<p><SPAN name="c1-3" id="c1-3"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3>
<h4>THE ARM IN THE CLOUDS.<br/> </h4>
<p>There was plenty of time for full inquiry and full reply between Mrs.
Ray and Mrs. Prime before Rachel opened the cottage door, and
interrupted them. It was then nearly half-past ten. Rachel had never
been so late before. The last streak of the sun's reflection in the
east had vanished, the last ruddy line of evening light had gone, and
the darkness of the coming night was upon them. The hour was late for
any girl such as Rachel Ray to be out alone.</p>
<p>There had been a long discussion between the mother and the elder
daughter; and Mrs. Ray, believing implicitly in the last
announcements made to her, was full of fears for her child. The
utmost rigour of self-denying propriety should have been exercised by
Rachel, whereas her conduct had been too dreadful almost to be
described. Two or three hours since Mrs. Ray had fondly promised that
she would trust her younger daughter, and had let her forth alone,
proud in seeing her so comely as she went. An idea had almost entered
her mind that if the young man was very steady, such an acquaintance
might perhaps be not altogether wicked. But everything was changed
now. All the happiness of her trust was gone. All her sweet hopes
were crushed. Her heart was filled with fear, and her face was pale
with sorrow.</p>
<p>"Why should she know where he was to be?" Dorothea had asked. "But he
is not at Exeter;—he is here, and she was with him." Then the two
had sat gloomily together till Rachel returned. As she came in there
was a little forced laugh upon her face. "I am late; am I not?" she
said. "Oh, Rachel, very late!" said her mother. "It is half-past
ten," said Mrs. Prime. "Oh, Dolly, don't speak with that terrible
voice, as though the world were coming to an end," said Rachel; and
she looked up almost savagely, showing that she was resolved to
fight.</p>
<p>But it may be as well to say a few words about the firm of Messrs.
Bungall and Tappitt, about the Tappitt family generally, and about
Mr. Luke Rowan, before any further portion of the history of that
evening is written.</p>
<p>Why there should have been any brewery at all at Baslehurst, seeing
that everybody in that part of the world drinks cider, or how, under
such circumstances, Messrs. Bungall and Tappitt had managed to live
upon the proceeds of their trade, I cannot pretend to say. Baslehurst
is in the heart of the Devonshire cider country. It is surrounded by
orchards, and farmers talk there of their apples as they do of their
cheese in Cheshire, or their wheat in Essex, or their sheep in
Lincolnshire. Men drink cider by the gallon,—by the gallon daily;
cider presses are to be found at every squire's house, at every
parsonage, and every farm homestead. The trade of a brewer at
Baslehurst would seem to be as profitless as that of a breeches-maker
in the Highlands, or a shoemaker in Connaught;—but nevertheless
Bungall and Tappitt had been brewers in Baslehurst for the last fifty
years, and had managed to live out of their brewery.</p>
<p>It is not to be supposed that they were great men like the mighty men
of beer known of old,—such as Barclay and Perkins, or Reid and Co.
Nor were they new, and pink, and prosperous, going into Parliament
for this borough and that, just as they pleased, like the modern
heroes of the bitter cask. When the student at Oxford was asked what
man had most benefited humanity, and when he answered "Bass," I think
that he should not have been plucked. It was a fair average answer.
But no student at any university could have said as much for Bungall
and Tappitt without deserving utter disgrace, and whatever penance an
outraged examiner could inflict. It was a sour and muddy stream that
flowed from their vats; a beverage disagreeable to the palate, and
very cold and uncomfortable to the stomach. Who drank it I could
never learn. It was to be found at no respectable inn. It was
admitted at no private gentleman's table. The farmers knew nothing of
it. The labourers drenched themselves habitually with cider.
Nevertheless the brewery of Messrs. Bungall and Tappitt was kept
going, and the large ugly square brick house in which the Tappitt
family lived was warm and comfortable. There is something in the very
name of beer that makes money.</p>
<p>Old Bungall, he who first established the house, was still remembered
by the seniors of Baslehurst, but he had been dead more than twenty
years before the period of my story. He had been a short, fat old
man, not much above five feet high, very silent, very hard, and very
ignorant. But he had understood business, and had established the
firm on a solid foundation. Late in life he had taken into
partnership his nephew Tappitt, and during his life had been a severe
taskmaster to his partner. Indeed the firm had only assumed its
present name on the demise of Bungall. As long as he had lived it had
been Bungall's brewery. When the days of mourning were over,
then—and not till then—Mr. Tappitt had put up a board with the
joint names of the firm as at present called.</p>
<p>It was believed in Baslehurst that Mr. Bungall had not bequeathed his
undivided interest in the concern to his nephew. Indeed people went
so far as to say that he had left away from Mr. Tappitt all that he
could leave. The truth in that respect may as well be told at once.
His widow had possessed a third of the profits of the concern, in
lieu of her right to a full half share in the concern, which would
have carried with it the onus of a full half share of the work. That
third and those rights she had left to her nephew,—or rather to her
great-nephew, Luke Rowan. It was not, however, in this young man's
power to walk into the brewery and claim a seat there as a partner.
It was not in his power to do so, even if such should be his wish.
When old Mrs. Bungall died at Dawlish at the very advanced age of
ninety-seven, there came to be, as was natural, some little dispute
between Mr. Tappitt and his distant connection, Luke Rowan. Mr.
Tappitt suggested that Luke should take a thousand pounds down, and
walk forth free from all contamination of malt and hops. Luke's
attorney asked for ten thousand. Luke Rowan at the time was articled
to a lawyer in London, and as the dinginess of the chambers which he
frequented in Lincoln's Inn Fields appeared to him less attractive
than the beautiful rivers of Devonshire, he offered to go into the
brewery as a partner. It was at last settled that he should place
himself there as a clerk for twelve months, drawing a certain
moderate income out of the concern; and that if at the end of the
year he should show himself to be able, and feel himself to be
willing, to act as a partner, the firm should be changed to Tappitt
and Rowan, and he should be established permanently as a Baslehurst
brewer. Some information, however, beyond this has already been given
to the reader respecting Mr. Rowan's prospects. "I don't think he
ever will be a partner," Rachel had said to her mother, "because he
quarrels with Mr. Tappitt." She had been very accurate in her
statement. Mr. Rowan had now been three months at Baslehurst, and had
not altogether found the ways of his relative pleasant. Mr. Tappitt
wished to treat him as a clerk, whereas he wished to be treated as a
partner. And Mr. Tappitt had by no means found the ways of the young
man to be pleasant. Young Rowan was not idle, nor did he lack
intelligence; indeed he possessed more energy and cleverness than, in
Tappitt's opinion, were necessary to the position of a brewer in
Baslehurst; but he was by no means willing to use these good gifts in
the manner indicated by the sole existing owner of the concern. Mr.
Tappitt wished that Rowan should learn brewing seated on a stool, and
that the lessons should be purely arithmetical. Luke was instructed
as to the use of certain dull, dingy, disagreeable ledgers, and
informed that in them lay the natural work of a brewer. But he
desired to learn the chemical action of malt and hops upon each
other, and had not been a fortnight in the concern before he
suggested to Mr. Tappitt that by a salutary process, which he
described, the liquor might be made less muddy. "Let us brew good
beer," he had said; and then Tappitt had known that it would not do.
"Yes," said Tappitt, "and sell for twopence a pint what will cost you
threepence to make!" "That's what we've got to look to," said Rowan.
"I believe it can be done for the money,—only one must learn how to
do it." "I've been at it all my life," Tappitt said. "Yes, Mr.
Tappitt; but it is only now that men are beginning to appreciate all
that chemistry can do for them. If you'll allow me I'll make an
experiment on a small scale." After that Mr. Tappitt had declared
emphatically to his wife that Luke Rowan should never become a
partner of his. "He would ruin any business in the world," said
Tappitt. "And as to conceit!" It is true that Rowan was conceited,
and perhaps true also that he would have ruined the brewery had he
been allowed to have his own way.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Tappitt by no means held him in such aversion as did her
husband. He was a well-grown, good-looking young man for whom his
friends had made comfortable provision, and Mrs. Tappitt had three
marriageable daughters. Her ideas on the subject of young men in
general were by no means identical with those held by Mrs. Ray. She
was aware how frequently it happened that a young partner would marry
a daughter of the senior in the house, and it seemed to her that
special provision for such an arrangement was made in this case.
Young Rowan was living in her house, and was naturally thrown into
great intimacy with her girls. It was clear to her quick eye that he
was of a susceptible disposition, fond of ladies' society, and
altogether prone to those pleasant pre-matrimonial conversations,
from the effects of which it is so difficult for an inexperienced
young man to make his escape. Mrs. Tappitt was minded to devote to
him Augusta, the second of her flock,—but not so minded with any
obstinacy of resolution. If Luke should prefer Martha, the elder, or
Cherry, the younger girl, Mrs. Tappitt would make no objection; but
she expected that he should do his duty by taking one of them. "Laws,
T., don't be so foolish," she said to her husband, when he made his
complaint to her. She always called her husband T., unless when the
solemnity of some special occasion justified her in addressing him as
Mr. Tappitt. To have called him Tom or Thomas, would, in her
estimation, have been very vulgar. "Don't be so foolish. Did you
never have to do with a young man before? Those tantrums will all
blow off when he gets himself into harness." The tantrums spoken of
were Rowan's insane desire to brew good beer, but they were of so
fatal a nature that Tappitt was determined not to submit himself to
them. Luke Rowan should never be partner of his,—not though he had
twenty daughters waiting to be married!</p>
<p>Rachel had been acquainted with the Tappitts before young Rowan had
come to Baslehurst, and had been made known to him by them all
collectively. Had they shared their mother's prudence they would
probably not have done anything so rash. Rachel was better-looking
than either of them,—though that fact perhaps might not have been
known to them. But in justice to them all I must say that they lacked
their mother's prudence. They were good-humoured, laughing, ordinary
girls,—very much alike, with long brown curls, fresh complexions,
large mouths, and thick noses. Augusta was rather the taller of the
three, and therefore, in her mother's eyes, the beauty. But the girls
themselves, when their distant cousin had come amongst them, had not
thought of appropriating him. When, after the first day, they became
intimate with him, they promised to introduce him to the beauties of
the neighbourhood, and Cherry had declared her conviction that he
would fall in love with Rachel Ray directly he saw her. "She is tall,
you know," said Cherry, "a great deal taller than us." "Then I'm sure
I shan't like her," Luke had said. "Oh, but you must like her,
because she is a friend of ours," Cherry had answered; "and I
shouldn't be a bit surprised if you fell violently in love with her."
Mrs. Tappitt did not hear all this, but, nevertheless, she began to
entertain a dislike to Rachel. It must not be supposed that she
admitted her daughter Augusta to any participation in her plans. Mrs.
Tappitt could scheme for her child, but she could not teach her child
to scheme. As regarded the girl, it must all fall out after the
natural, pleasant, everyday fashion of such things; but Mrs. Tappitt
considered that her own natural advantages were so great that she
could make the thing fall out as she wished. When she was informed
about a fortnight after Rowan's arrival in Baslehurst that Rachel Ray
had been walking with the party from the brewery, she could not
prevent herself from saying an ill-natured word or two. "Rachel Ray
is all very well," she said, "but she is not the person whom you
should show off to a stranger as your particular friend."</p>
<p>"Why not, mamma?" said Cherry.</p>
<p>"Why not, my dear! There are reasons why not. Mrs. Ray is very well
in her way, <span class="nowrap">but—"</span></p>
<p>"Her husband was a gentleman," said Martha, "and a great friend of
Mr. Comfort's."</p>
<p>"My dear, I have nothing to say against her," said the mother, "only
this; that she does not go among the people we know. There is Mrs.
Prime, the other daughter; her great friend is Miss Pucker. I don't
suppose you want to be very intimate with Miss Pucker." The brewer's
wife had a position in Baslehurst and wished that her daughters
should maintain it.</p>
<p>It will now be understood in what way Rachel had formed her
acquaintance with Luke Rowan, and I think it may certainly be
admitted that she had been guilty of no great impropriety;—unless,
indeed, she had been wrong in saying nothing of the acquaintance to
her mother. Previous to those ill-natured tidings brought home as to
the first churchyard meeting, Rachel had seen him but twice. On the
first occasion she had thought but little of it,—but little of Luke
himself or of her acquaintance with him. In simple truth the matter
had passed from her mind, and therefore she had not spoken of it.
When they met the second time, Luke had walked much of the way home
with her,—with her alone,—having joined himself to her when the
Tappitt girls went into their house as Rachel had afterwards
described to her mother. In all that she had said she had spoken
absolutely the truth; but it cannot be pleaded on her behalf that
after this second meeting with Mr. Rowan she had said nothing of him
because she had thought nothing. She had indeed thought much, but it
had seemed well to her to keep her thoughts to herself.</p>
<p>The Tappitt girls had by no means given up their friend because their
mother had objected to Miss Pucker; and when Rachel met them on that
Saturday evening,—that fatal Saturday,—they were very gracious to
her. The brewery at Baslehurst stood on the outskirts of the town, in
a narrow lane which led from the church into the High-street. This
lane,—Brewery-lane, as it was called,—was not the main approach to
the church; but from the lane there was a stile into the churchyard,
and a gate, opened on Sundays, by which people on that side reached
the church. From the opposite side of the churchyard a road led away
to the foot of the High-street, and out towards the bridge which
divided the town from the parish of Cawston. Along one side of this
road there was a double row of elms, having a footpath beneath them.
This old avenue began within the churchyard, running across the lower
end of it, and was continued for some two hundred yards beyond its
precincts. This, then, would be the way which Rachel would naturally
take in going home, after leaving the Miss Tappitts at their door;
but it was by no means the way which was the nearest for Mrs. Prime
after leaving Miss Pucker's lodgings in the High-street, seeing that
the High-street itself ran direct to Cawston bridge.</p>
<p>And it must also be explained that there was a third path out of the
churchyard, not leading into any road, but going right away across
the fields. The church stood rather high, so that the land sloped
away from it towards the west, and the view there was very pretty.
The path led down through a small field, with high hedgerows, and by
orchards, to two little hamlets belonging to Baslehurst, and this was
a favourite walk with the people of the town. It was here that Rachel
had walked with the Miss Tappitts on that evening when Luke Rowan had
first accompanied her as far as Cawston bridge, and it was here that
they agreed to walk again on the Saturday when Rowan was supposed to
be away at Exeter. Rachel was to come along under the elms, and was
to meet her friends there, or in the churchyard, or, if not so, then
she was to call for them at the brewery.</p>
<p>She found the three girls leaning against the rails near the
churchyard stile. "We have been waiting ever so long," said Cherry,
who was more specially Rachel's friend.</p>
<p>"Oh, but I said you were not to wait," said Rachel, "for I never am
quite sure whether I can come."</p>
<p>"We knew you'd come," said Augusta, "because—"</p>
<p>"Because what?" asked Rachel.</p>
<p>"Because nothing," said Cherry. "She's only joking."</p>
<p>Rachel said nothing more, not having understood the point of the
joke. The joke was this,—that Luke Rowan had come back from Exeter,
and that Rachel was supposed to have heard of his return, and
therefore that her coming for the walk was certain. But Augusta had
not intended to be ill-natured, and had not really believed what she
had been about to insinuate. "The fact is," said Martha, "that Mr.
Rowan has come home; but I don't suppose we shall see anything of him
this evening as he is busy with papa."</p>
<p>Rachel for a few minutes became silent and thoughtful. Her mind had
not yet freed itself from the effects of her conversation with her
mother, and she had been thinking of this young man during the whole
of her solitary walk into town. But she had been thinking of him as
we think of matters which need not put us to any immediate trouble.
He was away at Exeter, and she would have time to decide whether or
no she would admit his proffered intimacy before she should see him
again. "I do so hope we shall be friends," he had said to her as he
gave her his hand when they parted on Cawston bridge. And then he had
muttered something, which she had not quite caught, as to Baslehurst
being altogether another place to him since he had seen her. She had
hurried home on that occasion with a feeling, half pleasant and half
painful, that something out of the usual course had occurred to her.
But, after all, it amounted to nothing. What was there that she could
tell her mother? She had no special tale to tell, and yet she could
not speak of young Rowan as she would have spoken of a chance
acquaintance. Was she not conscious that he had pressed her hand
warmly as he parted from her?</p>
<p>Rachel herself entertained much of that indefinite fear of young men
which so strongly pervaded her mother's mind, and which, as regarded
her sister, had altogether ceased to be indefinite. Rachel knew that
they were the natural enemies of her special class, and that any kind
of friendship might be allowed to her, except a friendship with any
of them. And as she was a good girl, loving her mother, anxious to do
well, guided by pure thoughts, she felt aware that Mr. Rowan should
be shunned. Had it not been that he himself had told her that he was
to be in Exeter, she would not have come out to walk with the brewery
girls on that evening. What she might hereafter decide upon doing,
how these affairs might be made to arrange themselves, she by no
means could foresee;—but on that evening she had thought she would
be safe, and therefore she had come out to walk.</p>
<p>"What do you think?" said Cherry; "we are going to have a party next
week."</p>
<p>"It won't be till the week after," said Augusta.</p>
<p>"At any rate, we are going to have a party, and you must come. You'll
get a regular invite, you know, when they're sent out. Mr. Rowan's
mother and sister are coming down on a visit to us for a few days,
and so we're going to be quite smart."</p>
<p>"I don't know about going to a party. I suppose it is for a dance?"</p>
<p>"Of course it is for a dance," said Martha.</p>
<p>"And of course you'll come and dance with Luke Rowan," said Cherry.
Nothing could be more imprudent than Cherry Tappitt, and Augusta was
beginning to be aware of this, though she had not been allowed to
participate in her mother's schemes. After that, there was much
talking about the party, but the conversation was chiefly kept up by
the Tappitt girls. Rachel was almost sure that her mother would not
like her to go to a dance, and was quite sure that her sister would
oppose such iniquity with all her power; therefore she made no
promise. But she listened as the list was repeated of those who were
expected to come, and asked some few questions as to Mrs. Rowan and
her daughter. Then, at a sudden turn of a lane, a lane that led back
to the town by another route, they met Luke Rowan himself.</p>
<p>He was a cousin of the Tappitts, and therefore, though the
relationship was not near, he had already assumed the privilege of
calling them by their Christian names; and Martha, who was nearly
thirty years old, and four years his senior, had taught herself to
call him Luke; with the other two he was as yet Mr. Rowan. The
greeting was of course very friendly, and he returned with them on
their path. To Rachel he raised his hat, and then offered his hand.
She had felt herself to be confused the moment she saw him,—so
confused that she was not able to ask him how he was with ordinary
composure. She was very angry with herself, and heartily wished that
she was seated with the Dorcas women at Miss Pucker's. Any position
would have been better for her than this, in which she was disgracing
herself and showing that she could not bear herself before this young
man as though he were no more than an ordinary acquaintance. Her mind
would revert to that hand-squeezing, to those muttered words, and to
her mother's caution. When he remarked to her that he had come back
earlier than he expected, she could not take his words as though they
signified nothing. His sudden return was a momentous fact to her,
putting her out of her usual quiet mode of thought. She said little
or nothing, and he, at any rate, did not observe that she was
confused; but she was herself so conscious of it, that it seemed to
her that all of them must have seen it.</p>
<p>Thus they sauntered along, back to the outskirts of the town, and so
into the brewery lane, by a route opposite to that of the churchyard.
The whole way they talked of nothing but the party. Was Miss Rowan
fond of dancing? Then by degrees the girls called her Mary, declaring
that as she was a cousin they intended so to do. And Luke said that
he ought to be called by his Christian name; and the two younger
girls agreed that he was entitled to the privilege, only they would
ask mamma first; and in this way they were becoming very intimate.
Rachel said but little, and perhaps not much that was said was
addressed specially to her, but she seemed to feel that she was
included in the friendliness of the gathering. Every now and then
Luke Rowan would address her, and his voice was pleasant to her ears.
He had made an effort to walk next to her,—an attempt almost too
slight to be called an effort, which she had, almost unconsciously,
frustrated, by so placing herself that Augusta should be between
them. Augusta was not quite in a good humour, and said one or two
words which were slightly snubbing in their tendency; but this was
more than atoned for by Cherry's high good-humour.</p>
<p>When they reached the brewery they all declared themselves to be very
much astonished on learning that it was already past nine. Rachel's
surprise, at any rate, was real. "I must go home at once," she said;
"I don't know what mamma will think of me." And then, wishing them
all good-bye, without further delay she hurried on into the
churchyard.</p>
<p>"I'll see you safe through the ghosts at any rate," said Rowan.</p>
<p>"I'm not a bit afraid of churchyard ghosts," said Rachel, moving on.
But Rowan followed her.</p>
<p>"I've got to go into town to meet your father," said he to the other
girls, "and I'll be back with him."</p>
<p>Augusta saw with some annoyance that he had overtaken Rachel before
she had passed over the stile, and stood lingering at the door long
enough to be aware that Luke was over first. "That girl is a flirt,
after all," she said to her sister Martha.</p>
<p>Luke was over the stile first, and then turned round to assist Miss
Ray. She could not refuse him her hand in such a position; or if she
could have done so she lacked the presence of mind that was necessary
for such refusal. "You must let me walk home with you," he said.</p>
<p>"Indeed I will do no such thing. You told Augusta that you were going
to her papa in the town."</p>
<p>"So I am, but I will see you first as far as the bridge; you can't
refuse me that."</p>
<p>"Indeed I can, and indeed I will. I beg you won't come. I am sure you
would not wish to annoy me."</p>
<p>"Look," said he, pointing to the west; "did you ever see such a
setting sun as that? Did you ever see such blood-red colour?" The
light was very wonderful, for the sun had just gone down and all the
western heavens were crimson with its departing glory. In the few
moments that they stood there gazing it might almost have been
believed that some portentous miracle had happened, so deep and dark,
and yet so bright, were the hues of the horizon. It seemed as though
the lands below the hill were bathed in blood. The elm trees
interrupted their view, so that they could only look out through the
spaces between their trunks. "Come to the stile," said he. "If you
were to live a thousand years you might never again see such a sunset
as that. You would never forgive yourself if you missed it, just that
you might save three minutes."</p>
<p>Rachel stepped with him towards the stile; but it was not solely his
entreaty that made her do so. As he spoke of the sun's glory her
sharp ear caught the sound of a woman's foot close to the stile over
which she had passed, and knowing that she could not escape at once
from Luke Rowan, she had left the main path through the churchyard,
in order that the new comer might not see her there talking to him.
So she accompanied him on till they stood between the trees, and then
they remained encompassed as it were in the full light of the sun's
rays. But if her ears had been sharp, so were the eyes of this new
comer. And while she stood there with Rowan beneath the elms, her
sister stood a while also on the churchyard path and recognized the
figures of them both.</p>
<p>"Rachel," said he, after they had remained there in silence for a
moment, "live as long as you may, never on God's earth will you look
on any sight more lovely than that. Ah! do you see the man's arm, as
it were; the deep purple cloud, like a huge hand stretched out from
some other world to take you? Do you see it?"</p>
<p>The sound of his voice was very pleasant. His words to her young ears
seemed full of poetry and sweet mysterious romance. He spoke to her
as no one,—no man or woman,—had ever spoken to her before. She had
a feeling, as painful as it was delicious, that the man's words were
sweet with a sweetness which she had known in her dreams. He had
asked her a question, and repeated it, so that she was all but driven
to answer him; but still she was full of the one great fact that he
had called her Rachel, and that he must be rebuked for so calling
her. But how could she rebuke a man who had bid her look at God's
beautiful works in such language as he had used?</p>
<p>"Yes, I see it; it is very grand; but—"</p>
<p>"There were the fingers, but you see how they are melting away. The
arm is there still, but the hand is gone. You and I can trace it
because we saw it when it was clear, but we could not now show it to
another. I wonder whether any one else saw that hand and arm, or only
you and I. I should like to think that it was shown to us, and us
only."</p>
<p>It was impossible for her now to go back upon that word Rachel. She
must pass it by as though she had not heard it. "All the world might
have seen it had they looked," said she.</p>
<p>"Perhaps not. Do you think that all eyes can see alike?"</p>
<p>"Well, yes; I suppose so."</p>
<p>"All eyes will see a loaf of bread alike, or a churchyard stile, but
all eyes will not see the clouds alike. Do you not often find worlds
among the clouds? I do."</p>
<p>"Worlds!" she said, amazed at his energy; and then she bethought
herself that he was right. She would never have seen that hand and
arm had he not been there to show it her. So she gazed down upon the
changing colours of the horizon, and almost forgot that she should
not have lingered there a moment.</p>
<p>And yet there was a strong feeling upon her that she was
sinking,—sinking,—sinking away into iniquity. She ought not to have
stood there an instant, she ought not to have been there with him at
all;—and yet she lingered. Now that she was there she hardly knew
how to move herself away.</p>
<p>"Yes; worlds among the clouds," he continued; but before he did so
there had been silence between them for a minute or two. "Do you
never feel that you look into other worlds beyond this one in which
you eat, and drink, and sleep? Have you no other worlds in your
dreams?" Yes; such dreams she had known, and now, she almost thought
that she could remember to have seen strange forms in the clouds. She
knew that henceforth she would watch the clouds and find them there.
She looked down into the flood of light beneath her, with a full
consciousness that he was close to her, touching her; with a full
consciousness that every moment that she lingered there was a new
sin; with a full consciousness, too, that the beauty of those fading
colours seen thus in his presence possessed a charm, a sense of soft
delight, which she had never known before. At last she uttered a long
sigh.</p>
<p>"Why, what ails you?" said he.</p>
<p>"Oh, I must go; I have been so wrong to stand here. Good-bye; pray,
pray do not come with me."</p>
<p>"But you will shake hands with me." Then he got her hand, and held
it. "Why should it be wrong for you to stand and look at the sunset?
Am I an ogre? Have I done anything that should make you afraid of
me?"</p>
<p>"Do not hold me. Mr. Rowan I did not think you would behave like
that." The gloom of the evening was now coming on, and though but a
few minutes had passed since Mrs. Prime had walked through the
churchyard, she would not have been able to recognize them had she
walked there now. "It is getting dark, and I must go instantly."</p>
<p>"Let me go with you, then, as far as the bridge."</p>
<p>"No, no, no. Pray do not vex me."</p>
<p>"I will not. You shall go alone. But stand while I say one word to
you. Why should you be afraid of me?"</p>
<p>"I am not afraid of you,—at least,—you know what I mean."</p>
<p>"I wonder,—I wonder whether—you dislike me."</p>
<p>"I don't dislike anybody. Good-night."</p>
<p>He had however again got her hand. "I'll tell you why I ask;—because
I like you so much, so very much! Why should we not be friends? Well;
there. I will not trouble you now. I will not stir from here till you
are out of sight. But mind,—remember this; I intend that you shall
like me."</p>
<p>She was gone from him, fleeing away along the path in a run while the
last words were being spoken; and yet, though they were spoken in a
low voice, she heard and remembered every syllable. What did the man
mean by saying that he intended that she should like him? Like him!
How could she fail of liking him? Only was it not incumbent on her to
take some steps which might save her from ever seeing him again? Like
him, indeed! What was the meaning of the word? Had he intended to ask
her to love him? And if so, what answer must she make?</p>
<p>How beautiful had been those clouds! As soon as she was beyond the
church wall, so that she could look again to the west, she gazed with
all her eyes to see if there were still a remnant left of that arm.
No; it had all melted into a monstrous shape, indistinct and gloomy,
partaking of the darkness of night. The brightness of the vision was
gone. But he bade her look into the clouds for new worlds, and she
seemed to feel that there was a hidden meaning in his words. As she
looked out into the coming darkness, a mystery crept over her, a
sense of something wonderful that was out there, away,—of something
so full of mystery that she could not tell whether she was thinking
of the hidden distances of the horizon, or of the distances of her
own future life, which were still further off and more closely
hidden. She found herself trembling, sighing, almost sobbing, and
then she ran again. He had wrapped her in his influence, and filled
her full of the magnetism of his own being. Her woman's
weakness,—the peculiar susceptibility of her nature, had never
before been touched. She had now heard the first word of romance that
had ever reached her ears, and it had fallen upon her with so great a
power that she was overwhelmed.</p>
<p>Words of romance! Words direct from the Evil One, Mrs. Prime would
have called them! And in saying so she would have spoken the belief
of many a good woman and many a good man. She herself was a good
woman,—a sincere, honest, hardworking, self-denying woman; a woman
who struggled hard to do her duty as she believed it had been taught
to her. She, as she walked through the churchyard,—having come down
the brewery lane with some inkling that her sister might be
there,—had been struck with horror at seeing Rachel standing with
that man. What should she do? She paused a moment to ask herself
whether she should return for her; but she said to herself that her
sister was obstinate, that a scene would be occasioned, that she
would do no good,—and so she passed on. Words of romance, indeed!
Must not all such words be words from the Father of Lies, seeing that
they are words of falseness? Some such thoughts passed through her
mind as she walked home, thinking of her sister's iniquity,—of her
sister who must be saved, like a brand from the fire, but whose
saving could now be effected only by the sternest of discipline. The
hours at the Dorcas meetings must be made longer, and Rachel must
always be there.</p>
<p>In the mean time Rachel hurried home with her spirits all a-tremble.
Of her immediately-coming encounter with her mother and her sister
she hardly thought much before she reached the door. She thought only
of him, how beautiful he was, how grand,—and how dangerous; of him
and of his words, how beautiful they were, how grand, and how
terribly dangerous! She knew that it was very late and she hurried
her steps. She knew that her mother must be appeased, and her sister
must be opposed,—but neither to her mother or to her sister was
given the depth of her thoughts. She was still thinking of him, and
of the man's arm in the clouds, when she opened the door of the
cottage at Bragg's End.</p>
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