It was about the 10th of June when Mrs. Dennistoun left London. She had been in town for about five weeks, which looked like as many months, and it was with a mingled sense of relief, and of that feeling which Such things, however, do not make a lonely little house in the country more cheerful, or tend to make it easier to content one’s self with the Rector’s family, and the good old, simple-minded, retired people, with their little complaints, yet general peacefulness, and incompetence to understand what tragedy was. They thought on the whole their neighbour at the Cottage ought to be very thankful that she had got her daughter well, or, if not very well, at least fashionably, married, with good connections and all that, which are always of use in the long run. It was better than marrying a poor curate, which was almost the only chance a girl had on Windyhill. It was a little hard upon Mrs. Dennistoun, however, that she lost not only Elinor, but John, who had been so good about coming down when she was all alone at first. Of course, during the season, a young rising man, with engagements growing upon him every day, was very unlikely to have his Saturdays to Mondays free. So many people live out of town nowadays, or, at least, have a little house somewhere to which they John Tatham was indeed exceedingly angry with her for the weakness with which she had yielded to Phil Compton’s arguments, though indeed he knew nothing of Phil Compton’s arguments, nor whether they had been exercised at all on the woman who was first of all Elinor’s mother and ready to sacrifice everything to her comfort. When he found that this foolish step on her part had been followed by her retirement from London, he was greatly mystified and quite unable to understand. He met Elinor some time after at one of those assemblies to which “everybody” goes. It was, I think, the soirÉe at the Royal Academy—where amid the persistent crowd in the great room there was a whirling crowd, twisting in and out among the others, bound for heaven knows how many other places, and pausing here and there on tiptoe to greet an acquaintance, at the tail of which, carried along by its impetus, was Elinor. She was not looking either well or happy, but she was responding more or less to the impulse of her set, exchanging greetings and banal words with dozens of people, and sometimes turning a wistful and “You need not look—as if I would try to detain you, Elinor.” “Do you think I am afraid of your detaining me? I thought I should be sure to meet you to-night, and was on the outlook. How is it that we never see you now?” He refused the natural retort that she had never “Do you mean to say that you only came for her? That is an unkind speech. Yes, she has gone. It was cruel to keep her in town for the best part of the year.” “But she intended to stay till July, Elinor.” “Did she? I think you are mistaken, John. She intended to watch over me—dear mamma, she thinks too much of me—but when she saw that I was quite well——” “You don’t look to me so extraordinarily well.” “Don’t I? I must be a fraud then. Nobody could be stronger. I’m going to a multitude of places to-night. Wherever my Hebrew leader goes I go,” said Elinor, with a laugh. “I have given myself up for to-night, and she is never satisfied with less than a dozen.” “Ten minutes to each.” “Oh, half an hour at least: and with having our carriage found for us at every place, and the risk of getting into a queue, and all the delays of coming and going, it cannot be much less than three-quarters of an hour. This is the third. I think three more will weary even the Jew.” “You are with Lady Mariamne then, Elinor?” “Yes—oh, you need not make that face. She is as good as the rest, and pretends to nothing, at least. I have no carriage, you know, and Phil took fright at my dear old fly. He thought a hired brougham was not good when I was alone. “That was quite true. Nevertheless, I should like above all things to keep you here a little longer to look at some of the pictures, and take you home in a hansom after.” She laughed. “Oh, so should I—fancy, I have not seen the pictures, not at all. We came in a mob to the private view; and then one day I was coming with mamma, but was stopped by something, and now—— Always people, people—nothing else. ‘Did you see So-and-so? There’s some one bowing to you, Nell. Be sure you speak a word to the Thises or the Thats’—while I don’t care for one of them. But I fear the hansom would not do, John.” “It would have done very well in the old days. Your mother would not have been displeased.” “The old days are gone and will never return,” she said, half sad, half smiling, shaking her head. “So far as I can see, nothing ever returns. You have your day, and if you do not make the best of that——” She stopped, shaking her head again with a laugh, and there were various ways in which that speech might be interpreted. John for one knew a sense of it which he believed had never entered Elinor’s head. He too might have had his day and let it slip. “So you are making the most of yours,” he said. “I hear that you are very gay.” Elinor coloured high under his look. “I don’t know who can have told you that. We have had a few little dinners since mamma left us, chiefly Phil’s busi “I understand,” he said. “Oh, but you must not say ‘I understand’ with that air of knowing a great deal more than there is to understand,” she said, with heat. “Mamma said it would do me much more good to go—home for a night now and then and sleep in the fresh air than for her to stay; and though I think she is a little insane on the subject of my health, still it was certainly better than that she should stay here, making herself wretched, her rest broken, and all that. You know we keep such late hours.” “I should not have thought she would have minded that.” “But what would you have thought of me if I did not mind it for her? There, John, do you see they are all going? Ah, the pictures! I wish I could have stayed with you and gone round the rooms. But it must not be to-night. Come and see me!” she said, turning round to him with a smile, and holding out her hand. “I would gladly, Elinor—but should not I find myself in the way of your fine friends like——” He had not the heart to finish the sentence when he met her eyes brimming full of tears. “Not my fine friends, but my coarse friends,” she said; “not friends at all, our worst enemies, I am sure.” “Nell!” cried Lady Mariamne, in her shrill voice. “You will come and see me, John?” “Yes,” he said, “and in the meantime I will take you down-stairs, let your companions think as they please.” It proved when he did so that John had to escort both ladies to the carriage, which it was not very easy to find, no other cavalier being at hand for the moment; and that Lady Mariamne invited him to accompany them to their next stage. “You know the Durfords, of course. You are going there? What luck for us, Nell! Jump in, Mr. Tatham, we will take you on.” “Unfortunately Lady Durford has not taken the trouble to invite me,” said John. “What does that matter? Jump in, all the same, she’ll be delighted to see you, and as for not asking you, when you are with me and Nell——” But John turned a deaf ear to this siren’s song. He went to Curzon Street a little while after to call, as he had been invited to do, and went late to avoid the bustle of the tea-table, and the usual rabble of that no longer intimate but wildly gregarious house. And he was not without his reward. Perhaps a habit he had lately formed of passing by Curzon Street in the late afternoon, when he was on his way to his club, after “Yes,” he said, “but I am very sorry to see you so nervous.” “Oh, it’s nothing. I was always nervous”—which indeed was the purest invention, for Elinor Dennistoun had not known what nerves meant. “I mean I was always startled by any sudden entrance—in this way,” she cried, and very gravely asked him to be seated, with a curious assumption of dignity. Her demeanour altogether was incomprehensible to John. “I hope,” he said, “you were not displeased with me, Elinor, for going off the other night. I should have been too happy, you know, to go with you anywhere; but Lady Mariamne is more than I can stand.” “I was very glad you did not come,” she said, with a sigh; then smiling faintly, “But you were ungrateful, for Mariamne formed a most favourable opinion “I am deeply obliged, Elinor; but it seems that what was a compliment to me personally involved something the reverse for your other relations.” “It is one of their jokes,” said Elinor, with a voice that faltered a little, “to represent my relations as—not in a complimentary way. I am supposed not to mind, and it’s all a joke, or so they tell me; but it is not a joke I like,” she said, with a flash from her eyes. “All families have jokes of that description,” said John; “but tell me, Nelly, are you really going down to the cottage, to your mother?” Her eyes thanked him with a gleam of pleasure for the old familiar name, and then the light went out of them. “I don’t know,” she said, abruptly. “Phil was to come; if he will not, I think I will not either. But I will say nothing till I make sure.” “Of course your first duty is to him,” said John; “but a day now or a day then interferes with nothing, and the country would be good for you, Elinor. Doesn’t your husband see it? You are not looking like yourself.” “Not like myself? I might easily look better than myself. I wish I could. I am not so bigoted about myself.” “Your friends are, however,” he said: “no one who cares for you wants to change you, even for another Elinor. Come, you are nervous altogether to-night, “Your little Nellie has gone away somewhere John. I doubt if she’ll ever come back. Yes, London is rather too much for me, I think. It’s such a racket, as Phil says. But then he’s used to it, you know. He was brought up to it, whereas I—I think I hate a racket, John—and they all like it so. They prefer never having a moment to themselves. I daresay one would end by being just the same. It keeps you from thinking, that is one very good thing.” “You used not to think so, Elinor.” “No,” she said, “not at the Cottage among the flowers, where nothing ever happened from one year’s end to another. I should die of it now in a week—at least if not I, those who belong to me. So on the whole perhaps London is the safest—unless Phil will go.” “I can only hope you will be able to persuade him,” said John, rising to go away, “for whatever you may think, you are a country bird, and you want the fresh air.” “Are you going, John? Well, perhaps it is better. Good-by. Don’t trouble your mind about me whether I go or stay.” “Do you mean I am not to come again, Elinor?” “Oh, why should I mean that?” she said. “You He went on to his club, and there some one began to amuse him with an account of Lady Durford’s ball, to which Lady Mariamne had wished to take him. “Are not those Comptons relations of yours, Tatham?” he said. “Connections,” said John, “by marriage.” “I’m very glad that’s all. They are a queer lot. Phil Compton you know—the dis-Honourable Phil, as he used to be called—but I hear he’s turned over a new leaf——” “What of him?” said John. “Oh, nothing much: only that he was flirting desperately all the evening with a Mrs. Harris, an American widow. I believe he came with her—and his own wife there—much younger, much prettier, a beautiful young creature—looking on with astonishment. You could see her eyes growing bigger and bigger. If it had not been kind of amusing to a looker-on, it would be the most pitiful sight in the world. “I advise you not to let yourself be amused by such trifles,” said John Tatham, with a look of fire and flame. |