<h4><SPAN name="CHAPTER31" id="CHAPTER31">CHAPTER V.<br/>
THE RETURN OF THE WANDERER.</SPAN></h4>
<p></p>
<p>The March winds were blowing amongst the oaks in Dangerfield Park, when
Edward Arundel went back to the house which had never been his home since his
boyhood. He went back because he had grown weary of lonely wanderings in that
strange Breton country. He had grown weary of himself and of his own thoughts.
He was worn out by the eager desire that devoured him by day and by
night,––the passionate yearning to be far away beyond that low
Eastern horizon line; away amid the carnage and riot of an Indian
battle–field.</p>
<p>So he went back at last to his mother, who had written to him again and
again, imploring him to return to her, and to rest, and to be happy in the
familiar household where he was beloved. He left his luggage at the little inn
where the coach that had brought him from Exeter stopped, and then he walked
quietly homewards in the gloaming. The early spring evening was bleak and
chill. The blacksmith's fire roared at him as he went by the smithy. All the
lights in the queer latticed windows twinkled and blinked at him, as if in
friendly welcome to the wanderer. He remembered them all: the quaint,
misshapen, lopsided roofs; the tumble–down chimneys; the low doorways,
that had sunk down below the level of the village street, until all the front
parlours became cellars, and strange pedestrians butted their heads against the
flower–pots in the bedroom windows; the withered iron frame and pitiful
oil–lamp hung out at the corner of the street, and making a faint spot of
feeble light upon the rugged pavement; mysterious little shops in
diamond–paned parlour windows, where Dutch dolls and stationery, stale
gingerbread and pickled cabbage, were mixed up with wooden pegtops, squares of
yellow soap, rickety paper kites, green apples, and string; they were all
familiar to him.</p>
<p>It had been a fine thing once to come into this village with Letitia, and
buy stale gingerbread and rickety kites of a snuffy old pensioner of his
mother's. The kites had always stuck in the upper branches of the oaks, and the
gingerbread had invariably choked him; but with the memory of the kites and
gingerbread came back all the freshness of his youth, and he looked with a
pensive tenderness at the homely little shops, the merchandise flickering in
the red firelight, that filled each quaint interior with a genial glow of
warmth and colour.</p>
<p>He passed unquestioned by a wicket at the side of the great gates. The
firelight was rosy in the windows of the lodge, and he heard a woman's voice
singing a monotonous song to a sleepy child. Everywhere in this pleasant
England there seemed to be the glow of cottage–fires, and friendliness,
and love, and home. The young man sighed as he remembered that great stone
mansion far away in dismal Lincolnshire, and thought how happy he might have
been in this bleak spring twilight, if he could have sat by Mary Marchmont's
side in the western drawing–room, watching the firelight and the shadows
trembling on her fair young face.</p>
<p>It never had been; and it never was to be. The happiness of a home; the
sweet sense of ownership; the delight of dispensing pleasure to others; all the
simple domestic joys which make life beautiful,––had never been
known to John Marchmont's daughter, since that early time in which she shared
her father's lodging in Oakley Street, and went out in the cold December
morning to buy rolls for Edward Arundel's breakfast. From the bay–window
of his mother's favourite sitting–room the same red light that he had
seen in every lattice in the village streamed out upon the growing darkness of
the lawn. There was a half–glass door leading into a little lobby near
this sitting–room. Edward Arundel opened it and went in, very quietly. He
expected to find his mother and his sister in the room with the
bay–window.</p>
<p>The door of this familiar apartment was ajar; he pushed it open, and went
in. It was a very pretty room, and all the womanly litter of open books and
music, needlework and drawing materials, made it homelike. The firelight
flickered upon everything––on the pictures and
picture–frames, the black oak paneling, the open piano, a cluster of
snowdrops in a tall glass on the table, the scattered worsteds by the
embroidery–frame, the sleepy dogs upon the hearth–rug. A young lady
stood in the bay–window with her back to the fire. Edward Arundel crept
softly up to her, and put his arm round her waist.</p>
<p>"Letty!"</p>
<p>It was not Letitia, but a young lady with very blue eyes, who blushed
scarlet, and turned upon the young man rather fiercely; and then recognising
him, dropped into the nearest chair and began to tremble and grow pale.</p>
<p>"I am sorry I startled you, Miss Lawford," Edward said, gently; "I really
thought you were my sister. I did not even know that you were here."</p>
<p>"No, of course not. I––you didn't startle me much, Mr. Arundel;
only you were not expected home. I thought you were far away in Brittany. I had
no idea that there was any chance of your returning. I thought you meant to be
away all the summer––Mrs. Arundel told me so."</p>
<p>Belinda Lawford said all this in that fresh girlish voice which was familiar
to Mr. Arundel; but she was still very pale, and she still trembled a little,
and there was something almost apologetic in the way in which she assured
Edward that she had believed he would be abroad throughout the summer. It
seemed almost as if she had said: "I did not come here because I thought I
should see you. I had no thought or hope of meeting you."</p>
<p>But Edward Arundel was not a coxcomb, and he was very slow to understand any
such signs as these. He saw that he had startled the young lady, and that she
had turned pale and trembled as she recognised him; and he looked at her with a
half–wondering, half–pensive expression in his face.</p>
<p>She blushed as he looked at her. She went to the table and began to gather
together the silks and worsteds, as if the arrangement of her workbasket were a
matter of vital importance, to be achieved at any sacrifice of politeness.
Then, suddenly remembering that she ought to say something to Mr. Arundel, she
gave evidence of the originality of her intellect by the following remark:</p>
<p>"How surprised Mrs. Arundel and Letitia will be to see you!"</p>
<p>Even as she said this her eyes were still bent upon the skeins of worsted in
her hand.</p>
<p>"Yes; I think they will be surprised. I did not mean to come home until the
autumn. But I got so tired of wandering about a strange country alone. Where
are they––my mother and Letitia?"</p>
<p>"They have gone down the village, to the school. They will be back to tea.
Your brother is away; and we dine at three o'clock, and drink tea at eight. It
is so much pleasanter than dining late."</p>
<p>This was quite an effort of genius; and Miss Lawford went on sorting the
skeins of worsted in the firelight. Edward Arundel had been standing all this
time with his hat in his hand, almost as if he had been a visitor making a late
morning call upon Belinda; but he put his hat down now, and seated himself near
the table by which the young lady stood, busy with the arrangement of her
workbasket.</p>
<p>Her heart was beating very fast, and she was straining her arithmetical
powers to the uttermost, in the endeavour to make a very abstruse calculation
as to the time in which Mrs. Arundel and Letitia could walk to the village
schoolhouse and back to Dangerfield, and the delay that might arise by reason
of sundry interruptions from obsequious gaffers and respectful goodies, eager
for a word of friendly salutation from their patroness.</p>
<p>The arrangement of the workbasket could not last for ever. It had become the
most pitiful pretence by the time Miss Lawford shut down the wicker lid, and
seated herself primly in a low chair by the fireplace. She sat looking down at
the fire, and twisting a slender gold chain in and out between her smooth white
fingers. She looked very pretty in that fitful firelight, with her waving brown
hair pushed off her forehead, and her white eyelids hiding the tender blue
eyes. She sat twisting the chain in her fingers, and dared not lift her eyes to
Mr. Arundel's face; and if there had been a whole flock of geese in the room,
she could not have said "Bo!" to one of them.</p>
<p>And yet she was not a stupid girl. Her father could have indignantly refuted
any such slander as that against the azure–eyed Hebe who made his home
pleasant to him. To the Major's mind Belinda was all that man could desire in
the woman of his choice, whether as daughter or wife. She was the bright genius
of the old man's home, and he loved her with that chivalrous devotion which is
common to brave soldiers, who are the simplest and gentlest of men when you
chain them to their firesides, and keep them away from the din of the camp and
the confusion of the transport–ship.</p>
<p>Belinda Lawford was clever; but only just clever enough to be charming. I
don't think she could have got through "Paradise Lost," or Gibbon's "Decline
and Fall," or a volume by Adam Smith or McCulloch, though you had promised her
a diamond necklace when she came conscientiously to "Finis." But she could read
Shakespeare for the hour together, and did read him aloud to her father in a
fresh, clear voice, that was like music on the water. And she read Macaulay's
"History of England," with eyes that kindled with indignation against cowardly,
obstinate James, or melted with pity for poor weak foolish Monmouth, as the
case might be. She could play Mendelssohn and Beethoven,––plaintive
sonatas; tender songs, that had no need of words to expound the mystic meaning
of the music. She could sing old ballads and Irish melodies, that thrilled the
souls of those who heard her, and made hard men pitiful to brazen Hibernian
beggars in the London streets for the memory of that pensive music. She could
read the leaders in the "Times," with no false quantities in the Latin
quotations, and knew what she was reading about; and had her favourites at St.
Stephen's; and adored Lord Palmerston, and was liberal to the core of her
tender young heart. She was as brave as a true Englishwoman should be, and
would have gone to the wars with her old father, and served him as his page; or
would have followed him into captivity, and tended him in prison, if she had
lived in the days when there was such work for a high–spirited girl to
do.</p>
<p>But she sat opposite Mr. Edward Arundel, and twisted her chain round her
fingers, and listened for the footsteps of the returning mistress of the house.
She was like a bashful schoolgirl who has danced with an officer at her first
ball. And yet amidst her shy confusion, her fears that she should seem agitated
and embarrassed, her struggles to appear at her ease, there was a sort of
pleasure in being seated there by the low fire with Edward Arundel opposite to
her. There was a strange pleasure, an almost painful pleasure, mingled with her
feelings in those quiet moments. She was acutely conscious of every sound that
broke the stillness––the sighing of the wind in the wide chimney;
the falling of the cinders on the hearth; the occasional snort of one of the
sleeping dogs; and the beating of her own restless heart. And though she dared
not lift her eyelids to the young soldier's face, that handsome, earnest
countenance, with the chestnut hair lit up with gleams of gold, the firm lips
shaded by a brown moustache, the pensive smile, the broad white forehead, the
dark–blue handkerchief tied loosely under a white collar, the careless
grey travelling–dress, even the attitude of the hand and arm, the bent
head drooping a little over the fire,––were as present to her inner
sight as if her eyes had kept watch all this time, and had never wavered in
their steady gaze.</p>
<p>There is a second–sight that is not recognised by grave professors of
magic––a second–sight which common people call Love.</p>
<p>But by–and–by Edward began to talk, and then Miss Lawford found
courage, and took heart to question him about his wanderings in Brittany. She
had only been a few weeks in Devonshire, she said. Her thoughts went back to
the dreary autumn in Lincolnshire as she spoke; and she remembered the dull
October day upon which her father had come into the girl's morning–room
at the Grange with Edward's farewell letter in his hand. She remembered this,
and all the talk that there had been about the horsewhipping of Mr. Paul
Marchmont upon his own threshold. She remembered all the warm discussions, the
speculations, the ignorant conjectures, the praise, the blame; and how it had
been her business to sit by and listen and hold her peace, except upon that one
never–to–be–forgotten night at the Rectory, when Paul
Marchmont had hinted at something whose perfect meaning she had never dared to
imagine, but which had, somehow or other, mingled vaguely with all her
day–dreams ever since.</p>
<p>Was there any truth in that which Paul Marchmont had said to her? Was it
true that Edward Arundel had never really loved his young bride?</p>
<p>Letitia had said as much, not once, but twenty times.</p>
<p>"It's quite ridiculous to suppose that he could have ever been in love with
the poor, dear, sickly thing," Miss Arundel had exclaimed; "it was only the
absurd romance of the business that captivated him; for Edward is really
ridiculously romantic, and her father having been a
supernumer––(it's no use, I don't think anybody ever did know how
many syllables there are in that word)––and having lived in Oakley
Street, and having written a pitiful letter to Edward, about this motherless
daughter and all that sort of thing, just like one of those tiresome old novels
with a baby left at a cottage–door, and all the <em>s's</em> looking like
<em>f's</em>, and the last word of one page repeated at the top of the next
page, and printed upon thick yellow–looking ribbed paper, you know.
<em>That</em> was why my brother married Miss Marchmont, you may depend upon
it, Linda; and all I hope is, that he'll be sensible enough to marry again
soon, and to have a Christianlike wedding, with carriages, and a breakfast, and
two clergymen; and <em>I</em> should wear white glac� silk, with tulle
puffings, and a tulle bonnet (I suppose I must wear a bonnet, being only a
bridesmaid?), all showered over with clematis, as if I'd stood under a
clematis–bush when the wind was blowing, you know, Linda."</p>
<p>With such discourse as this Miss Arundel had frequently entertained her
friend; and she had indulged in numerous inuendoes of an embarrassing nature as
to the propriety of old friends and schoolfellows being united by the endearing
tie of sister–in–lawhood, and other observations to the like
effect.</p>
<p>Belinda knew that if Edward ever came to love her,––whenever she
did venture to speculate upon such a chance, she never dared to come at all
near it, but thought of it as a thing that might come to pass in half a century
or so––if he should choose her for his second wife, she knew that
she would be gladly and tenderly welcomed at Dangerfield. Mrs. Arundel had
hinted as much as this. Belinda knew how anxiously that loving mother hoped
that her son might, by–and–by, form new ties, and cease to lead a
purposeless life, wasting his brightest years in lamentations for his lost
bride: she knew all this; and sitting opposite to the young man in the
firelight, there was a dull pain at her heart; for there was something in the
soldier's sombre face that told her he had not yet ceased to lament that
irrevocable past.</p>
<p>But Mrs. Arundel and Letitia came in presently, and gave utterance to loud
rejoicings; and preparations were made for the physical comfort of the
wanderer,––bells were rung, lighted wax–candles and a
glittering tea–service were brought in, a cloth was laid, and cold meats
and other comestibles spread forth, with that profusion which has made the west
country as proverbial as the north for its hospitality. I think Miss Lawford
would have sat opposite the traveller for a week without asking any such
commonplace question as to whether Mr. Arundel required refreshment. She had
read in her Hort's "Pantheon" that the gods sometimes ate and drank like
ordinary mortals; yet it had never entered into her mind that Edward could be
hungry. But she now had the satisfaction of seeing Mr. Arundel eat a very good
dinner; while she herself poured out the tea, to oblige Letitia, who was in the
middle of the third volume of a new novel, and went on reading it as coolly as
if there had been no such person as that handsome young soldier in the
world.</p>
<p>"The books must go back to the club to–morrow morning, you know, mamma
dear, or I wouldn't read at tea–time," the young lady remarked
apologetically. "I want to know whether <em>he'll</em> marry Theodora or that
nasty Miss St. Ledger. Linda thinks he'll marry Miss St. Ledger, and be
miserable, and Theodora will die. I believe Linda likes love–stories to
end unhappily. I don't. I hope if he <em>does</em> marry Miss St.
Ledger––and he'll be a wicked wretch if he does, after the
<em>things</em> he has said to Theodora––I hope, if he does, she'll
die––catch cold at a <em>d�jeuner</em> at Twickenham, or something
of that kind, you know; and then he'll marry Theodora afterwards, and all will
end happily. Do you know, Linda, I always fancy that you're like Theodora, and
that Edward's like <em>him</em>."</p>
<p>After which speech Miss Arundel went back to her book, and Edward helped
himself to a slice of tongue rather awkwardly, and Belinda Lawford, who had her
hand upon the urn, suffered the teapot to overflow amongst the cups and
saucers.</p>
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