? You might as well talk about marriage in the hen coop.”

  “But all the same if he cares for her, Auntie. . . .”

  “Who says he cares for her? And if he does he’ll settle her off and get rid of her before he marries you.”

  “But will that be right?” I said, whereupon my aunt rested her iron and looked at me as if I had said something shameful.

  “Mary O’Neill, what do you mean? Of course it will be right. He shouldn’t have two women, should he? Do you think the man’s a barn-door rooster?”

 

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