<p><SPAN name="c3" id="c3"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
<h3>John Grey, the Worthy Man.<br/> </h3>
<p>Mr. Grey's answer to Alice Vavasor's letter, which was duly sent by
return of post and duly received on the morning after Lady Macleod's
visit, may perhaps be taken as giving a sample of his worthiness. It
was dated from Nethercoats, a small country-house in Cambridgeshire
which belonged to him, at which he already spent much of his time,
and at which he intended to live altogether after his
marriage.<br/> </p>
<blockquote>
<p class="jright">Nethercoats, June, 186––.</p>
<p><span class="smallcaps">Dearest Alice</span>,</p>
<p>I am glad you have settled your affairs,—foreign affairs, I
mean,—so much to your mind. As to your home affairs they are not, to
my thinking, quite so satisfactorily arranged. But as I am a party
interested in the latter my opinion may perhaps have an undue bias.
Touching the tour, I quite agree with you that you and Kate would
have been uncomfortable alone. It's a very fine theory, that of women
being able to get along without men as well as with them; but, like
other fine theories, it will be found very troublesome by those who
first put it in practice. Gloved hands, petticoats, feminine
softness, and the general homage paid to beauty, all stand in the way
of success. These things may perhaps some day be got rid of, and
possibly with advantage; but while young ladies are still encumbered
with them a male companion will always be found to be a comfort. I
don't quite know whether your cousin George is the best possible
knight you might have chosen. I should consider myself to be
infinitely preferable, had my going been upon the cards. Were you in
danger of meeting Paynim foes, he, no doubt, would kill them off much
quicker than I could do, and would be much more serviceable in
liberating you from the dungeons of oppressors, or even from stray
tigers in the Swiss forests. But I doubt his being punctual with the
luggage. He will want you or Kate to keep the accounts, if any are
kept. He will be slow in getting you glasses of water at the railway
stations, and will always keep you waiting at breakfast. I hold that
a man with two ladies on a tour should be an absolute slave to them,
or they will not fully enjoy themselves. He should simply be an upper
servant, with the privilege of sitting at the same table with his
mistresses. I have my doubts as to whether your cousin is fit for the
place; but, as to myself, it is just the thing that I was made for.
Luckily, however, neither you nor Kate are without wills of your own,
and perhaps you may be able to reduce Mr. Vavasor to obedience.</p>
<p>As to the home affairs I have very little to say here,—in this
letter. I shall of course run up and see you before you start, and
shall probably stay a week in town. I know I ought not to do so, as
it will be a week of idleness, and yet not a week of happiness. I'd
sooner have an hour with you in the country than a whole day in
London. And I always feel in town that I've too much to do to allow
of my doing anything. If it were sheer idleness I could enjoy it, but
it is a feverish idleness, in which one is driven here and there,
expecting some gratification which not only never comes, but which
never even begins to come. I will, however, undergo a week of
it,—say the last seven days of this month, and shall trust to you to
recompense me by as much of yourself as your town doings will permit.</p>
<p>And now again as to those home affairs. If I say nothing now I
believe you will understand why I refrain. You have cunningly just
left me to imply, from what you say, that all my arguments have been
of no avail; but you do not answer them, or even tell me that you
have decided. I shall therefore imply nothing, and still trust to my
personal eloquence for success. Or rather not trust,—not trust, but
hope.</p>
<p>The garden is going on very well. We are rather short of water, and
therefore not quite as bright as I had hoped; but we are preparing
with untiring industry for future brightness. Your commands have been
obeyed in all things, and Morrison always says "The mistress didn't
mean this," or "The mistress did intend that." God bless the mistress
is what I now say, and send her home, to her own home, to her
flowers, and her fruit, and her house, and her husband, as soon as
may be, with no more of these delays which are to me so grievous, and
which seem to me to be so unnecessary. That is my prayer.</p>
<p class="ind10">Yours ever and always,</p>
<p class="ind15">J. G.<br/> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>"I didn't give commands," Alice said to herself, as she sat with the
letter at her solitary breakfast-table. "He asked me how I liked the
things, and of course I was obliged to say. I was obliged to seem to
care, even if I didn't care." Such were her first thoughts as she put
the letter back into its envelope, after reading it the second time.
When she opened it, which she did quickly, not pausing a moment lest
she should suspect herself of fearing to see what might be its
contents, her mind was full of that rebuke which her aunt had
anticipated, and which she had almost taught herself to expect. She
had torn the letter open rapidly, and had dashed at its contents with
quick eyes. In half a moment she had seen what was the nature of the
reply respecting the proposed companion of her tour, and then she had
completed her reading slowly enough. "No; I gave no commands," she
repeated to herself, as though she might thereby absolve herself from
blame in reference to some possible future accusations, which might
perhaps be brought against her under certain circumstances which she
was contemplating.</p>
<p>Then she considered the letter bit by bit, taking it backwards, and
sipping her tea every now and then amidst her thoughts. No; she had
no home, no house, there. She had no husband;—not as yet. He spoke
of their engagement as though it were a betrothal, as betrothals used
to be of yore; as though they were already in some sort married. Such
betrothals were not made now-a-days. There still remained, both to
him and to her, a certain liberty of extricating themselves from this
engagement. Should he come to her and say that he found that their
contemplated marriage would not make him happy, would not she release
him without a word of reproach? Would not she regard him as much more
honourable in doing so than in adhering to a marriage which was
distasteful to him? And if she would so judge him,—judge him and
certainly acquit him, was it not reasonable that she under similar
circumstances should expect a similar acquittal? Then she declared to
herself that she carried on this argument within her own breast
simply as an argument, induced to do so by that assertion on his part
that he was already her husband,—that his house was even now her
home. She had no intention of using that power which was still hers.
She had no wish to go back from her pledged word. She thought that
she had no such wish. She loved him much, and admired him even more
than she loved him. He was noble, generous, clever, good,—so good as
to be almost perfect; nay, for aught she knew he was perfect. Would
that he had some faults! Would that he had! Would that he had! How
could she, full of faults as she knew herself to be,—how could she
hope to make happy a man perfect as he was! But then there would be
no doubt as to her present duty. She loved him, and that was
everything. Having told him that she loved him, and having on that
score accepted his love, nothing but a change in her heart towards
him could justify her in seeking to break the bond which bound them
together. She did love him, and she loved him only.</p>
<p>But she had once loved her cousin. Yes, truly it was so. In her
thoughts she did not now deny it. She had loved him, and was
tormented by a feeling that she had had a more full delight in that
love than in this other that had sprung up subsequently. She had told
herself that this had come of her youth;—that love at twenty was
sweeter than it could be afterwards. There had been a something of
rapture in that earlier dream which could never be repeated,—which
could never live, indeed, except in a dream. Now, now that she was
older and perhaps wiser, love meant a partnership, in which each
partner would be honest to the other, in which each would wish and
strive for the other's welfare, so that thus their joint welfare
might be insured. Then, in those early girlish days, it had meant a
total abnegation of self. The one was of earth, and therefore
possible. The other had been a ray from heaven,—and impossible,
except in a dream.</p>
<p>And she had been mistaken in her first love. She admitted that
frankly. He whom she had worshipped had been an idol of clay, and she
knew that it was well for her to have abandoned that idolatry. He had
not only been untrue to her, but, worse than that, had been false in
excusing his untruth. He had not only promised falsely, but had made
such promises with a deliberate, premeditated falsehood. And he had
been selfish, coldly selfish, weighing the value of his own low lusts
against that of her holy love. She had known this, and had parted
from him with an oath to herself that no promised contrition on his
part should ever bring them again together. But she had pardoned him
as a man, though never as a lover, and had bade him welcome again as
a cousin and as her friend's brother. She had again become very
anxious as to his career, not hiding her regard, but professing that
anxiety aloud. She knew him to be clever, ambitious, bold,—and she
believed even yet, in spite of her own experience, that he might not
be bad at heart. Now, as she told herself that in truth she loved the
man to whom her troth was plighted, I fear that she almost thought
more of that other man from whom she had torn herself asunder.</p>
<p>"Why should he find himself unhappy in London?" she said, as she went
back to the letter. "Why should he pretend to condemn the very place
which most men find the fittest for all their energies? Were I a man,
no earthly consideration should induce me to live elsewhere. It is
odd how we differ in all things. However brilliant might be his own
light, he would be contented to hide it under a bushel!"</p>
<p>And at last she recurred to that matter as to which she had been so
anxious when she first opened her lover's letter. It will be
remembered how assured she had expressed herself that Mr. Grey would
not condescend to object to her travelling with her cousin. He had
not so condescended. He had written on the matter with a pleasant
joke, like a gentleman as he was, disdaining to allude to the past
passages in the life of her whom he loved, abstaining even from
expressing anything that might be taken as a permission on his part.
There had been in Alice's words, as she told him of their proposed
plan, a something that had betrayed a tremor in her thoughts. She had
studiously striven so to frame her phrases that her tale might be
told as any other simple statement,—as though there had been no
trembling in her mind as she wrote. But she had failed, and she knew
that she had failed. She had failed; and he had read all her effort
and all her failure. She was quite conscious of this; she felt it
thoroughly; and she knew that he was noble and a gentleman to the
last drop of his blood. And yet—yet—yet there was almost a feeling
of disappointment in that he had not written such a letter as Lady
Macleod had anticipated.</p>
<p>During the next week Lady Macleod still came almost daily to Queen
Anne Street, but nothing further was said between her and Miss
Vavasor as to the Swiss tour; nor were any questions asked about Mr..
Grey's opinion on the subject. The old lady of course discovered that
there was no quarrel, or, as she believed, any probability of a
quarrel; and with that she was obliged to be contented. Nor did she
again on this occasion attempt to take Alice to Lady Midlothian's.
Indeed, their usual subjects of conversation were almost abandoned,
and Lady Macleod's visits, though they were as constant as
heretofore, were not so long. She did not dare to talk about Mr. Grey,
and because she did not so dare, was determined to regard herself as
in a degree ill-used. So she was silent, reserved, and fretful. At
length came the last day of her London season, and her last visit to
her niece. "I would come because it's my last day," said Lady
Macleod; "but really I'm so hurried, and have so many things to do,
that I hardly know how to manage it."</p>
<p>"It's very kind," said Alice, giving her aunt an affectionate squeeze
of the hand.</p>
<p>"I'm keeping the cab, so I can just stay twenty-five minutes. I've
marked the time accurately, but I know the man will swear it's over
the half-hour."</p>
<p>"You'll have no more trouble about cabs, aunt, when you are back in
Cheltenham."</p>
<p>"The flies are worse, my dear. I really think they're worse. I pay
the bill every month, but they've always one down that I didn't have.
It's the regular practice, for I've had them from all the men in the
place."</p>
<p>"It's hard enough to find honest men anywhere, I suppose."</p>
<p>"Or honest women either. What do you think of Mrs. Green wanting to
charge me for an extra week, because she says I didn't give her
notice till Tuesday morning? I won't pay her, and she may stop my
things if she dares. However, it's the last time. I shall never come
up to London again, my dear."</p>
<p>"Oh, aunt, don't say that!"</p>
<p>"But I do say it, my dear. What should an old woman like me do,
trailing up to town every year, merely because it's what people
choose to call the season."</p>
<p>"To see your friends, of course. Age doesn't matter when a person's
health is so good as yours."</p>
<p>"If you knew what I suffer from lumbago,—though I must say coming to
London always does cure that for the time. But as for friends—!
Well, I suppose one has no right to complain when one gets to be as
old as I am; but I declare I believe that those I love best would
sooner be without me than with me."</p>
<p>"Do you mean me, aunt?"</p>
<p>"No, my dear, I don't mean you. Of course my life would have been
very different if you could have consented to remain with me till you
were married. But I didn't mean you. I don't know that I meant any
one. You shouldn't mind what an old woman like me says."</p>
<p>"You're a little melancholy because you're going away."</p>
<p>"No, indeed. I don't know why I stayed the last week. I did say to
Lady Midlothian that I thought I should go on the 20th; and, though I
know that she knew that I really didn't go, she has not once sent to
me since. To be sure they've been out every night; but I thought she
might have asked me to come and lunch. It's so very lonely dining by
myself in lodgings in London."</p>
<p>"And yet you never will come and dine with me."</p>
<p>"No, my dear; no. But we won't talk about that. I've just one word
more to say. Let me see. I've just six minutes to stay. I've made up
my mind that I'll never come up to town again,—except for one
thing."</p>
<p>"And what's that, aunt?" Alice, as she asked the question, well knew
what that one thing was.</p>
<p>"I'll come for your marriage, my dear. I do hope you will not keep me
long waiting."</p>
<p>"Ah! I can't make any promise. There's no knowing when that may be."</p>
<p>"And why should there be no knowing? I always think that when a girl
is once engaged the sooner she's married the better. There may be
reasons for delay on the gentleman's part."</p>
<p>"There very often are, you know,"</p>
<p>"But, Alice, you don't mean to say that Mr. Grey is putting it off?"</p>
<p>Alice was silent for a moment, during which Lady Macleod's face
assumed a look of almost tragic horror. Was there something wrong on
Mr. Grey's side of which she was altogether unaware? Alice, though for
a second or two she had been guilty of a slight playful deceit, was
too honest to allow the impression to remain. "No, aunt," she said;
"Mr. Grey is not putting it off. It has been left to me to fix the
time."</p>
<p>"And why don't you fix it?"</p>
<p>"It is such a serious thing! After all it is not more than four
months yet since I—I accepted him. I don't know that there has been
any delay."</p>
<p>"But you might fix the time now, if he wishes it."</p>
<p>"Well, perhaps I shall,—some day, aunt. I'm going to think about it,
and you mustn't drive me."</p>
<p>"But you should have some one to advise you, Alice."</p>
<p>"Ah! that's just it. People always do seem to think it so terrible
that a girl should have her own way in anything. She mustn't like any
one at first; and then, when she does like some one, she must marry
him directly she's bidden. I haven't much of my own way at present;
but you see, when I'm married I shan't have it at all. You can't
wonder that I shouldn't be in a hurry."</p>
<p>"I am not advocating anything like hurry, my dear. But, goodness
gracious me! I've been here twenty-eight minutes, and that horrid man
will impose upon me. Good-bye; God bless you! Mind you write." And
Lady Macleod hurried out of the room more intent at the present
moment upon saving her sixpence than she was on any other matter
whatsoever.</p>
<p>And then John Grey came up to town, arriving a day or two after the
time that he had fixed. It is not, perhaps, improbable that Alice had
used some diplomatic skill in preventing a meeting between Lady
Macleod and her lover. They both were very anxious to obtain the same
object, and Alice was to some extent opposed to their views. Had Lady
Macleod and John Grey put their forces together she might have found
herself unable to resist their joint endeavours. She was resolved
that she would not at any rate name any day for her marriage before
her return from Switzerland; and she may therefore have thought it
wise to keep Mr. Grey in the country till after Lady Macleod had gone,
even though she thereby cut down the time of his sojourn in London to
four days. On the occasion of that visit Mr. Vavasor did a very
memorable thing. He dined at home with the view of welcoming his
future son-in-law. He dined at home, and asked, or rather assented to
Alice's asking, George and Kate Vavasor to join the dinner-party.
"What an auspicious omen for the future nuptials!" said Kate, with
her little sarcastic smile. "Uncle John dines at home, and Mr. Grey
joins in the dissipation of a dinner-party. We shall all be changed
soon, I suppose, and George and I will take to keeping a little
cottage in the country."</p>
<p>"Kate," said Alice, angrily, "I think you are about the most unjust
person I ever met. I would forgive your raillery, however painful it
might be, if it were only fair."</p>
<p>"And to whom is it unfair on the present occasion;—to your father?"</p>
<p>"It was not intended for him."</p>
<p>"To yourself?"</p>
<p>"I care nothing as to myself; you know that very well."</p>
<p>"Then it must have been unfair to Mr. Grey."</p>
<p>"Yes; it was Mr. Grey whom you meant to attack. If I can forgive him
for not caring for society, surely you might do so."</p>
<p>"Exactly; but that's just what you can't do, my dear. You don't
forgive him. If you did you might be quite sure that I should say
nothing. And if you choose to bid me hold my tongue I will say
nothing. But when you tell me all your own thoughts about this thing
you can hardly expect but that I should let you know mine in return.
I'm not particular; and if you are ready for a little good,
wholesome, useful hypocrisy, I won't balk you. I mayn't be quite so
dishonest as you call me, but I'm not so wedded to truth but what I
can look, and act, and speak a few falsehoods if you wish it. Only
let us understand each other."</p>
<p>"You know I wish for no falsehood, Kate."</p>
<p>"I know it's very hard to understand what you do wish. I know that
for the last year or two I have been trying to find out your wishes,
and, upon my word, my success has been very indifferent. I suppose
you wish to marry Mr. Grey, but I'm by no means certain. I suppose the
last thing on earth you'd wish would be to marry George?"</p>
<p>"The very last. You're right there at any rate."</p>
<p>"Alice—! sometimes you drive me too hard; you do, indeed. You make
me doubt whether I hate or love you most. Knowing what my feelings
are about George, I cannot understand how you can bring yourself to
speak of him to me with such contempt!" Kate Vavasor, as she spoke
these words, left the room with a quick step, and hurried up to her
own chamber. There Alice found her in tears, and was driven by her
friend's real grief into the expression of an apology, which she knew
was not properly due from her. Kate was acquainted with all the
circumstances of that old affair between her brother and Alice. She
had given in her adhesion to the propriety of what Alice had done.
She had allowed that her brother George's behaviour had been such as
to make any engagement between them impossible. The fault, therefore,
had been hers in making any reference to the question of such a
marriage. Nor had it been by any means her first fault of the same
kind. Till Alice had become engaged to Mr. Grey she had spoken of
George only as her brother, or as her friend's cousin, but now she
was constantly making allusion to those past occurrences, which all
of them should have striven to forget. Under these circumstances was
not Lady Macleod right in saying that George Vavasor should not have
been accepted as a companion for the Swiss tour?</p>
<ANTIMG src="images/ill03-t.jpg" height-obs="500" alt='"Sometimes you drive me too hard."' />
<p>The little dinner-party went off very quietly; and if no other ground
existed for charging Mr. Grey with London dissipation than what that
afforded, he was accused most unjustly. The two young men had never
before met each other; and Vavasor had gone to his uncle's house,
prepared not only to dislike but to despise his successor in Alice's
favour. But in this he was either disappointed or gratified, as the
case may be. "He has plenty to say for himself," he said to Kate on
his way home.</p>
<p>"Oh yes; he can talk."</p>
<p>"And he doesn't talk like a prig either, which was what I expected.
He's uncommonly handsome."</p>
<p>"I thought men never saw that in each other. I never see it in any
man."</p>
<p>"I see it in every animal—in men, women, horses, dogs, and even
pigs. I like to look on handsome things. I think people always do who
are ugly themselves."</p>
<p>"And so you're going into raptures in favour of John Grey."</p>
<p>"No, I'm not. I very seldom go into raptures about anything. But he
talks in the way I like a man to talk. How he bowled my uncle over
about those actors; and yet if my uncle knows anything about anything
it is about the stage twenty years ago." There was nothing more said
then about John Grey; but Kate understood her brother well enough to
be aware that this praise meant very little. George Vavasor spoke
sometimes from his heart, and did so more frequently to his sister
than to any one else; but his words came generally from his head.</p>
<p>On the day after the little dinner in Queen Anne Street, John Grey
came to say good-bye to his betrothed;—for his betrothed she
certainly was, in spite of those very poor arguments which she had
used in trying to convince herself that she was still free if she
wished to claim her freedom. Though he had been constantly with Alice
during the last three days, he had not hitherto said anything as to
the day of their marriage. He had been constantly with her alone,
sitting for hours in that ugly green drawing-room, but he had never
touched the subject. He had told her much of Switzerland, which she
had never yet seen but which he knew well. He had told her much of
his garden and house, whither she had once gone with her father,
whilst paying a visit nominally to the colleges at Cambridge. And he
had talked of various matters, matters bearing in no immediate way
upon his own or her affairs; for Mr. Grey was a man who knew well how
to make words pleasant; but previous to this last moment he had said
nothing on that subject on which he was so intent.</p>
<p>"Well, Alice," he said, when the last hour had come, "and about that
question of home affairs?"</p>
<p>"Let us finish off the foreign affairs first."</p>
<p>"We have finished them; haven't we?"</p>
<p>"Finished them! why we haven't started yet."</p>
<p>"No; you haven't started. But we've had the discussion. Is there any
reason why you'd rather not have this thing settled."</p>
<p>"No; no special reason."</p>
<p>"Then why not let it be fixed? Do you fear coming to me as my wife?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"I cannot think that you repent your goodness to me."</p>
<p>"No; I don't repent it;—what you call my goodness? I love you too
entirely for that."</p>
<p>"My darling!" And now he passed his arm round her waist as they stood
near the empty fireplace. "And if you love
<span class="nowrap">me—"</span></p>
<p>"I do love you."</p>
<p>"Then why should you not wish to come to me?"</p>
<p>"I do wish it. I think I wish it."</p>
<p>"But, Alice, you must have wished it altogether when you consented to
be my wife."</p>
<p>"A person may wish for a thing altogether, and yet not wish for it
instantly."</p>
<p>"Instantly! Come; I have not been hard on you. This is still June.
Will you say the middle of September, and we shall still be in time
for warm pleasant days among the lakes? Is that asking for too much?"</p>
<p>"It is not asking for anything."</p>
<p>"Nay, but it is, love. Grant it, and I will swear that you have
granted me everything."</p>
<p>She was silent, having things to say but not knowing in what words to
put them. Now that he was with her she could not say the things which
she had told herself that she would utter to him. She could not bring
herself to hint to him that his views of life were so unlike her own,
that there could be no chance of happiness between them, unless each
could strive to lean somewhat towards the other. No man could be more
gracious in word and manner than John Grey; no man more chivalrous in
his carriage towards a woman; but he always spoke and acted as though
there could be no question that his manner of life was to be adopted,
without a word or thought of doubting, by his wife. When two came
together, why should not each yield something, and each claim
something? This she had meant to say to him on this day; but now that
he was with her she could not say it.</p>
<p>"John," she said at last, "do not press me about this till I return."</p>
<p>"But then you will say the time is short. It would be short then."</p>
<p>"I cannot answer you now;—indeed, I cannot. That is I cannot answer
in the affirmative. It is such a solemn thing."</p>
<p>"Will it ever be less solemn, dearest?"</p>
<p>"Never, I hope never."</p>
<p>He did not press her further then, but kissed her and bade her
farewell.</p>
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