<SPAN name="chap31"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XXXI. </h3>
<p>As February merged in March, and lighter evenings broke the gloom of
the woodmen's homeward journey, the Hintocks Great and Little began to
have ears for a rumor of the events out of which had grown the
timber-dealer's troubles. It took the form of a wide sprinkling of
conjecture, wherein no man knew the exact truth. Tantalizing phenomena,
at once showing and concealing the real relationship of the persons
concerned, caused a diffusion of excited surprise. Honest people as
the woodlanders were, it was hardly to be expected that they could
remain immersed in the study of their trees and gardens amid such
circumstances, or sit with their backs turned like the good burghers of
Coventry at the passage of the beautiful lady.</p>
<p>Rumor, for a wonder, exaggerated little. There were, in fact, in this
case as in thousands, the well-worn incidents, old as the hills, which,
with individual variations, made a mourner of Ariadne, a by-word of
Vashti, and a corpse of the Countess Amy. There were rencounters
accidental and contrived, stealthy correspondence, sudden misgivings on
one side, sudden self-reproaches on the other. The inner state of the
twain was one as of confused noise that would not allow the accents of
calmer reason to be heard. Determinations to go in this direction, and
headlong plunges in that; dignified safeguards, undignified collapses;
not a single rash step by deliberate intention, and all against
judgment.</p>
<p>It was all that Melbury had expected and feared. It was more, for he
had overlooked the publicity that would be likely to result, as it now
had done. What should he do—appeal to Mrs. Charmond himself, since
Grace would not? He bethought himself of Winterborne, and resolved to
consult him, feeling the strong need of some friend of his own sex to
whom he might unburden his mind.</p>
<p>He had entirely lost faith in his own judgment. That judgment on which
he had relied for so many years seemed recently, like a false companion
unmasked, to have disclosed unexpected depths of hypocrisy and
speciousness where all had seemed solidity. He felt almost afraid to
form a conjecture on the weather, or the time, or the fruit-promise, so
great was his self-abasement.</p>
<p>It was a rimy evening when he set out to look for Giles. The woods
seemed to be in a cold sweat; beads of perspiration hung from every
bare twig; the sky had no color, and the trees rose before him as
haggard, gray phantoms, whose days of substantiality were passed.
Melbury seldom saw Winterborne now, but he believed him to be occupying
a lonely hut just beyond the boundary of Mrs. Charmond's estate, though
still within the circuit of the woodland. The timber-merchant's thin
legs stalked on through the pale, damp scenery, his eyes on the dead
leaves of last year; while every now and then a hasty "Ay?" escaped his
lips in reply to some bitter proposition.</p>
<p>His notice was attracted by a thin blue haze of smoke, behind which
arose sounds of voices and chopping: bending his steps that way, he saw
Winterborne just in front of him. It just now happened that Giles,
after being for a long time apathetic and unemployed, had become one of
the busiest men in the neighborhood. It is often thus; fallen friends,
lost sight of, we expect to find starving; we discover them going on
fairly well. Without any solicitation, or desire for profit on his
part, he had been asked to execute during that winter a very large
order for hurdles and other copse-ware, for which purpose he had been
obliged to buy several acres of brushwood standing. He was now engaged
in the cutting and manufacture of the same, proceeding with the work
daily like an automaton.</p>
<p>The hazel-tree did not belie its name to-day. The whole of the
copse-wood where the mist had cleared returned purest tints of that
hue, amid which Winterborne himself was in the act of making a hurdle,
the stakes being driven firmly into the ground in a row, over which he
bent and wove the twigs. Beside him was a square, compact pile like
the altar of Cain, formed of hurdles already finished, which bristled
on all sides with the sharp points of their stakes. At a little
distance the men in his employ were assisting him to carry out his
contract. Rows of copse-wood lay on the ground as it had fallen under
the axe; and a shelter had been constructed near at hand, in front of
which burned the fire whose smoke had attracted him. The air was so
dank that the smoke hung heavy, and crept away amid the bushes without
rising from the ground.</p>
<p>After wistfully regarding Winterborne a while, Melbury drew nearer, and
briefly inquired of Giles how he came to be so busily engaged, with an
undertone of slight surprise that Winterborne could seem so thriving
after being deprived of Grace. Melbury was not without emotion at the
meeting; for Grace's affairs had divided them, and ended their intimacy
of old times.</p>
<p>Winterborne explained just as briefly, without raising his eyes from
his occupation of chopping a bough that he held in front of him.</p>
<p>"'Twill be up in April before you get it all cleared," said Melbury.</p>
<p>"Yes, there or thereabouts," said Winterborne, a chop of the billhook
jerking the last word into two pieces.</p>
<p>There was another interval; Melbury still looked on, a chip from
Winterborne's hook occasionally flying against the waistcoat and legs
of his visitor, who took no heed.</p>
<p>"Ah, Giles—you should have been my partner. You should have been my
son-in-law," the old man said at last. "It would have been far better
for her and for me."</p>
<p>Winterborne saw that something had gone wrong with his former friend,
and throwing down the switch he was about to interweave, he responded
only too readily to the mood of the timber-dealer. "Is she ill?" he
said, hurriedly.</p>
<p>"No, no." Melbury stood without speaking for some minutes, and then, as
though he could not bring himself to proceed, turned to go away.</p>
<p>Winterborne told one of his men to pack up the tools for the night and
walked after Melbury.</p>
<p>"Heaven forbid that I should seem too inquisitive, sir," he said,
"especially since we don't stand as we used to stand to one another;
but I hope it is well with them all over your way?"</p>
<p>"No," said Melbury—"no." He stopped, and struck the smooth trunk of a
young ash-tree with the flat of his hand. "I would that his ear had
been where that rind is!" he exclaimed; "I should have treated him to
little compared wi what he deserves."</p>
<p>"Now," said Winterborne, "don't be in a hurry to go home. I've put
some cider down to warm in my shelter here, and we'll sit and drink it
and talk this over."</p>
<p>Melbury turned unresistingly as Giles took his arm, and they went back
to where the fire was, and sat down under the screen, the other woodmen
having gone. He drew out the cider-mug from the ashes and they drank
together.</p>
<p>"Giles, you ought to have had her, as I said just now," repeated
Melbury. "I'll tell you why for the first time."</p>
<p>He thereupon told Winterborne, as with great relief, the story of how
he won away Giles's father's chosen one—by nothing worse than a
lover's cajoleries, it is true, but by means which, except in love,
would certainly have been pronounced cruel and unfair. He explained
how he had always intended to make reparation to Winterborne the father
by giving Grace to Winterborne the son, till the devil tempted him in
the person of Fitzpiers, and he broke his virtuous vow.</p>
<p>"How highly I thought of that man, to be sure! Who'd have supposed he'd
have been so weak and wrong-headed as this! You ought to have had her,
Giles, and there's an end on't."</p>
<p>Winterborne knew how to preserve his calm under this unconsciously
cruel tearing of a healing wound to which Melbury's concentration on
the more vital subject had blinded him. The young man endeavored to
make the best of the case for Grace's sake.</p>
<p>"She would hardly have been happy with me," he said, in the dry,
unimpassioned voice under which he hid his feelings. "I was not well
enough educated: too rough, in short. I couldn't have surrounded her
with the refinements she looked for, anyhow, at all."</p>
<p>"Nonsense—you are quite wrong there," said the unwise old man,
doggedly. "She told me only this day that she hates refinements and
such like. All that my trouble and money bought for her in that way is
thrown away upon her quite. She'd fain be like Marty South—think o'
that! That's the top of her ambition! Perhaps she's right. Giles, she
loved you—under the rind; and, what's more, she loves ye still—worse
luck for the poor maid!"</p>
<p>If Melbury only had known what fires he was recklessly stirring up he
might have held his peace. Winterborne was silent a long time. The
darkness had closed in round them, and the monotonous drip of the fog
from the branches quickened as it turned to fine rain.</p>
<p>"Oh, she never cared much for me," Giles managed to say, as he stirred
the embers with a brand.</p>
<p>"She did, and does, I tell ye," said the other, obstinately. "However,
all that's vain talking now. What I come to ask you about is a more
practical matter—how to make the best of things as they are. I am
thinking of a desperate step—of calling on the woman Charmond. I am
going to appeal to her, since Grace will not. 'Tis she who holds the
balance in her hands—not he. While she's got the will to lead him
astray he will follow—poor, unpractical, lofty-notioned dreamer—and
how long she'll do it depends upon her whim. Did ye ever hear anything
about her character before she came to Hintock?"</p>
<p>"She's been a bit of a charmer in her time, I believe," replied Giles,
with the same level quietude, as he regarded the red coals. "One who
has smiled where she has not loved and loved where she has not married.
Before Mr. Charmond made her his wife she was a play-actress."</p>
<p>"Hey? But how close you have kept all this, Giles! What besides?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Charmond was a rich man, engaged in the iron trade in the north,
twenty or thirty years older than she. He married her and retired, and
came down here and bought this property, as they do nowadays."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes—I know all about that; but the other I did not know. I fear
it bodes no good. For how can I go and appeal to the forbearance of a
woman in this matter who has made cross-loves and crooked entanglements
her trade for years? I thank ye, Giles, for finding it out; but it
makes my plan the harder that she should have belonged to that unstable
tribe."</p>
<p>Another pause ensued, and they looked gloomily at the smoke that beat
about the hurdles which sheltered them, through whose weavings a large
drop of rain fell at intervals and spat smartly into the fire. Mrs.
Charmond had been no friend to Winterborne, but he was manly, and it
was not in his heart to let her be condemned without a trial.</p>
<p>"She is said to be generous," he answered. "You might not appeal to
her in vain."</p>
<p>"It shall be done," said Melbury, rising. "For good or for evil, to
Mrs. Charmond I'll go."</p>
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