<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">Lady Markham</span> received young Gaunt with the most gracious kindness: had
his mother seen him seated in the drawing-room at Eaton Square, with
Frances hovering about him full of pleasure and questions, and her
mother insisting that he should stay to luncheon, and Markham’s hansom
just drawing up at the door, she would have thought her boy on the
highway to fortune. The sweetness of the two ladies—the happy eagerness
of Frances, and Lady Markham’s grace and graciousness—had a soothing
effect upon the young man. He had been unwilling to come, as he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-2" id="page_v3-2">{v3-2}</SPAN></span>
unwilling to go anywhere at this crisis of his life; but it soothed him,
and filled him with a sort of painful and bitter pleasure to be thus
surrounded by all that was most familiar to Constance,—by her mother
and sister, and all their questions about her. These questions, indeed,
it was hard upon him to be obliged to answer; but yet that pain was the
best thing that now remained to him, he said to himself. To hear her
name, and all those allusions to her, to be in the rooms where she had
spent her life—all this gave food to his longing fancy, and wrung, yet
soothed, his heart.</p>
<p>“My dear, you will worry Captain Gaunt with your questions; and I don’t
know those good people, Tasie and the rest: you must let me have my turn
now. Tell me about my daughter, Captain Gaunt. She is not a very good
correspondent. She gives few details of her life; and it must be so very
different from life here. Does she seem to enjoy herself? Is she happy
and bright? I have longed so much to see some one, impartial, whom I
could ask.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-3" id="page_v3-3">{v3-3}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>Impartial! If they only knew! “She is always bright,” he said with a
suppressed passion, the meaning of which Frances divined suddenly,
almost with a cry, with a start and thrill of sudden certainty, which
took away her breath. “But for happy, I cannot tell. It is not good
enough for her, out there.”</p>
<p>“No? Thank you, Captain Gaunt, for appreciating my child. I was afraid
it was not much of a sphere for her. What company has she? Is there
anything going on——?”</p>
<p>“Mamma,” said Frances, “I told you—there is never anything going on.”</p>
<p>The young soldier shook his head. “There is no society—except the
Durants—and ourselves—who are not interesting,” he said, with a
somewhat ghastly smile.</p>
<p>“The Durants are the clergyman’s family?—and yourselves. I think she
might have been worse off. I am sure Mrs Gaunt has been kind to my
wayward girl,” she said, looking him in the face with that charming
smile.</p>
<p>“Kind!” he cried, as if the word were a profanation. “My mother is too
happy to do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-4" id="page_v3-4">{v3-4}</SPAN></span>—anything. But Miss Waring,” he added with a feeble smile,
“has little need of—any one. She has so many resources—she is so far
above——”</p>
<p>He got inarticulate here, and stumbled in his speech, growing very red.
Frances watched him under her eyelids with a curious sensation of pain.
He was very much in earnest, very sad, yet transported out of his
langour and misery by Constance’s name. Now Frances had heard of George
Gaunt for years, and had unconsciously allowed her thoughts to dwell
upon him, as has been mentioned in another part of this history. His
arrival, had it not happened in the midst of other excitements which
preoccupied her, would have been one of the greatest excitements she had
ever known. She remembered now that when it did happen, there had been a
faint, almost imperceptible, touch of disappointment in it, in the fact
that his whole attention was given to Constance, and that for herself,
Frances, he had no eyes. But in the moment of seeing him again she had
forgotten all that, and had gone back to her previous prepossession in
his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-5" id="page_v3-5">{v3-5}</SPAN></span> favour, and his mother’s certainty that Frances and her George
would be “great friends.” Now she understood with instant divination the
whole course of affairs. He had given his heart to Constance, and she
had not prized the gift. The discovery gave her an acute, yet vague (if
that could be), impression of pain. It was she, not Constance, that had
been prepossessed in his favour. Had Constance not been there, no doubt
she would have been thrown much into the society of George
Gaunt—and—who could tell what might have happened? All this came
before her like the sudden opening of a landscape hid by fog and mists.
Her eyes swept over it, and then it was gone. And this was what never
had been, and never would be.</p>
<p>“Poor Con,” said Lady Markham. “She never was thrown on her own
resources before. Has she so many of them? It must be a curiously
altered life for her, when she has to fall back upon what you call her
resources. But you think she is happy?” she asked with a sigh.</p>
<p>How could he answer? The mere fact that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-6" id="page_v3-6">{v3-6}</SPAN></span> she was Constance, seemed to
Gaunt a sort of paradise. If she could make him happy by a look or a
word, by permitting him to be near her, how was it possible that, being
herself, she could be otherwise than blessed? He was well enough aware
that there was a flaw in his logic somewhere, but his mind was not
strong enough to perceive where that flaw was.</p>
<p>Markham came in in time to save him from the difficulty of an answer.
Markham did not recollect the young man, whom he had only seen once; but
he hailed him with great friendliness, and began to inquire into his
occupations and engagements. “If you have nothing better to do, you must
come and dine with me at my club,” he said in the kindest way, for which
Frances was very grateful to her brother. And young Gaunt, for his part,
began to gather himself together a little. The presence of a man roused
him. There is something, no doubt, seductive and relaxing in the fact of
being surrounded by sympathetic women, ready to divine and to console.
He had not braced himself to bear the pain of their questions; but
somehow had felt a certain luxury in letting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-7" id="page_v3-7">{v3-7}</SPAN></span> his despondency, his
languor, and displeasure with life appear. “I have to be here,” he had
said to them, “to see people, I believe. My father thinks it necessary:
and I could not stay; that is, my people are leaving Bordighera. It
becomes too hot to hold one—they say.”</p>
<p>“But you would not feel that, coming from India?”</p>
<p>“I came to get braced up,” he said with a smile, as of self-ridicule,
and made a little pause. “I have not succeeded very well in that,” he
added presently. “They think England will do me more good. I go back to
India in a year; so that, if I can be braced up, I should not lose any
time.”</p>
<p>“You should go to Scotland, Captain Gaunt. I don’t mean at once, but as
soon as you are tired of the season—that is the place to brace you
up—or to Switzerland, if you like that better.”</p>
<p>“I do not much care,” he had said with another melancholy smile, “where
I go.”</p>
<p>The ladies tried every way they could think of to console him, to give
him a warmer interest in his life. They told him that when he was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-8" id="page_v3-8">{v3-8}</SPAN></span>
feeling stronger, his spirits would come back. “I know how one runs down
when one feels out of sorts,” Lady Markham said. “You must let us try to
amuse you a little, Captain Gaunt.”</p>
<p>But when Markham appeared, this softness came to an end. George Gaunt
picked himself up, and tried to look like a man of the world. He had to
see some one at the Horse Guards, and he had some relations to call
upon; but he would be very glad, he said, to dine with Lord Markham. It
surprised Frances that her mother did not appear to look with any
pleasure on this engagement. She even interposed in a way which was
marked. “Don’t you think, Markham, it would be better if Captain Gaunt
and you dined with <i>me</i>? Frances is not half satisfied. She has not
asked half her questions. She has the first right to an old friend.”</p>
<p>“Gaunt is not going away to-morrow,” said Markham. “Besides, if he’s out
of sorts, he wants amusing, don’t you see?”</p>
<p>“And we are not capable of doing that! Frances, do you hear?”</p>
<p>“Very capable, in your way. But for a man,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-9" id="page_v3-9">{v3-9}</SPAN></span> when he’s low, ladies are
dangerous—that’s my opinion, and I’ve a good deal of experience.”</p>
<p>“Of low spirits, Markham!”</p>
<p>“No, but of ladies,” he said with a chuckle. “I shall take him somewhere
afterwards; to the play perhaps, or—somewhere amusing: whereas you
would talk to him all night, and Fan would ask him questions, and keep
him on the same level.”</p>
<p>Lady Markham made a reply which to Frances sounded very strange. She
said, “To the play—perhaps?” in a doubtful tone, looking at her son.
Gaunt had been sitting looking on in the embarrassed and helpless way in
which a man naturally regards a discussion over his own body as it were,
particularly if it is a conflict of kindness, and, glad to be delivered
from this friendly duel, turned to Frances with some observation, taking
no heed of Lady Markham’s remark. But Frances heard it with a confused
premonition which she could not understand. She could not understand,
and yet—— She saw Markham shrug his shoulders in reply; there was a
slight colour upon his face, which ordinarily knew none. What did they
both mean?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-10" id="page_v3-10">{v3-10}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But how elated would Mrs Gaunt have been, how pleased the General, had
they seen their son at Lady Markham’s luncheon-table, in the midst, so
to speak, of the first society! Sir Thomas came in to lunch, as he had a
way of doing; and so did a gay young Guardsman, who was indeed naturally
a little contemptuous of a man in the line, yet civil to Markham’s
friend. These simple old people would have thought their George on the
way to every advancement, and believed even the heart-break which had
procured him that honour well compensated. These were far from his own
sentiments; yet, to feel himself thus warmly received by “<i>her</i> people,”
the object of so much kindness, which his deluded heart whispered must
surely, surely, whatever she might intend, have been suggested at least
by something she had said of him, was balm and healing to his wounds. He
looked at her mother—and indeed Lady Markham was noted for her
graciousness, and for looking as if she meant to be the motherly friend
of all who approached her—with a sort of adoration. To be the mother of
Constance, and yet to speak to ordinary mortals<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-11" id="page_v3-11">{v3-11}</SPAN></span> with that smile, as if
she had no more to be proud of than they! And what could it be that made
her so kind? not anything in him—a poor soldier, a poor soldier’s son,
knowing nothing but the exotic society of India and its curious
ways—surely something which, out of some relenting of the heart, some
pity or regret, Constance had said. Frances sat next to him at table,
and there was a more subtle satisfaction still in speaking low, aside to
Frances, when he got a little confused with the general conversation,
that bewildering talk which was all made up of allusions. He told her
that he had brought a parcel from the Palazzo, and a box of flowers from
the bungalow,—that his mother was very anxious to hear from her, that
they were going to Switzerland—no, not coming home this year. “They
have found a cheap place in which my mother delights,” he said, with a
faint smile. He did not tell her that his coming home a little
circumscribed their resources, and that the month in town which they
were so anxious he should have, which in other circumstances he would
have enjoyed so much, but which now he cared nothing for, nor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-12" id="page_v3-12">{v3-12}</SPAN></span> for
anything, was the reason why they had stopped half-way on their usual
summer journey to England. Dear old people, they had done it for
him—this was what he thought to himself, though he did not say it—for
him, for whom nobody could now do anything! He did not say much, but as
he looked in Frances’ sympathetic eyes, he felt that, without saying a
word to her, she must understand it all.</p>
<p>Lady Markham made no remark about their visitor until after they had
done their usual afternoon’s “work,” as it was her habit to call
it—their round of calls, to which she went in an exact succession,
saying lightly, as she cut short each visit, that she could stay no
longer, as she had so much to do. There was always a shop or two to go
to, in addition to the calls, and almost always some benevolent
errand—some Home to visit, some hospital to call at, something about
the work of poor ladies, or the salvation of poor girls,—all these were
included along with the calls in the afternoon’s work. And it was not
till they had returned home and were seated together at tea, refreshing
themselves after their labours, that she mentioned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-13" id="page_v3-13">{v3-13}</SPAN></span> young Gaunt. She
then said, after a minute’s silence, suddenly, as if the subject had
been long in her mind, “I wish Markham had let that young man alone; I
wish he had left him to you and me.”</p>
<p>Frances started a little, and felt, with great self-indignation and
distress, that she blushed—though why, she could not tell. She looked
up, wondering, and said, “Markham! I thought it was so very kind.”</p>
<p>“Yes, my dear; I believe he means to be kind.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am sure he does; for he could have no interest in George
Gaunt—not for himself. I thought it was perhaps for my sake, because he
was—because he was the son of—such a friend.”</p>
<p>“Were they so good to you, Frances? And no doubt to Con too.”</p>
<p>“I am sure of it, mamma.”</p>
<p>“Poor people,” said Lady Markham; “and this is the reward they get. Con
has been experimenting on that poor boy. What do I mean by
experimenting? You know well enough what I mean, Frances. I suppose he
was the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-14" id="page_v3-14">{v3-14}</SPAN></span> only man at hand, and she has been amusing herself. He has been
dangling about her constantly, I have no doubt, and she has made him
believe that she liked it as well as he did. And then he has made a
declaration, and there has been a scene. I am sorry to say I need no
evidence in this case: I know all about it. And now, Markham! Poor
people, I say: it would have been well for them if they had never seen
one of our race.”</p>
<p>“Mamma!” cried Frances, with a little indignation, “I feel sure you are
misjudging Constance. Why should she do anything so cruel? Papa used to
say that one must have a motive.”</p>
<p>“<i>He</i> said so! I wonder if he could tell what motives were his
when—— Forgive me, my dear. We will not discuss your father. As for
Con, her motives are clear enough—amusement. Now, my dear, don’t! I
know you were going to ask me, with your innocent face, what amusement
it could possibly be to break that young man’s heart. The greatest in
the world, my love! We need not mince matters between ourselves. There
is nothing that diverts Con so<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-15" id="page_v3-15">{v3-15}</SPAN></span> much, and many another woman. You think
it is terrible; but it is true.”</p>
<p>“I think—you must be mistaken,” said Frances, pale and troubled, with a
little gasp as for breath. “But,” she went on, “supposing even that you
were right about Con, what could Markham do?”</p>
<p>Lady Markham looked at her very gravely. “He has asked this poor young
fellow—to dinner,” she said.</p>
<p>Frances could scarcely restrain a laugh, which was half hysterical.
“That does not seem very tragic,” she said.</p>
<p>“Oh no, it does not seem very tragic—poor people, poor people!” said
Lady Markham, shaking her head.</p>
<p>And there was no more; for a visitor appeared—one of a little circle of
ladies who came in and out every day, intimates, who rushed up-stairs
and into the room without being announced, always with something to say
about the Home, or the Hospital, or the Reformatory, or the Poor Ladies,
or the endangered girls. There was always a great deal to talk over
about these institutions, which formed an important<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-16" id="page_v3-16">{v3-16}</SPAN></span> part of the “work”
which all these ladies had to do. Frances withdrew to a little distance,
so as not to embarrass her mother and her friend, who were discussing
“cases” for one of those refuges of suffering humanity, and were more
comfortable when she was out of hearing. Frances knitted and thought of
home—not this bewildering version of it, but the quiet of the idle
village life where there was no “work,” but where all were neighbours,
lending a kindly hand to each other in trouble, and where the tranquil
days flew by she knew not how. She thought of this with a momentary,
oft-recurring secret protest against this other life, of which, as was
natural, she saw the evil more clearly than the good; and then, with a
bound, her thoughts returned to the extraordinary question to which her
mother had made so extraordinary a reply. What could Markham do? “He has
asked the poor young fellow to dinner.” Even now, in the midst of the
painful confusion of her mind, she almost laughed. Asked him to dinner!
How would that harm him? At Markham’s club there would be no poisoned
dishes—nothing that would slay. What harm<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-17" id="page_v3-17">{v3-17}</SPAN></span> could it do to George Gaunt
to dine with Markham? She asked herself the question again and again,
but could find no reply. When she turned to the other side and thought
of Constance, the blood rushed to her head with a feverish angry pang.
Was that also true? But in this case, Frances, like her mother, felt
that no doubt was possible. In this respect she had been able to
understand what her mother said to her. Her heart bled for the poor
people, whom Lady Markham compassionated without knowing them, and
wondered how Mrs Gaunt would bear the sight of the girl who had been
cruel to her son. All that, with agitation and trouble she could
believe: but Markham! What could Markham do?</p>
<p>She was going to the play with her mother that evening, which was to
Frances, fresh to every real enjoyment, one of the greatest of
pleasures. But she did not enjoy it that night. Lady Markham paid little
attention to the play: she studied the people as they went and came,
which was a usual weakness of hers, much wondered at and deplored by
Frances, to whom the stage was the centre of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-18" id="page_v3-18">{v3-18}</SPAN></span> attraction. But on this
occasion Lady Markham was more <i>distraite</i> than ever, levelling her
glass at every new group that appeared in the recesses between the
acts,—the restless crowd, which is always in motion. Her face, when she
removed the glass from it, was anxious, and almost unhappy. “Frances,”
she said, in one of these pauses, “your eyes must be sharper than mine;
try if you can see Markham anywhere.”</p>
<p>“Here is Markham,” said her son, opening the door of the box. “What does
the mother want with me, Fan?”</p>
<p>“Oh, you are here!” Lady Markham cried, leaning back in her chair with a
sigh of relief. “And Captain Gaunt too.”</p>
<p>“Quite safe, and out of the way of mischief,” said Markham with a
chuckle, which brought the colour to his mother’s cheek.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-19" id="page_v3-19">{v3-19}</SPAN></span></p>
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