Time went on quickly enough amid all these preparations and the little attendant excitements of letters, congratulations, and presents which came in on every side. Elinor complained mildly of the fuss, but it was a new and far from unpleasant experience. She liked to have the packets brought in by the post, or the bigger boxes that arrived from the station, and to open them and produce out of the wadding or the saw-dust “I will put it with my own little old baby rings in this little silver tray, and they will all look as if they were antiques, or something worth looking at,” said Elinor. Happily there were other people who endowed her more richly with rings fit for a bride to wear. The relations at a distance were more or less pleased with Elinor’s prospects. A few, indeed, from different parts of the world wrote in the vein of Elinor’s home-advisers, hoping that it was not the Mr. Compton who was so well known as a betting man whom she was going to marry; but the fact that she was marrying into a noble family, and would henceforward be known as the Honourable Mrs. Compton, mollified even these critics. Only three brothers—one a great invalid, and two soldiers—between him and the title. Elinor’s relations promptly inaugurated in their imaginations a great war, in which two noble regiments were cut to pieces, to dispose of the two Captains Compton; and as for the invalid, that he would obligingly die off was a contingency which nobody doubted—and behold Elinor Dennistoun Lady St. Serf! This greatly calmed criti All this kept a cheerful little commotion about the house, and often kept the mother and daughter from thinking more than was good for them. These extraneous matters did not indeed preserve Elinor altogether from the consciousness that her fiancÉ’s letters were very short and a little uncertain in their arrival, sometimes missing several days together, and generally written in a hurry to catch the post. But they kept Mrs. Dennistoun from remarking that fact, as otherwise she would have been sure to do. If any chill of disappointment Elinor and her mother were seated together in the drawing-room on one of those evenings of which Mrs. Dennistoun desired to make the most, as they would be the last, but which, as they actually passed, were—if not occupied with discussions of how everything was to be arranged, which they went over again and again by instinct as a safe subject—heavy, almost dull, and dragged sadly over the poor ladies whose hearts were so full, but to whom to be separated, though it would be bitter, would also at the same time almost be a relief. They had been silent for some time, not because they had not plenty to say, but because it was so difficult to say it without awaking too much feeling. How could they talk of the future in which one of them would be away in strange places, exposed to the risks and vicissitudes of a new life, and one of them be left alone in the unbroken silence, sitting over the fire, with nothing but that blaze to give her any comfort? It was too much to think of, much more to talk about, though it need not be said that it was in the minds of both—with a difference, for Elinor’s imagination was most employed upon the brilliant canvas where she herself held necessarily the first place, with a sketch of her mother’s lonely life, giving her heart a pang, in the distance; while Mrs. Dennistoun could not help but see the lonely figure in her own foreground, against the brightness of all the entertainments in which Elinor should appear as a queen. They were sitting thus, the mother employed at some fine needlework for the Suddenly Elinor looked up, holding up her finger. “What was that?” she said. “A step upon the gravel?” “Nonsense, child. If we were to listen to all these noises of the night there would always be a step upon—— Oh! I think I did hear something.” “It is someone coming to the door,” said Elinor, rising up with that sudden prevision of trouble which is so seldom deceived. “Don’t go, Elinor; don’t go. It might be a tramp; wait at least till they knock at the door. “I don’t think it can be a tramp, mamma. It may be a telegram. It is coming straight up to the door.” “It will be the parcel porter from the station. He is always coming and going, though I never knew him so late. Pearson is in the house, you know. There is not any cause to be alarmed.” “Alarmed!” said Elinor, with a laugh of excitement; “but I put more confidence in myself than in Pearson, whoever it may be.” She stood listening with a face full of expectation, and Mrs. Dennistoun put down her work and listened too. The step advanced lightly, scattering the gravel, and then there was a pause as if the stranger had stopped to reconnoitre. Then came a knock at the window, which could only have been done by a tall man, and the hearts of the ladies jumped up, and then seemed to stop beating. To be sure, there were bolts and bars, but Pearson was not much good, and the house was full of valuables and very lonely. Mrs. Dennistoun rose up, trembling a little, and went forward to the window, bidding Elinor go back and keep quite quiet. But here they were interrupted by a voice which called from without, with another knock on the window, “Nell! Nell!” “It is Phil,” said Elinor, flying to the door. Mrs. Dennistoun sat down again and said nothing. Her heart sank in her breast. She did not know what she feared; perhaps that he had come to break off the marriage, perhaps to hurry it and carry her child away. “She thinks everyone is like herself, Mrs. Dennistoun, but I am aware that I am not such a popular personage as she thinks me, and you have least reason of all to approve of the man who is coming to carry her away.” “I am glad to see you, Mr. Compton,” she said, gravely, giving him her hand. The Hon. Philip Compton was a very tall man, with very black hair. He had fine but rather hawk-like features, a large nose, a complexion too white to be agreeable, though it added to his romantic appearance. There was a furtive look in his big dark eyes, which had a way of surveying the country, so to speak, before making a reply to any question, like a man whose response depended upon what he saw. He surveyed Mrs. Dennistoun in this way while she spoke; but then he took her hand, stooped his head over it, and kissed it, not without grace. “Thank you very much for that,” he said, as if there had been some doubt on his mind about his reception. “I was glad enough to get the “I came up direct from my brother Lomond’s shooting-box. Reply No. 1. What put it into my head to come? Love, I suppose, and the bright eyes of a certain little witch called Nell. I ought to have been in Ireland for a sort of a farewell visit there; but when I found I could steal two days, you may imagine I knew very well what to do with them. Eh? Oh, it’s mamma that frightens you, I see.” “It is kind of you to give Elinor two days when you have so many other engagements,” said Mrs. Dennistoun, turning away. But he was not in the least abashed. “Yes, isn’t it?” he said; “my last few days of freedom. I consider I deserve the prize for virtue—to cut short my very last rampage; and she will not as much as give me a kiss! I think she is ashamed before you, Mrs. Dennistoun.” “It would not be surprising if she were,” said Mrs. Dennistoun, gravely. “I am old-fashioned, as you may perceive.” “Oh, you don’t need to tell me that,” said he; “one can see it with half an eye. Come here, Nell, you little coquette: or I shall tell the Jew you were afraid of mamma, and you will never hear an end of it as long as you live. “Elinor, I think you had better see, perhaps, what there is to make up as good a meal as possible for Mr. Compton,” said her mother, sitting down opposite to the stranger, whose long limbs were stretched over half the floor, with the intention of tripping up Elinor, it seemed; but she glided past him and went on her way—not offended, oh, not at all—waving her hand to him as she avoided the very choice joke of his stretched-out foot. “Mr. Compton,” said Mrs. Dennistoun, “you will be Elinor’s husband in less than a fortnight.” “I hope so,” he said, displaying the large cavern of a yawn under his black moustache as he looked her in the face. “And after that I will have no right to interfere; but, in the meantime, this is my house, and I hope you will remember that these ways are not mine, and that I am too old-fashioned to like them. I prefer a little more respect to your betrothed.” “Oh, respect,” he said. “I have never found that girls like too much respect. But as you please. Well, look here, Nell,” he said, catching her by the arm as she came back and swinging her towards him, “your mother thinks I’m too rough with you, my little dear.” “Do you, mamma?” said Elinor, faltering a little; but she had the sweetest rose-flush on her cheeks and the moisture of joy in her eyes. In all her twenty-three years she had never looked as she looked now. Her life had been a happy one, but not like this. She had “It is only his bad manners,” said Elinor, in a voice which sounded like a caress. “He knows very well how to behave. He can be as nice as any one, and as pretty spoken, and careful not to offend. It is only arriving so suddenly, and not being expected—or that he has forgotten his nice manners to-night. Phil, do you hear what I say?” Phil made himself into the semblance of a dog, and sat up and begged for pardon. It was a trick which made people “shriek with laughing;” but Mrs. Dennistoun’s gravity remained unbroken. Perhaps her extreme seriousness had something in it that was rather ridiculous too. It was a relief when he went off to his supper, attended by Elinor, and Mrs. Dennistoun was left alone over her fire. She had a slight sense that she had been absurd, as well as that Philip Compton had lacked breeding, which did not make her more comfortable. Was it possible that she would be glad when it was all over, and her child gone—her child gone, and with that man! Her child, her little delicately bred, finely nurtured girl, who had been wrapped in all the refinements of life from her cradle, and had never heard a rough word, never been allowed to know anything that They were so long in the dining-room, where Compton had his supper, that when that was over it was time to go to bed. Still talking and laughing as if they could never exhaust either the fountain of talk or the mirth, which was probably much more sheer pleasure in their meeting than genuine laughter produced by any wit or bon mot, they came out into the passage, and stood by Mrs. Dennistoun and the housemaid, who had brought her the keys and was now fastening the hall door. A The next morning the visitor made himself very agreeable: his raptures were a little calmed. He talked over all the arrangements, and entered into everything with the interest of a man to whom that great day approaching was indeed the greatest day in his life. And it turned out that he had something to tell which was of practical importance. “I may relieve your mind about Nell’s money,” he said, “for I believe my company is going to be wound up. We’ll look out for another investment which will pay as well and be less risky. It has been found not to be doing quite so well as was thought, so we’re going to wind up. “I hope you have not lost anything,” said Mrs. Dennistoun. “Oh, nothing to speak of,” he said, carelessly. “I am not fond of speculative companies. I am glad you are done with it,” Mrs. Dennistoun said. “And I’m glad to be done with it. I shall look out for something permanent and decline joint-stock companies. I thought you would like to know. But that is the last word I shall say about business. Come, Nell, I have only one day; let’s spend it in the woods.” Elinor, who felt that the day in the woods was far more important than any business, hurried to get her hat and follow him to the door. It chanced to her to glance at the calendar as she passed hastily out to where he stood awaiting her in the porch. Why that should have happened to anyone in the Cottage twice in the twenty-four hours is a coincidence which I cannot explain, but so it was. Her eye caught the little white plaque in passing, and perceived with surprise that it had moved up two numbers, and that it was the figure 8 which was marked upon it now. “We cannot have slept through a day and night,” she said, laughing as she joined him. “The calendar says the eighth September now.” “But I arrived on the sixth,” he said. “Mind that, Nell, whatever happens. You saw it with your own eyes. It may be of consequence to remember.” “Of what consequence could it be?” said Elinor, wondering. “One can never tell. The only thing is I arrived on the sixth—that you know. And, Nell, my darling, supposing any fellow should inquire too closely into my movements, you’ll back me up, won’t you, and agree in everything I say?” “Who should inquire into your movements? There is no one here who would be so impertinent, Phil.” “Oh,” he said, “there is never any telling how impertinent people may be.” “And what is there in your movements that any one dare inquire about? I hope you are not ashamed of coming to see me.” “That is just what is the saving of me, Nell. I can’t explain what I mean now, but I will later on. Only mind you don’t contradict me if we should meet any inquisitive person. I arrived on the sixth, and you’ll back me like my true love in everything I say.” “As far as—as I know, Phil.” “Oh, we must have no conditions. You must stand by me in everything I say.” |