<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV.</h3>
<p> </p>
<p>It was not till nearly three weeks after this that John
received another brief dispatch. "At home: come and
see us." He had indeed got a short letter or two in the
interval, saying almost nothing—a brief report of
Elinor's health, and of the baby, against whom he had
taken an unreasoning disgust and repugnance. "Little
beast!" he said to himself, passing over that part of the
bulletin: for the letters were scarcely more than bulletins,
without a word about the circumstances which surrounded
her. A shooting lodge in Ross-shire in the
middle of the winter! What a place for a delicate
woman! John was well enough aware that many elements
of comfort were possible even in such a place;
but he shut his eyes, as was natural, to anything that
went against his own point of view.</p>
<p>And now this telegram from Windyhill—"At home:
come and see us"—<i>us</i>. Was it a mistake of the telegraph
people?—of course they must make mistakes.
They had no doubt taken the <i>me</i> in Mrs. Dennistoun's
angular writing for <i>us</i>—or was it possible<span class="norewrap">——</span> John had
no peace in his mind until he had so managed matters
that he could go and see. There was no very pressing
business in the middle of January, when people had
hardly yet recovered the idleness of Christmas. He
started one windy afternoon, when everything was grey,
and arrived at Hurrymere station in the dim twilight,
still ruddy with tints of sunset. He was in a very contradictory
frame of mind, so that though his heart
jumped to see Mrs. Dennistoun awaiting him on the
platform, there mingled in his satisfaction in seeing her
and hearing what she had to tell so much sooner, a perverse
conviction of cold and discomfort in the long
drive up in the pony carriage which he felt sure was before
him. He was mistaken, however, on this point,
for the first thing she said was, "I have secured the fly,
John. Old Pearson will take your luggage. I have so
much to tell you." There was an air of excitement in
her face, but not that air of subdued and silent depression
which comes with solitude. She was evidently full
of the report she had to make; but yet the first thing
she did when she was ensconced in the fly with John beside
her was to cover her face with her hands, and subside
into her corner in a silent passion of tears.</p>
<p>"For mercy's sake tell me what is the matter. What
has happened? Is Elinor ill?"</p>
<p>He had almost asked is Elinor dead?</p>
<p>She uncovered her face, which had suddenly lighted
up with a strange gleam of joy underneath the tears.
"John, Elinor is here," she said.</p>
<p>"Here?"</p>
<p>"At home—safe. I have brought her back—and the
child."</p>
<p>"Confound the child!" John said in his excitement.
"Brought her back! What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Oh, John, it is a long story. I have a hundred
things to tell you, and to ask your advice upon; but the
main thing is that she is here. I have brought her away
from him. She will go back no more."</p>
<p>"She has left her husband?" he said, with a momentary
flicker of exultation in his dismay. But the dismay,
to do him justice, was the strongest. He looked
at his companion almost sternly. "Things," he said,
"must have been very serious to justify that."</p>
<p>"They were more than serious—they had become
impossible," Mrs. Dennistoun said.</p>
<p>And she told him her story, which was a long one.
She had arrived to find Elinor alone in the little solitary
lodge in the midst of the wilds, not without attention
indeed or comfort, but alone, her husband absent. She
had been very ill, and he had been at the neighbouring
castle, where a great party was assembled, and where,
the mother discovered at last, there was—the woman
who had made Elinor's life a burden to her. "I don't
know with what truth. I don't know whether there is
what people call any harm in it. It is possible he is
only amusing himself. I can't tell. But it has made
Elinor miserable this whole autumn through, that and a
multitude of other things. She would not let me send
for him when I got there. It had gone so far as that.
She said that the whole business disgusted him, that he
had lost all interest in her, that to hear it was over
might be a relief to him, but nothing more. Her heart
has turned altogether against him, John, in every way.
There have been a hundred things. You think I am
almost wickedly glad to have her home. And so I am.
I cannot deny it. To have her here even in her trouble
makes all the difference to me. But I am not so careless
as you think. I can look beyond to other things.
I shrink as much as you do from such a collapse of her
life. I don't want her to give up her duty, and now that
there is the additional bond of the child<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"Oh, for heaven's sake," said John, "leave the child
out of it! I want to hear nothing of the child!"</p>
<p>"That is one chief point, however, that we want your
advice about, John. A man, I suppose, does not understand
it; but her baby is everything to Elinor: and I
suppose—unless he can really be proved as guilty as
she thinks—he could take the child away."</p>
<p>John smiled to himself a little bitterly: this was why
he was sent for in such a hurry, not for the sake of his
society, or from any affection for him, but that he
might tell them what steps to take to secure them in
possession of the child. He said nothing for some time,
nor did Mrs. Dennistoun, whose disappointment in the
coldness of his response was considerable, and who
waited in vain for him to speak. At length she said,
almost tremblingly, "I am afraid you disapprove very
much of the whole business, John."</p>
<p>"I hope it has not been done rashly," he said. "The
husband's mere absence, though heartless as—as I
should have expected of the fellow—would yet not be
reason enough to satisfy any—court."</p>
<p>"Any court! You don't think she means to bring
him before any court? She wants only to be left alone.
We ask nothing from him, not a penny, not any money—surely,
surely no revenge—only not to be molested.
There shall not be a word said on our side, if he will
but let her alone."</p>
<p>John shook his head. "It all depends upon the view
the man takes of it," he said.</p>
<p>Now this was very cold comfort to Mrs. Dennistoun,
who had by this time become very secure in her position,
feeling herself entirely justified in all that she had
done. "The man," she said, "the man is not the sufferer:
and surely the woman has some claim to be
heard."</p>
<p>"Every claim," said John. "That is not what I was
thinking of. It is this: if the man has a leg to stand
upon, he will show fight. If he hasn't—why that will
make the whole difference, and probably Elinor's position
will be quite safe. But you yourself say<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"John, don't throw back upon me what I myself said.
I said that perhaps things were not so bad as she believed.
In my experience I have found that folly, and
playing with everything that is right is more common
than absolute wrong—and men like Philip Compton are
made up of levity and disregard of everything that is
serious."</p>
<p>"In that case," said John, "if you are right, he will
not let her go."</p>
<p>"Oh, John! oh, John! don't make me wish that he
may be a worse man than I think. He could not force
her to go back to him, feeling as she does."</p>
<p>"Nobody can force a woman to do that; but he
could perhaps make her position untenable; he would,
perhaps, take away the child."</p>
<p>"John," said Mrs. Dennistoun, in alarm, "if you
tell her that, she will fly off with him to the end of the
world. She will die before she will part with the child."</p>
<p>"I suppose that's how women are made," said John,
not yet cured of his personal offence.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said, "that's how women are made."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon," he said, coming to himself;
"but you know, aunt, a man may be pardoned for not
understanding that supreme fascination of the baby
who cares no more for one than another, poor little
animal, so long as it gets its food and is warm enough.
We must await and see what the man will do."</p>
<p>"Is that the best?—is there nothing we can do to
defend ourselves in the meantime—to make any sort of
barricade against him?"</p>
<p>"We must wait and see what he is going to do," said
John; and they went over and over the question, again
and again, as they climbed the hills. It grew quite
dark as they drove along, and when they came out upon
the open part of the road, from which the Cottage was
visible, they both looked out across the combe to the
lights in the windows with an involuntary movement.
The Cottage was transformed; instead of the one
lonely lighted window which had indicated to John in
former visits where Mrs. Dennistoun sat alone, there was
now a twinkle from various points, a glow of firelight, a
sensation of warmth, and company. Mrs. Dennistoun
looked out upon it and her face shone. It was not a
happy thing that Elinor should have made shipwreck
of her life, should have left her husband and sought
refuge in her mother's house. But how could it be
otherwise than happy that Elinor was there—Elinor
and the other little creature who was something more
than Elinor, herself and yet another? As for John, he
looked at it too, with an interest which stopped all
arguments on the cause of it. She was there—wrong,
perhaps, impatient; too quick to fly as she had been
too quick to go—but still Elinor all the same, whether
she was right or wrong.</p>
<p>The cab arrived soberly at the door, where Pearson
with the pony carriage, coming by the shorter way with
the luggage, had just arrived also. Mrs. Dennistoun
said, hurriedly, "You will find Elinor in the drawing-room,
John," and herself went hastily through the
house and up the stairs. She was going to the baby!
John guessed this with a smile of astonishment and
half contempt. How strange it was! There could not
be a more sad position than that in which, in their
rashness, these two women had placed themselves; and
yet the mother, a woman of experience, who ought to
have known better, got out of the carriage like a girl,
without waiting to be helped or attended to, and went
up-stairs like the wind, forgetting everything else for
that child—that child, the inheritor of Phil Compton's
name and very likely of his qualities—fated from his
birth (most likely) to bring trouble to everybody connected
with him! And yet Elinor was of less interest
to her mother. What strange caprices of nature! what
extraordinary freaks of womankind!</p>
<p>The Cottage down-stairs was warm and bright with
firelight and lamplight, and in the great chair by the
fire was reclining, lying back with her book laid on her
lap and her face full of eager attention to the sounds
outside, a pale young woman, surrounded by cushions
and warm wraps and everything an invalid could require,
who raised to him eyes more large and shining
than he had ever seen before, suffused with a dew of
pain and pleasure and eager welcome. Elinor, was it
Elinor? He had never seen her in any way like an invalid
before—never knew her to be ill, or weak, or unable
to walk out to the door and meet him or anyone
she cared for. The sight of her ailing, weak, with those
large glistening eyes, enlarged by feebleness, went to
his very heart. Fortunately he did not in any way connect
this enfeebled state with the phenomenon up-stairs,
which was best for all parties. He hurried up to
her, taking her thin hands into his own.</p>
<p>"Elinor! my poor little Nelly—can this be you!"</p>
<p>The water that was in her eyes rolled over in two
great tears; a brief convulsion went over her face.
"Yes, John," she said, almost in a whisper. "Strange
as it may seem, this is all that is left of me."</p>
<p>He sat down beside her and for a moment neither of
them spoke. Pity, tenderness, wrath, surged up together
in John's breast; pity, tender compassion, most
strong of all. Poor little thing; this was how she had
come back to her home; her heart broken, her wings
broken, as it were; all her soaring and swiftness and
energy gone. He could scarcely look upon her for the
pity that overflowed his heart. But underneath lay
wrath, not only against the man who had brought her
to such a pass, but against herself too.</p>
<p>"John," she said, after a while, "do you remember
saying to me that I was not one to bear, to put up with
things, to take the consequences if I tried a dangerous
experiment and failed?"</p>
<p>"Did I ever say anything so silly and so cruel?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, no; it was neither silly nor unkind, but
quite, quite true. I have thought of it so often. I
used to think of it to stir up my pride, to remind myself
that I ought to try to be better than my nature, not
to allow you to be a true prophet. But it was so, and
I couldn't change it. You can see you were right, John,
for I have not been like a strong woman, able to endure;
I have only been able to run away."</p>
<p>"My poor little Nelly!"</p>
<p>"Don't pity me," she said, the tears running over
again. "I am too well off; I am too well taken care of.
A prodigal should not be made so much of as I am."</p>
<p>"Don't call yourself a prodigal, Nelly! Perhaps
things may not be as bad as they appear. At least, it is
but the first fall—the greatest athlete gets many before
he can stand against the world."</p>
<p>"I'll never be an athlete, John. Besides, I'm a woman,
you know, and a fall of any kind is fatal to a woman,
especially anything of this kind. No, I know very
well it's all over; I shall never hold up my head again.
But that's not the question—the question is, to be safe
and as free as can be. Mamma takes me in, you know,
just as if nothing had happened. She is quite willing
to take the burden of me on her shoulders—and of
baby. She has told you that there are two of me, now,
John—my baby, as well as myself."</p>
<p>John could only nod an assent; he could not speak.</p>
<p>"It's a wonderful thing to come out of a wreck with
a treasure in one's arms; everything going to pieces
behind one; the rafters coming down, the walls falling in
and yet one's treasure in one's arms. Oh, I had not the
heart or the strength to come out of the tumbling
house. My mother did it all, dragged me out, wrapped
me up in love and kindness, carried me away. I don't
want you to think I was good for anything. I should
just have lain there and died. One thing, I did not
mind dying at all—I had quite made up my mind.
That would not have been so disgraceful as running
away."</p>
<p>"There is nothing that is disgraceful," said John,
"for heaven's sake don't say so, Nelly. It is unfortunate—beyond
words—but that is all. Nobody can
think that you are in any way disgraced. And if you
are allowed just to stay quietly here in your natural
home, I suppose you desire nothing more."</p>
<p>"What should I desire more, John? You don't suppose
I should like to go and live in the world again,
and go into society and all that? I have had about
enough of society. Oh, I want nothing but to be quiet
and unmolested, and bring up my baby. They could
not take my baby from me, John?"</p>
<p>"I do not think so," he said, with a grave face.</p>
<p>"You do not—think so? Then you are not <i>sure</i>?
My mother says dreadful things, but I cannot believe
them. They would never take an infant from its mother
to give it to—to give it to—a man—who could do
nothing, nothing for it. What could a man do with a
young child? a man always on the move, who has no
settled home, who has no idea what an infant wants?
John, I know law is inhuman, but surely, surely not so
inhuman as that."</p>
<p>"My dear Nelly," he said, "the law, you know, which,
as you say, is often inhuman, recognizes the child as
belonging to the father. He is responsible for it. For
instance, they never could come upon you for its maintenance
or education, or anything of that kind, until it
had been proved that the father<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"May I ask," said Elinor, with uplifted head, "of
what or of whom you are talking when you say <i>it</i>?"</p>
<p>It was all John could do not to burst into a peal of
aggrieved and indignant laughter. He who had been
brought from town, from his own comforts such as they
were, to be consulted about this brat, this child which
belonged to the dis-Honourable Phil; and Elinor, <i>Elinor</i>,
of all people in the world, threw up her head and
confronted him with disdain because he called the brat
it, and not him or her, whichever it was. John recollected
well enough that sentence at which he had been
so indignant in the telegram—"child, a boy "—but he
affected to himself not to know what it was for the indulgence
of a little contumely: and the reward he had
got was contumely upon his own head. But when he
looked at Elinor's pale face, the eyes so much larger
than they ought to be, with tears welling out unawares,
dried up for a moment by indignation or quick hasty
temper, the temper which made her sweeter words all
the more sweet he had always thought—then rising
again unawares under the heavy lids, the lips so ready
to quiver, the pathetic lines about the mouth: when he
looked at all these John's heart smote him. He would
have called the child anything, if there had been a sex
superior to him the baby should have it. And what
was there that man could do that he would not do for
the deliverance of the mother and the child?</p>
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