<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2>
<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">After</span> this, for about a fortnight, Captain Gaunt was very often visible
in Eaton Square. He dined next evening with Lady Markham and
Frances—Sir Thomas, who scarcely counted, he was so often there, being
the only other guest. Sir Thomas was a man who had a great devotion for
Lady Markham, and a very distant link of cousinship, which, or something
in themselves which made that impossible, had silenced any remark of
gossip, much less scandal, upon their friendship. He came in to luncheon
whenever it pleased him; he dined there—when he was not dining anywhere
else. But as both he and Lady Markham had many engagements, this was not
too often the case, though there was rarely an evening, if the ladies
were at home, when Sir Thomas did<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-20" id="page_v3-20">{v3-20}</SPAN></span> not “look in.” His intimacy was like
that of a brother in the cheerful easy house. This cheerful company, the
friendliness, the soothing atmosphere of feminine sympathy around him,
and underneath all the foolish hope, more sweet than anything else, that
a certain relenting on the part of Constance must be underneath, took
away the gloom and dejection, in great part at least, from the young
soldier’s looks. He exerted himself to please the people who were so
kind to him, and his melancholy smile had begun to brighten into
something more natural. Frances, for her part, thought him a very
delightful addition to the party. She looked at him across the table
almost with the pride which a sister might have felt when he made a good
appearance and did himself credit. He seemed to belong to her more or
less,—to reflect upon her the credit which he gained. It showed that
her friends after all were worth thinking of, that they were not
unworthy of the admiration she had for them, that they were able to hold
their own in what the people here called Society and the world. She
raised her little animated face to young<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-21" id="page_v3-21">{v3-21}</SPAN></span> Gaunt, was the first to see
what he meant, unconsciously interpreted or explained for him when he
was hazy—and beamed with delight when Lady Markham was interested and
amused. Poor Frances was not always quite clever enough to see when it
happened that the two elders were amused by the man himself, rather than
by what he said—and her gratification was great in his success. She
herself had never aspired to success in her own person; but it was a
great pleasure to her that the little community at Bordighera should be
vindicated and put in the best light. “They will never be able to say to
me <i>now</i> that we had no Society, that we saw nobody,” Frances said to
herself—attributing, however, a far greater brilliancy to poor George
than he ever possessed. He fell back into melancholy, however, when the
ladies left, and Sir Thomas found him dull. He had very little to say
about Waring, on whose behalf the benevolent baronet was so much
interested.</p>
<p>“Do you think he shows any inclination towards home?” Sir Thomas asked.</p>
<p>“I am sure,” young Gaunt answered, with a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-22" id="page_v3-22">{v3-22}</SPAN></span> solemn face, “that there is
nothing there that can satisfy such a creature as that.”</p>
<p>“He has no society, then?” asked Sir Thomas.</p>
<p>“Oh, society! it is like the poem,” said the young man, with a sigh. “I
should think it would be so everywhere. ‘Ye common people of the sky,
what are ye when your queen is nigh?’<span class="lftspc">”</span></p>
<p>Sir Thomas had been much puzzled by the application to Waring, as he
supposed, of the phrase, “such a creature as that;” but now he
perceived, with a compassionate shake of his head, what the poor young
fellow meant. Con had been at her tricks again! He said, with the
pitying look which such a question warranted, “I suppose you are very
fond of poetry?”</p>
<p>“No,” said the young soldier, astonished, looking at him suddenly. “Oh
no. I am afraid I am very ignorant; but sometimes it expresses what
nothing else can express. Don’t you think so?”</p>
<p>“I think perhaps it is time to join the ladies,” Sir Thomas said. He was
sorry for the boy,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-23" id="page_v3-23">{v3-23}</SPAN></span> though a little contemptuous too; but then he
himself had known Con and her tricks from her cradle, and those of many
another, and he was hardened. He thought their mothers had been far more
attractive women.</p>
<p>Was it the same art which made Frances look up with that bright look of
welcome, and almost affectionate interest, when they returned to the
drawing-room? Sir Thomas liked her so much, that he hoped it was not
merely one of their tricks; then paused, and said to himself that it
would be better if it were so, and not that the girl had really taken a
fancy to this young fellow, whose heart and head were both full of
another, and who, even without that, would evidently be a very poor
thing for Lady Markham’s daughter. Sir Thomas was so far unjust to
Frances, that he concluded it must be one of her tricks, when he
recollected how complacent she had been to Claude Ramsay, finding places
for him where he could sit out of the draught. They were all like that,
he said to himself; but concluded that, as one nail drives out another,
a second “affair,” if he could be drawn into it, might cure the victim.
This rapid <i>résumé</i> of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-24" id="page_v3-24">{v3-24}</SPAN></span> all the circumstances, present and future, is a
thing which may well take place in an experienced mind in the moment of
entering a room in which there are materials for the development of a
new chapter in the social drama. The conclusion he came to led him to
the side of Lady Markham, who was writing the address upon one of her
many notes. “It is to Nelly Winterbourn,” she explained, “to inquire——
You know they have dragged that poor sufferer up to town, to be near the
best advice; and he is lying more dead than alive.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps it is not very benevolent, so far as he is concerned; but I
hope he’ll linger a long time,” said Sir Thomas.</p>
<p>“Oh, so do I! These imbroglios may go on for a long time and do nobody
any harm. But when a horrible crisis comes, and one feels that they must
be cleared up!” It was evident that in this Lady Markham was not
specially considering the sufferings of poor Mr Winterbourn.</p>
<p>“What does Markham say?” Sir Thomas asked.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-25" id="page_v3-25">{v3-25}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Say! He does not say anything. He shuffles—you know the way he has. He
never could stand still upon both of his feet.”</p>
<p>“And you can’t guess what he means to do?”</p>
<p>“I think—— But who can tell? even with one whom I know so intimately
as Markham. I don’t say even in my son, for that does not tell for very
much.”</p>
<p>“Nothing at all,” said the social philosopher.</p>
<p>“Oh, a little, sometimes. I believe to a certain extent in a kind of
magnetic sympathy. You don’t, I know. I think, then, so far as I can
make out, that Markham would rather do nothing at all. He likes the
<i>status quo</i> well enough. But then he is only one; and the other—one
cannot tell how she might feel.”</p>
<p>“Nelly is the unknown quantity,” said Sir Thomas; and then Lady Markham
sent away, by the hands of the footman, her anxious affectionate little
billet “to inquire.”</p>
<p>Meanwhile young Gaunt sat down by Frances. On the table near them there
was a glorious show of crimson—the great dazzling<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-26" id="page_v3-26">{v3-26}</SPAN></span> red anemones, the
last of the season, which Mrs Gaunt had sent. It had been very difficult
to find them so late on, he told her; they had hunted into the coolest
corners where the spring flowers lingered the longest, his mother quite
anxious about it, climbing into the little valleys among the hills. “For
you know what you are to my mother,” he said, with a smile, and then a
sigh. Mrs Gaunt had often made disparaging comparisons—comparisons how
utterly out of the question! He allowed to himself that this candid
countenance, so open and simple, and so full of sympathy, had a
charm—more than he could have believed; but yet to make a comparison
between this sister and the other! Nevertheless it was very consolatory,
after the effort he had made at dinner, to lay himself back in the soft
low chair, with his long limbs stretched out, and talk or be talked to,
no longer with any effort, with a softening tenderness towards the
mother who loved Frances, but with whom he had had many scenes before he
left her, in frantic defence of the woman who had broken his heart.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-27" id="page_v3-27">{v3-27}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Mrs Gaunt was always so kind to me,” Frances said, gratefully, a little
moisture starting into her eyes. “At the Durants’ there seemed always a
little comparison with Tasie; but with your mother there was no
comparison.”</p>
<p>“A comparison with Tasie!” He laughed in spite of himself. “Nothing can
be so foolish as these comparisons,” he added, not thinking of Tasie.</p>
<p>“Yes, she was older,” said Frances. “She had a right to be more clever.
But it was always delightful at the bungalow. Does my father go there
often now?”</p>
<p>“Did he ever go often?”</p>
<p>“N-no,” said Frances, hesitating; “but sometimes in the evening. I hope
Constance makes him go out. I used to have to worry him, and often get
scolded. No, not scolded—that was not his way; but sent off with a
sharp word. And then he would relent, and come out.”</p>
<p>“I have not seen very much of Mr Waring,” Gaunt said.</p>
<p>“Then what does Constance do? Oh, it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-28" id="page_v3-28">{v3-28}</SPAN></span> must be such a change for her! I
could not have imagined such a change. I can’t help thinking sometimes
it is a great pity that I, who was not used to it, nor adapted for it,
should have all this—and Constance, who likes it, who suits it, should
be—banished; for it must be a sort of banishment for her, don’t you
think?”</p>
<p>“I—suppose so. Yes, there could be no surroundings too bright for her,”
he said, dreamily. He seemed to see her, notwithstanding, walking with
him up into the glades of the olive-gardens, with her face so bright.
Surely she had not felt her banishment then! Or was it only that the
amusement of breaking his heart made up for it, for the moment, as his
mother said?</p>
<p>“Fancy,” said Frances; “I am going to court on Monday—I—in a train and
feathers. What would they all say? But all the time I am feeling like
the daw in the peacock’s plumes. They seem to belong to Constance. She
would wear them as if she were a queen herself. She would not perhaps
object to be stared at; and she would be admired.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-29" id="page_v3-29">{v3-29}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>“Oh yes!”</p>
<p>“She was, they say, when she was presented, so much admired. She might
have been a maid of honour; but mamma would not. And I, a poor little
brown sparrow, in all the fine feathers—I feel inclined to call out, ‘I
am only Frances.’ But that is not needed, is it, when any one looks at
me?” she said, with a laugh. She had met with nobody with whom she could
be confidential among all her new acquaintances. And George Gaunt was a
new acquaintance too, if she had but remembered; but there was in him
something which she had been used to, something with which she was
familiar, a breath of her former life—and that acquaintance with his
name and all about him which makes one feel like an old friend. She had
expected for so many years to see him, that it appeared to her
imagination as if she had known him all these years—as if there was
scarcely any one with whom she was so familiar in the world.</p>
<p>He looked at her attentively as she spoke, a little touched, a little
charmed by this instinctive delicate familiarity, in which he at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-30" id="page_v3-30">{v3-30}</SPAN></span> last,
having so lately come out of the hands of a true operator, saw, whatever
Sir Thomas might think, that it was not one of their tricks. She did not
want any compliment from him, even had he been capable of giving it. She
was as sincere as the day, as little troubled about her inferiority as
she was convinced of it; the laugh with which she spoke had in it a
genuine tone of innocent youthful mirth, such as had not been heard in
that house for long. The exhilarating ring of it, so spontaneous, so
gay, reached Lady Markham and Sir Thomas in their colloquy, and roused
them. Frances herself had never laughed like that before. Her mother
gave a glance towards her, smiling. “The little thing has found her own
character in the sight of her old friend,” she said; and then rounded
her little epigram with a sigh.</p>
<p>“The young fellow ought to think much of himself to have two of them
taking that trouble.”</p>
<p>“Don’t talk nonsense,” said Lady Markham. “Do you think she is taking
trouble? She does not understand what it means.”</p>
<p>“Do any of them not understand what it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-31" id="page_v3-31">{v3-31}</SPAN></span> means?” asked Sir Thomas. He had
a large experience in Society, and thought he knew; but he had little
experience out of Society, and so, perhaps, did not. There are some
points in which a woman’s understanding is the best.</p>
<p>The evening had not been unpleasant to any one, not even, perhaps, to
the lovelorn, when Markham appeared, coming back from his dinner-party,
a signal to the other gentlemen that it was time for them to disappear
from theirs. He gave his mother the last news of Winterbourn; and he
told Sir Thomas that a division was expected, and that he ought to be in
the House. “The poor sufferer” was sinking slowly, Markham said. It was
quite impossible now to think of the operation which might perhaps have
saved him three months since. His sister was with Nelly, who had neither
mother nor sister of her own; and the long-expected event was thus to
come off decorously, with all the proper accessories. It was a very
important matter for two at least of the speakers; but this was how they
talked of it, hiding, perhaps, the anxiety within. Then Markham turned
to the other group.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-32" id="page_v3-32">{v3-32}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Have you got all the feathers and the furbelows ready?” he said. “Do
you think there will be any of you visible through them, little Fan?”</p>
<p>“Don’t frighten the child, Markham. She will do very well. She can be as
steady as a little rock: and in that case it doesn’t matter that she is
not tall.”</p>
<p>“Oh, tall—as if that were necessary! You are not tall yourself, our
mother; but you are a very majestic person when you are in your
war-paint.”</p>
<p>“There’s the Queen herself, for that matter,” said Sir Thomas. “See her
in a procession, and she might be six feet. I feel a mouse before her.”
He had held once some post about the court, and had a right to speak.</p>
<p>“Let us hope Fan will look majestic too. You should, to carry off the
effect I shall produce. In ordinary life,” said Markham, “I don’t
flatter myself that I am an Adonis; but you should see me screwed up
into a uniform. No, I’m not in the army, Fan. What is my uniform,
mother, to please her? A Deputy Lieutenant, or something of that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-33" id="page_v3-33">{v3-33}</SPAN></span> sort.
I hope you are a great deal the wiser, Fan.”</p>
<p>“People always look well in uniform,” said Frances, looking at him
somewhat doubtfully, on which Markham broke forth into his chuckle.
“Wait till you see me, my little dear. Wait till the little boys see me
on the line of route. They are the true tests of personal attraction.
Are you coming, Gaunt? Do you feel inclined to give those fellows their
revenge?”</p>
<p>Markham had spoken rather low, and at some distance from his mother; but
the word caught her quick ear.</p>
<p>“Revenge? What do you mean by revenge? Who is going to be revenged?” she
cried.</p>
<p>“Nobody is going to fight a duel, if that is what you mean,” said
Markham, quietly turning round. “Gaunt has, for as simple as he stands
there, beaten me at billiards, and I can’t stand under the affront.
Didn’t you lick me, Gaunt?”</p>
<p>“It was an accident,” said Gaunt. “If that is all, you are very welcome
to your revenge.”</p>
<p>“Listen to his modesty, which, by-the-by,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-34" id="page_v3-34">{v3-34}</SPAN></span> shows a little want of tact;
for am I the man to be beaten by an accident?” said Markham, with his
chuckle of self-ridicule. “Come along, Gaunt.”</p>
<p>Lady Markham detained Sir Thomas with a look as he rose to accompany
them. She gave Captain Gaunt her hand, and a gracious, almost anxious
smile. “Markham is noted for bad hours,” she said. “You are not very
strong, and you must not let him beguile you into his evil ways.” She
rose too, and took Sir Thomas by the arm as the young man went away.
“Did you hear what he said? Do you think it was only billiards he meant?
My heart quakes for that poor boy and the poor people he belongs to.
Don’t you think you could go after them and see what they are about?”</p>
<p>“I will do anything you please. But what good could I do?” said Sir
Thomas. “Markham would not put up with any interference from me—nor the
other young fellow either, for that matter.”</p>
<p>“But if you were there, if they saw you about, it would restrain them:
oh, you have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-35" id="page_v3-35">{v3-35}</SPAN></span> always been such a true friend. If you were but there.”</p>
<p>“There: where?” There came before the practical mind of Sir Thomas a
vision of himself, at his sober age, dragged into he knew not what
nocturnal haunts, like an elderly spectre, jeered at by the
pleasure-makers. “I will do anything to please you,” he said,
helplessly. “But what can I do? It would be of no use. You know yourself
that interference never does any good.”</p>
<p>Frances stood by aghast, listening to this conversation. What did it
mean? Of what was her mother afraid? Presently Lady Markham took her
seat again, with a return to her usual smiling calm. “You are right, and
I am wrong,” she said. “Of course we can do nothing. Perhaps, as you
say, there is no real reason for anxiety.” (Frances observed, however,
that Sir Thomas had not said this.) “It is because the boy is not well
off, and his people are not well off—old soldiers, with their pensions
and their savings. That is what makes me fear.”</p>
<p>“Oh, if that is the case, you need have the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-36" id="page_v3-36">{v3-36}</SPAN></span> less alarm. Where there’s
not much to lose, the risks are lessened,” Sir Thomas said, calmly.</p>
<p>When he too was gone, Frances crept close to her mother. She knelt down
beside the chair on which Lady Markham sat, grave and pale, with
agitation in her face. “Mother,” she whispered, taking her hand and
pressing her cheek against it, “Markham is so kind—he never would do
poor George any harm.”</p>
<p>“Oh, my dear,” cried Lady Markham, “how can you tell? Markham is not a
man to be read off like a book. He is very kind—which does not hinder
him from being cruel too. He means no harm, perhaps; but when the harm
is done, what does it matter whether he meant it or not? And as for the
risks being lessened because your friend is poor, that only means that
he is despatched all the sooner. Markham is like a man with a fever: he
has his fits of play, and one of them is on him now.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean—gambling?” said Frances, growing pale too. She did not
know very well what gambling was, but it was ruin, she had always
heard.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-37" id="page_v3-37">{v3-37}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Don’t let us talk of it,” said Lady Markham. “We can do no good; and to
distress ourselves for what we cannot prevent is the worst policy in the
world, everybody says. You had better go to bed, dear child; I have some
letters to write.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_v3-38" id="page_v3-38">{v3-38}</SPAN></span>”</p>
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