<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2>
<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">There</span> were voices in the drawing-room as Frances ran up-stairs, which
warned her that her own appearance in her morning dress would be
undesirable there. She went on with a sense of relief to her own room,
where she threw aside the heavy cloak, lined with fur, which her aunt
had insisted on wrapping her in. It was too grave, too ample for
Frances, just as the other presents she had received were too rich and
valuable for her wearing. She took the emerald brooch out of her pocket
in its little case, and thrust it away into her drawer, glad to be rid
of it, wondering whether it would be her duty to show it, to exhibit her
presents. She divined that Lady Markham would be pleased, that she would
congratulate her upon having made herself agreeable to her aunt, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-182" id="page_v2-182">{v2-182}</SPAN></span>
perhaps repeat that horrible encouragement to her to make what progress
she could in the affections of the Clarendons, because they were rich
and had no heirs. If, instead of saying this, Lady Markham had but said
that Mrs Clarendon was lonely, having no children, and little good of
her husband’s society, how different it might have been. How anxious
then would Frances have been to visit and cheer her father’s sister! The
girl, though she was very simple, had a great deal of inalienable good
sense; and she could not but wonder within herself how her mother could
make so strange a mistake.</p>
<p>It was late before Lady Markham came up-stairs. She came in shading her
candle with her hand, gliding noiselessly to her child’s bedside. “Are
you not asleep, Frances? I thought you would be too tired to keep
awake.”</p>
<p>“Oh no. I have done nothing to tire me. I thought you would not want me
down-stairs, as I was not dressed.”</p>
<p>“I always want you,” said Lady Markham, stooping to kiss her. “But I
quite understand<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-183" id="page_v2-183">{v2-183}</SPAN></span> why you did not come. There was nobody that could have
interested you. Some old friends of mine, and a man or two whom Markham
brought to dine; but nothing young or pleasant. And did you have a
tolerable day? Was poor Caroline a little less grey and cold? But
Constance used to tell me she was only cold when I was there.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think she was cold. She was—very kind; at least that is what
she meant, I am sure,” said Frances, anxious to do her aunt justice.</p>
<p>Lady Markham laughed softly, with a sort of suppressed satisfaction. She
was anxious that Frances should please. She had herself, at a
considerable sacrifice of pride, kept up friendly relations, or at least
a show of friendly relations, with her husband’s sister. But
notwithstanding all this, the tone in which Frances spoke was balm to
her. The cloak was an evidence that the girl had succeeded; and yet she
had not joined herself to the other side. This unexpected triumph gave a
softness to Lady Markham’s voice.</p>
<p>“We must remember,” she said, “that poor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-184" id="page_v2-184">{v2-184}</SPAN></span> Caroline is very much alone.
When one is much alone, one’s very voice gets rusty, so to speak. It
sounds hoarse in one’s throat. You may think, perhaps, that I have not
much experience of that. Still, I can understand; and it takes some time
to get it toned into ordinary smoothness. It is either too expressive,
or else it sounds cold. A great deal of allowance is to be made for a
woman who spends so much of her life alone.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes,” cried Frances, with a burst of tender compunction, taking her
mother’s soft white dimpled hand in her own, and kissing it with a
fervour which meant penitence as well as enthusiasm. “It is so good of
you to remind me of that.”</p>
<p>“Because she has not much good to say of me? My dear, there are a great
many things that you don’t know, that it would be hard to explain to
you: we must forgive her for that.”</p>
<p>And for a moment Lady Markham looked very grave, turning her face away
towards the vacancy of the dark room with something that sounded like a
sigh. Her daughter had never loved her so much as at this moment. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-185" id="page_v2-185">{v2-185}</SPAN></span>
laid her cheek upon her mother’s hand, and felt the full sweetness of
that contact enter into her heart.</p>
<p>“But I am disturbing your beauty-sleep, my love,” she said; “and I want
you to look your best to-morrow; there are several people coming
to-morrow. Did she give you that great cloak, Frances? How like poor
Caroline! I know the cloak quite well. It is far too <i>old</i> for you. But
that is beautiful sable it is trimmed with; it will make you something.
She is fond of giving presents.” Lady Markham was very quick—full of
the intelligence in which Mrs Clarendon failed. She felt the instinctive
loosening of her child’s hands from her own, and that the girl’s cheek
was lifted from that tender pillow. “But,” she said, “we’ll say no more
of that to-night,” and stooped and kissed her, and drew her covering
about her with all the sweetness of that care which Frances had never
received before. Nevertheless, the involuntary and horrible feeling that
it was clever of her mother to stop when she did and say no more, struck
chill to the girl’s very soul.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-186" id="page_v2-186">{v2-186}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Next day Mr Ramsay came in the afternoon, and immediately addressed
himself to Frances. “I hope you have not forgotten your promise, Miss
Waring, to give me all the <i>renseignements</i>. I should not like to lose
such a good chance.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think I have any information to give you—if it is about
Bordighera, you mean. I am fond of it; but then I have lived there all
my life. Constance thought it dull.”</p>
<p>“Ah yes, to be sure—your sister went there. But her health was perfect.
I have seen her go out in the wildest weather, in days that made me
shiver. She said that to see the sun always shining bored her. She liked
a great deal of excitement and variety—don’t you think?” he added after
a moment, in a tentative way.</p>
<p>“The sun does not shine always,” said Frances, piqued for the reputation
of her home, as if this were an accusation. “We have grey days
sometimes, and sometimes storms, beautiful storms, when the sea is all
in foam.”</p>
<p>He shivered a little at the idea. “I have never yet found the perfect
place in which there is nothing of all that,” he said. “Wher<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-187" id="page_v2-187">{v2-187}</SPAN></span>ever I have
been, there are cold days—even in Algiers, you know. No climate is
perfect. I don’t go in much for society when I am at a health-place. It
disturbs one’s thoughts and one’s temper, and keeps you from fixing your
mind upon your cure, which you should always do. But I suppose you know
everybody there?”</p>
<p>“There is—scarcely any one there,” she said, faltering, remembering at
once that her father was not a person to whom to offer introductions.</p>
<p>“So much the better,” he said more cheerfully. “It is a thing I have
often heard doctors say, that society was quite undesirable. It disturbs
one’s mind. One can’t be so exact about hours. In short, it places
health in a secondary place, which is fatal. I am always extremely rigid
on that point. Health—must go before all. Now, dear Miss Waring, to
details, if you please.” He took out a little note-book, bound in
russia, and drew forth a jewelled pencil-case. “The hotels first, I beg;
and then the other particulars can be filled in. We can put them under
different heads:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-188" id="page_v2-188">{v2-188}</SPAN></span> (1) Shelter; (2) Exposure; (3) Size and convenience of
apartments; (4) Nearness to church, beach, &c. I hope you don’t think I
am asking too much?”</p>
<p>“I am so glad to see that you have not given him up because of Con,”
said one of Lady Markham’s visitors, talking very earnestly over the
tea-table, with a little nod and gesture to indicate of whom she was
speaking. “He must be very fond of you, to keep coming; or he must have
some hope.”</p>
<p>“I think he is rather fond of me, poor Claude!” Lady Markham replied
without looking round. “I am one of the oldest friends he has.”</p>
<p>“But Constance, you know, gave him a terrible snub. I should not have
wondered if he had never entered the house again.”</p>
<p>“He enters the house almost every day, and will continue to do so, I
hope. Poor boy, he cannot afford to throw away his friends.”</p>
<p>“Then that is almost the only luxury he can’t afford.”</p>
<p>Lady Markham smiled upon this remark. “Claude,” she said, turning round,
“don’t you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-189" id="page_v2-189">{v2-189}</SPAN></span> want some tea? Come and get it while it is hot.”</p>
<p>“I am getting some <i>renseignements</i> from Miss Waring. It is very good of
her. She is telling me all about Bordighera, which, so far as I can see,
will be a very nice place for the winter,” said Ramsay, coming up to the
tea-table with his little note-book in his hand. “Thanks, dear Lady
Markham. A little sugar, please. Sugar is extremely nourishing, and it
is a great pity to leave it out in diet—except, you know, when you are
inclining to fat. Banting is at the bottom of all this fashion of doing
without sugar. It is not good for little thin fellows like me.”</p>
<p>“I gave it up long before I ever heard of Banting,” said the stout lady:
for it need scarcely be said that there was a stout lady; no tea-party
in England ever assembled without one. The individual in the present
case was young, and rebellious against the fate which had overtaken
her—not of the soft, smiling, and contented kind.</p>
<p>“It does us real good,” said Claude, with his softly pathetic voice. “I
have seen one or two<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-190" id="page_v2-190">{v2-190}</SPAN></span> very sad instances where the fat did not go away,
you know, but got limp and flaccid, and the last state of that man was
worse than the first. Dear lady, I think you should be very cautious. To
make experiments with one’s health is really criminal. We are getting on
very nicely with the <i>renseignements</i>. Miss Waring has remembered a
great deal. She thought she could not tell me anything; but she has
remembered a great deal.”</p>
<p>“Bordighera? Is that where Constance is?” the ladies said to each other
round the low tea-table where Lady Markham was so busy. She smiled upon
them all, and answered “Yes,” without any tinge of the embarrassment
which perhaps they hoped to see.</p>
<p>“But of course as a resident she is not living among the people at the
hotels. You know how the people who live in a place hold themselves
apart; and the season is almost over. I don’t think that either tourists
or invalids passing that way are likely to see very much of Con.”</p>
<p>In the meantime, Frances, as young Ramsay had said, had been honestly
straining her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-191" id="page_v2-191">{v2-191}</SPAN></span> mind to “remember” what she could about the Marina and
the circumstances there. She did not know anything about the east wind,
and had no recollection of how it affected the place. She remembered
that the sun shone in at the windows all day; which of course meant, as
he informed her, a southern exposure; and that in all the hotel gardens,
as well as elsewhere, there were palms growing, and hedges of lemons and
orange trees; and that at the Angleterre—or was it the Victoria?—the
housekeeper was English; along with other details of a similar kind.
There were no balls; very few concerts or entertainments of any kind; no
afternoon tea-parties. “How could there be?” said Frances, “when there
were only ourselves, the Gaunts, and the Durants.”</p>
<p>“Only themselves, the Gaunts, and the Durants,” Ramsay wrote down in his
little book. “How delightful that must be! Thank you so much, Miss
Waring. Usually one has to pay for one’s experience; but thanks to you,
I feel that I know all about it. It seems a place in which one could do
one’s self every<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-192" id="page_v2-192">{v2-192}</SPAN></span> justice. I shall speak to Dr Lull about it at once. I
have no doubt he will think it the very place for me.”</p>
<p>“You will find it dull,” said Frances, looking at him curiously,
wondering was it possible that he could be sincere, or whether this was
his way of justifying to himself his intention of following Constance.
But nothing could be more steadily matter-of-fact than the young man’s
aspect.</p>
<p>“Yes, no doubt I shall find it dull. I don’t so very much object to
that. At Cannes and those places there is a continual racket going on.
One might almost as well be in London. One is seduced into going out in
the evening, doing all sorts of things. I think your place is an ideal
place—plenty of sunshine and no amusements. How can I thank you enough,
Miss Waring, for your <i>renseignements</i>? I shall speak to Dr Lull without
delay.”</p>
<p>“But you must recollect that it will soon be getting very hot; and even
the people who live there will be going away. Mr Durant sometimes takes
the duty at Homburg or one of those places; and the Gaunts come home to
England; and even we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-193" id="page_v2-193">{v2-193}</SPAN></span>——”</p>
<p>Here Frances paused for a moment to watch him, and she thought that the
pencil with which he was still writing down all these precious details,
paused too. He looked up at her, as if waiting for further information.
“Yes?” he said interrogatively.</p>
<p>“Even we—go up among the mountains where it is cooler,” she said.</p>
<p>He looked a little thoughtful at this; but presently threw her back into
perplexity by saying calmly: “That would not matter to me so much, since
I am quite sincere in thinking that when one goes to a health-place, one
should give one’s self up to one’s health. But unfortunately, or perhaps
I should say fortunately, Miss Waring, England is just as good as
anywhere else in the summer; and Dr Lull has not thought it necessary
this year to send me away. But I feel quite set up with your
<i>renseignements</i>,” he added, putting back his book into his pocket, “and
I certainly shall think of it for another year.”</p>
<p>Frances had been so singled out for the purpose of giving the young
invalid information, that she found herself a little apart from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-194" id="page_v2-194">{v2-194}</SPAN></span>
party when he went away. They were all ladies, and all intimates, and
the unaccustomed girl was not prepared for the onslaught of this curious
and eager, though so pretty and fashionable mob. “What are those
<i>renseignements</i> you have been giving him? Is he going off after Con?
Has he been questioning you about Con? We are all dying to know. And
what do you think she will say to him if he goes out after her?” cried
all, speaking together, those soft eager voices, to which Frances did
not know how to reply.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-195" id="page_v2-195">{v2-195}</SPAN></span></p>
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