<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
<p class="nind">“<span class="smcap">She</span> thinks I am fanciful,” he said.</p>
<p>He was sitting with Lady Markham in the room which was her special
sanctuary. She did not call it her boudoir—she was not at all inclined
to <i>bouder</i>; but it answered to that retirement in common parlance.
Those who wanted to see her alone, to confide in her, as many people
did, knocked at the door of this room. It opened with a large window
upon the lawn, and looked down through a carefully kept opening upon the
sea. Amid all the little luxuries appropriate to my lady’s chamber, you
could see the biggest ships in the world pass across the gleaming
foreground, shut in between two <i>massifs</i> of laurel, making a delightful
confusion of the great and the small, which was specially pleasant to
her. She sat, however,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-232" id="page_v2-232">{v2-232}</SPAN></span> with her back to this pleasant prospect, holding
up a screen, to shade her delicate cheek from the bright little fire,
which, though April was far advanced, was still thought necessary so
near the sea. Claude had thrown himself into another chair in front of
the fireplace. No warmth was ever too much for him. There was the usual
pathos in his tone, but a faint consciousness of something amusing was
in his face.</p>
<p>“Did she?” said Lady Markham with a laugh. “The little impertinent! But
you know, my dear boy, that is what I have always said.”</p>
<p>“Yes—it is quite true. You healthy people, you are always of opinion
that one can get over it if one makes the effort; and there is no way of
proving the contrary but by dying, which is a strong step.”</p>
<p>“A very strong step—one, I hope, that you will not think of taking.
They are both very sincere, my girls, though in a different way. They
mean what they say; and yet they do not mean it, Claude. That is, it is
quite true; but does not affect their regard for you, which,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-233" id="page_v2-233">{v2-233}</SPAN></span> I am sure,
without implying any deeper feeling, is strong.”</p>
<p>He shook his head a little. “Dear Lady Markham,” he said, “you know if I
am to marry, I want, above all things, to marry a daughter of yours.”</p>
<p>“Dear boy!” she said, with a look full of tender meaning.</p>
<p>“You have always been so good to me, since ever I can remember. But what
am I to do if they—object? Constance—has run away from me, people say:
run away—to escape <i>me</i>!” His voice took so tragically complaining a
tone, that Lady Markham bit her lip and held her screen higher to
conceal her smile. Next moment, however, she turned upon him with a
perfectly grave and troubled face.</p>
<p>“Dear Claude!” she cried, “what an injustice to poor Con. I thought I
had explained all that to you. You have known all along the painful
position I am in with their father, and you know how impulsive she is.
And then, Markham—— Alas!” she continued with a sigh, “my position is
very complicated, Claude. Markham is the best son that ever<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-234" id="page_v2-234">{v2-234}</SPAN></span> was; but
you know I have to pay a great deal for it.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Claude; “Nelly Winterbourn and all that,” with a good many
sage nods of his head.</p>
<p>“Not only Nelly Winterbourn—there is no harm in her, that I know—but
he has a great influence with the girls. It was he who put it into
Constance’s head to go to her father. I am quite sure it was. He put it
before her that it was her duty.”</p>
<p>“O—oh!” Claude made this very English comment with the doubtful tone
which it expresses; and added, “Her duty!” with a very unconvinced air.</p>
<p>“He did so, I know. And she was so fond of adventure and change. I
agreed with him partly afterwards that it was the best thing that could
happen to her. She is finding out by experience what banishment from
Society, and from all that makes life pleasant, is. I have no doubt she
will come back—in a very different frame of mind.”</p>
<p>Claude did not respond, as perhaps Lady Markham expected him to do. He
sat and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-235" id="page_v2-235">{v2-235}</SPAN></span> dandled his leg before the fire, not looking at her. After some
time, he said in a reflective way, “Whoever I marry, she will have to
resign herself to banishment, as you call it—that has been always
understood. A warm climate in winter—and to be ready to start at any
moment.”</p>
<p>“That is always understood—till you get stronger,” said Lady Markham in
the gentlest tone. “But you know I have always expected that you would
get stronger. Remember, you have been kept at home all this year—and
you are better; at all events you have not suffered.”</p>
<p>“Had I been sent away, Constance would have remained at home,” he said.
“I am not speaking out of irritation, but only to understand it fully.
It is not as if I were finding fault with Constance; but you see for
yourself she could not stand me all the year round. A fellow who has
always to be thinking about the thermometer is trying.”</p>
<p>“My dear boy,” said Lady Markham, “everything is trying. The thermometer
is much less offensive than most things that men care for. Girls are
brought up in that fastidious way:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-236" id="page_v2-236">{v2-236}</SPAN></span> you all like them to be so, and to
think they have refined tastes, and so forth; and then you are surprised
when you find they have a little difficulty—— Constance was only
fanciful, that was all—impatient.”</p>
<p>“Fanciful,” he repeated. “That was what the little one said. I wish she
were fanciful, and not so horribly well and strong.”</p>
<p>“My dear Claude,” said Lady Markham quickly, “you would not like that at
all! A delicate wife is the most dreadful thing—one that you would
always have to be considering; who could not perhaps go to the places
that suited you; who would not be able to go out with you when you
wanted her. I don’t insist upon a daughter of mine: but not that, not
that, for your own sake, my dear boy!”</p>
<p>“I believe you are right,” he said, with a look of conviction. “Then I
suppose the only thing to be done is to wait for a little and see how
things turn out. There is no hurry about it, you know.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no hurry!” she said, with uneasy assent. “That is, if you are not
in a hurry,” she added after a pause.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-237" id="page_v2-237">{v2-237}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“No, I don’t think so. I am rather enjoying myself, I think. It always
does one good,” he said, getting up slowly, “to come and have it out
with you.”</p>
<p>Lady Markham said “Dear boy!” once more, and gave him her hand, which he
kissed; and then his audience was over. He went away; and she turned
round to her writing-table to the inevitable correspondence. There was a
little cloud upon her forehead so long as she was alone; but when
another knock came at the door, it cleared by magic as she said “Come
in.” This time it was Sir Thomas who appeared. He was a tall man, with
grey hair, and had the air of being very carefully brushed and dressed.
He came in, and seated himself where Claude had been, but pushed back
the chair from the fire.</p>
<p>“Don’t you think,” he said, “that you keep your room a little too warm?”</p>
<p>“Claude complained that it was cold. It is difficult to please
everybody.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Claude. I have come to speak to you, dear Lady Markham, on a very
different subject. I was talking to Frances last night.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-238" id="page_v2-238">{v2-238}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>“So I perceived. And what do you think of my little girl?”</p>
<p>“You know,” he said, with some solemnity, “the hopes I have always
entertained that some time or other our dear Waring might be brought
among us once more.”</p>
<p>“I have always told you,” said Lady Markham, “that no difficulties
should be raised by me.”</p>
<p>“You were always everything that is good and kind,” said Sir Thomas. “I
was talking to his dear little daughter last night. She reminds me very
much of Waring, Lady Markham.”</p>
<p>“That is odd; for everybody tells me—and indeed I can see it
myself—that she is like me.”</p>
<p>“She is very like you; still, she reminds me of her father more than I
can say. I do think we have in her the instrument—the very instrument
that is wanted. If he is ever to be brought back again——”</p>
<p>“Which I doubt,” she said, shaking her head.</p>
<p>“Don’t let us doubt. With perseverance, everything is to be hoped; and
here we have in our very hands what I have always looked for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-239" id="page_v2-239">{v2-239}</SPAN></span>—some one
devoted to him and very fond of you.”</p>
<p>“Is she very fond of me?” said Lady Markham. Her face softened—a little
moisture crept into her eyes. “Ah, Sir Thomas, I wonder if that is true.
She was very much moved by the idea of her mother—a relation she had
never known. She expected I don’t know what, but more, I am sure, than
she has found in me. Oh, don’t say anything. I am scarcely surprised; I
am not at all displeased. To come with your heart full of an ideal, and
to find an ordinary woman—a woman in Society!” The moisture enlarged in
Lady Markham’s eyes—not tears, but yet a liquid mist that gave them
pathos. She shook her head, looking at him with a smile.</p>
<p>“We need not argue the question,” said Sir Thomas, “for I know she is
very fond of you. You should have heard her stop me when she thought I
was going to criticise you. Of course, had she known me better she would
have known how impossible that was.”</p>
<p>Lady Markham did not say “Dear Sir Thomas!” as she had said “Dear boy!”
but her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-240" id="page_v2-240">{v2-240}</SPAN></span> look was the same as that which she had turned upon Claude. She
was in no doubt as to what his account of her would be.</p>
<p>“She can persuade him, if anybody can,” he said. “I think I shall go and
see him as soon as I can get away—if you do not object. To bring our
dear Waring back, to see you two together again, who have always been
the objects of my warmest admiration——”</p>
<p>“You are too kind. You have always had a higher opinion of me than I
deserve,” she said. “One can only be grateful. One cannot try to
persuade you that you are mistaken. As for my—husband”—there was the
slightest momentary pause before she said the name—“I fear you will
never get him to think so well of me as you do. It is a great
misfortune; but still it sometimes happens that other people think more
of a woman than—her very own.”</p>
<p>“You must not say that. Waring adored you.”</p>
<p>She shook her head again. “He had a great admiration,” she said, “for a
woman to whom he gave my name. But he discovered that it was a mistake;
and for me in my own person<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-241" id="page_v2-241">{v2-241}</SPAN></span> he had no particular feeling. Think a
little whether you are doing wisely. If you should succeed in bringing
us two together again——”</p>
<p>“What then?”</p>
<p>She did not say any more: her face grew pale, as by a sudden touch or
breath. When such a tie as marriage is severed, if by death or by any
other separation, it is not a light thing to renew it again. The thought
of that possibility—which yet was not a possibility—suddenly realised,
sent the blood back to Lady Markham’s heart. It was not that she was
unforgiving, or even that she had not a certain remainder of love for
her husband. But to resume those habits of close companionship after so
many years—to give up her own individuality, in part at least, and live
a dual life—this thought startled her. She had said that she would put
no difficulties in the way. But then she had not thought of all that was
involved.</p>
<p>The next visitor who interrupted her retirement came in without the
preliminary of knocking. It was Markham who thus made his appearance,
presenting himself to the full<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-242" id="page_v2-242">{v2-242}</SPAN></span> daylight in his light clothes and
colourless aspect; not very well dressed, a complete contrast to the
beautiful if sickly youth of her first visitor, and to the size and
vigour of the other. Markham had neither beauty nor vigour. Even the
usual keenness and humorous look had gone out of his face. He held a
letter in his hand. He did not, like the others, put himself into the
chair where Lady Markham, herself turned from the light, could mark
every change of countenance in her interlocutor. He went up to the fire
with the ease of the master of the house, and stood in front of it as an
Englishman loves to do. But he was not quite at his ease on this
occasion. He said nothing until he had assumed his place, and even stood
for a whole minute or more silent before he found his voice. Lady
Markham had turned her chair towards him at once, and sat with her head
raised and expectant, watching him. For with Markham, never very
reticent of his words, this prolonged pause seemed to mean that there
was something important to say. But it did not appear when he spoke. He
put the forefinger of one hand<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-243" id="page_v2-243">{v2-243}</SPAN></span> on the letter he held in the other. “I
have heard from the Winterbourns,” he said. “They are coming to-morrow.”</p>
<p>Lady Markham made the usual little exclamation “Oh!”—faintly breathed
with the slightest catch, as if it might have meant more. Then, after a
moment—“Very well, Markham: they can have their usual rooms,” she said.</p>
<p>Again there was a little pause. Then—“He is not very well,” said
Markham.</p>
<p>“Oh, that is a pity,” she replied with very little concern.</p>
<p>“That’s not strong enough. I believe he is rather ill. They are leaving
the Crosslands sooner than they intended because there’s no doctor
there.”</p>
<p>“Then it is a good thing,” said Lady Markham, “that there is such a good
doctor here. We are so healthy a party, he is quite thrown away on us.”</p>
<p>Markham did not find that his mother divined what he wanted to say with
her usual promptitude. “I am afraid Winterbourn is in a bad way,” he
said at length, moving uneasily from one foot to the other, and avoiding
her eye.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-244" id="page_v2-244">{v2-244}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Do you mean that there is anything serious—dangerous? Good heavens!”
cried Lady Markham, now fully roused, “I hope she is not going to bring
that man to die here.”</p>
<p>“That’s just what I have been thinking. It would be decidedly awkward.”</p>
<p>“Oh, awkward is not the word,” cried Lady Markham, with a sudden vision
of all the inconveniences: her pretty house turned upside down—though
it was not hers, but his—a stop put to everything—the flight of her
guests in every direction—herself detained and separated from all her
social duties. “You take it very coolly,” she said. “You must write and
say it is impossible in the circumstances.”</p>
<p>“Can’t,” said Markham. “They must have started by this time. They are to
travel slowly—to husband his strength.”</p>
<p>“To husband——! Telegraph, then! Good heavens! Markham, don’t you see
what a dreadful nuisance—how impossible in every point of view.”</p>
<p>“Come,” he said, with a return of his more familiar tone. “There’s no
evidence that he means to die here. I daresay he won’t, if he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-245" id="page_v2-245">{v2-245}</SPAN></span> can help
it, poor beggar! The telegraph is as impossible as the post. We are in
for it, mammy. Let’s hope he’ll pull through.”</p>
<p>“And if he doesn’t, Markham!”</p>
<p>“That will be—more awkward still,” he said. Markham was not himself: he
shuffled from one foot to another, and looked straight before him, never
glancing aside with those keen looks of understanding which made his
insignificant countenance interesting. His mother was, what mothers too
seldom are, his most intimate friend; but he did not meet her eye. His
hands were thrust into his pockets, his shoulders up to his ears. At
last a faint and doubtful gleam broke over his face. He burst into a
sudden chuckle—one of those hoarse brief notes of laughter which were
peculiar to him. “By Jove! it would be poetic justice,” he said.</p>
<p>Lady Markham showed no inclination to laughter. “Is there nothing we can
do?” she cried.</p>
<p>“Think of something else,” said Markham, with a sudden recovery. “I
always find that the best thing to do—for the moment. What was Claude
saying to you—and t’other man?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-246" id="page_v2-246">{v2-246}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>“Claude! I don’t know what he was saying. News like this is enough to
drive everything else out of one’s head. He is wavering between Con and
Frances.”</p>
<p>“Mother, I told you. Frances will have nothing to say to him.”</p>
<p>“Frances—will obey the leading of events, I hope.”</p>
<p>“Poor little Fan! I don’t think she will, though. That child has a great
deal in her. She shows her parentage.”</p>
<p>“Sir Thomas says she reminds him much of her—father,” Lady Markham
said, with a faint smile.</p>
<p>“There is something of Waring too,” said her son, nodding his head.</p>
<p>This seemed to jar upon the mother. She changed colour a little; and
then added, her smile growing more constrained: “He thinks she may be a
powerful instrument in—changing his mind—bringing him, after all these
years, back”—here she paused a little, as if seeking for a phrase; then
added, her smile growing less and less pleasant—“to his duty.”</p>
<p>Then Markham for the first time looked at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-247" id="page_v2-247">{v2-247}</SPAN></span> her. He had been paying but
partial attention up to this moment, his mind being engrossed with
difficulties of his own; but he awoke at this suggestion, and looked at
her with something of his usual keenness, but with a gravity not at all
usual. And she met his eye with an awakening in hers which was still
more remarkable. For a moment they thus contemplated each other, not
like mother and son, nor like the dear and close friends they were, but
like two antagonists suddenly perceiving, on either side, the coming
conflict. For almost the first time there woke in Lady Markham’s mind a
consciousness that it was possible her son, who had been always her
champion, her defender, her companion, might wish her out of his way.
She looked at him with a rising colour, with all her nerves thrilling,
and her whole soul on the alert for his next words. These were words
which he would have preferred not to speak; but they seemed to be forced
from his lips against his will, though even as he said them he explained
to himself that they had been in his mind to say before he knew—before
the dilemma that might occur had seemed possible.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-248" id="page_v2-248">{v2-248}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Yes?” he said. “I understand what he means. I—even I—had been
thinking that something of the sort—might be a good thing.”</p>
<p>She clasped her hands with a quick passionate movement. “Has it come to
this—in a moment—without warning?” she cried.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v2-249" id="page_v2-249">{v2-249}</SPAN></span></p>
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