<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXI.</h2>
<p class="chapterhead">THE MARQUIS COMES HOME.</p>
<p><span class="firstwords">Some</span> little time after the middle of April, when the hunting was all
over, and Mr. Price had sunk down into his summer insignificance,
there came half a dozen telegrams to Manor Cross, from Italy, from
Mr. Knox, and from a certain managing tradesman in London, to say
that the Marquis was coming a fortnight sooner than he had expected.
Everything was at sixes and sevens. Everything was in a ferment.
Everybody about Manor Cross seemed to think that the world was
coming to an end. But none of these telegrams were addressed to any of
the Germain family, and the last people in the county who heard of this
homeward rush of the Marquis were the ladies at Cross Hall, and they
heard it from Lord George, upon whom Mr. Knox called in London;
supposing, however, when he did call that Lord George had already
received full information on the subject. Lord George's letter to Lady
Sarah was full of dismay, full of horror. "As he has not taken the
trouble to communicate his intentions to me, I shall not go down to
receive him." "You will know how to deal with the matter, and<!-- Page 133 -->
will, I am sure, support our mother in this terrible trial." "I think
that the child should, at any rate, at first be acknowledged by you all
as Lord Popenjoy." "We have to regard, in the first place, the honour
of the family. No remissness on his part should induce us to forget
for a moment what is due to the title, the property, and the name."
The letter was very long, and was full of sententious instructions,
such as the above. But the purport of it was to tell the ladies at
Cross Hall that they must go through the first burden of receiving
the Marquis without any assistance from himself.</p>
<p>The Dean heard of the reported arrival some days before the family
did so. It was rumoured in Brotherton, and the rumour reached
the deanery. But he thought that there was nothing that he could
do on the spur of the moment. He perfectly understood the condition
of Lord George's mind, and perceived that it would not be
expedient for him to interfere quite on the first moment. As soon as
the Marquis should have settled himself in the house, of course he
would call; and when the Marquis had settled himself, and when the
world had begun to recognise the fact that the Marquis, with his
Italian Marchioness, and his little Italian, so-called Popenjoy, were
living at Manor Cross, then,—if he saw his way,—the Dean would
bestir himself.</p>
<p>And so the Marquis arrived. He reached the Brotherton station
with his wife, a baby, a lady's maid, a nurse, a valet, a cook, and a
courier, about three o'clock in the afternoon; and the whole crowd of
them were carried off in their carriages to Manor Cross. A great many
of the inhabitants of Brotherton were there to see, for this coming of
the Marquis had been talked of far and wide. He himself took no
notice of the gathering people,—was perhaps unaware that there was
any gathering. He and his wife got into one carriage; the nurse, the
lady's maid, and the baby into a second; the valet and courier, and
cook into a third. The world of Brotherton saw them, and the world
of Brotherton observed that the lady was very old and very ugly.
Why on earth could he have married such a woman as that, and then
have brought her home! That was the exclamation which was made
by Brotherton in general.</p>
<p>It was soon ascertained by every one about Manor Cross that the
Marchioness could not speak a word of English, nor could any of the
newly imported servants do so with the exception of the courier, who
was supposed to understand all languages. There was, therefore, an
absolutely divided household. It had been thought better that the old
family housekeeper, Mrs. Toff, should remain in possession. Through
a long life she had been devoted to the old Marchioness and to the
ladies of the family generally; but she would have been useless at
their new home, and there was an idea that Manor Cross could not be
maintained without her. It might also be expedient to have a friend
in the enemy's camp. Other English servants had been provided,—a<!-- Page 134 -->
butler, two footmen, a coachman, and the necessary housemaids and
kitchen maids. It had been stated that the Marquis would bring his
own cook. There were, therefore, at once two parties, at the head of
one of which was Mrs. Toff, and at the head of the other the courier,—who
remained, none of the English people knew why.</p>
<p>For the first three days the Marchioness showed herself to no one. It
was understood that the fatigues of the journey had oppressed her,
and that she chose to confine herself to two or three rooms upstairs,
which had been prepared for her. Mrs. Toff, strictly obeying orders
which had come from Cross Hall, sent up her duty and begged to
know whether she should wait upon my lady. My lady sent down
word that she didn't want to see Mrs. Toff. These messages had to
be filtered through the courier, who was specially odious to Mrs. Toff.
His Lordship was almost as closely secluded as her Ladyship. He
did, indeed, go out to the stables, wrapped up in furs, and found
fault with everything he saw there. And he had himself driven round
the park. But he did not get up on any of these days till noon, and
took all his meals by himself. The English servants averred that
during the whole of this time he never once saw the Marchioness or
the baby; but then the English servants could not very well have
known what he saw or what he did not see.</p>
<p>But this was very certain, that during those three days <SPAN name="tn_pg_143"></SPAN><!-- TN: original reads "de"-->he did not go
to Cross Hall, or see any one of his own family. Mrs. Toff in the
gloaming of the evening, on the third day, hurried across the park to
see—the young ladies as she still called them. Mrs. Toff thought that
it was all very dreadful. She didn't know what was being done in
those apartments. She had never set her eyes upon the baby. She
didn't feel sure that there was any baby at all, though John,—John was
one of the English servants,—had seen a bundle come into the house.
Wouldn't it be natural and right that any real child should be carried
out to take the air? "And then all manner of messes were," said
Mrs. Toff, "prepared up in the closed room." Mrs. Toff didn't believe
in anything, except that everything was going to perdition. The Marchioness
was intent on asking after the health and appearance of her
son, but Mrs. Toff declared that she hadn't been allowed to catch
a sight of "my lord." Mrs. Toff's account was altogether very
lachrymose. She spoke of the Marquis, of course, with the utmost
respect. But she was sufficiently intimate with the ladies to treat the
baby and its mother with all the scorn of an upturned nose. Nor was
the name of Popenjoy once heard from her lips.</p>
<p>But what were the ladies to do? On the evening of the third day
Lady Sarah wrote to her brother George, begging him to come down
to them. "The matter was so serious, that he was," said Lady Sarah,
"bound to lend the strength of his presence to his mother and
sisters." But on the fourth morning Lady Sarah sent over a note to
her brother, the Marquis.<!-- Page 135 --></p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"<span class="smcap">Dear Brotherton</span>,—We hope that you and your wife and little
boy have arrived well, and have found things comfortable. Mamma is
most anxious to see you,—as of course we all are. Will you not come
over to us to-day. I dare say my sister-in-law may be too fatigued to
come out as yet. I need not tell you that we are very anxious to see
your little Popenjoy.</p>
<div class="closing">
<span class="presignature2">"Your affectionate Sister,<br/></span>
<span class="smcap presignature3"><SPAN name="tn_pg_144"></SPAN><!-- TN: end quote added-->"Sarah Germain."<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>It may be seen from this that the ladies contemplated peace, if
peace were possible. But in truth the nature of the letter, though not
the words, had been dictated by the Marchioness. She was intent
upon seeing her son, and anxious to acknowledge her grandchild.
Lady Sarah had felt her position to be very difficult, but had perceived
that no temporary acceptance by them of the child would at all
injure her brother George's claim, should Lord George set up a claim,
and so, in deference to the old lady, the peaceful letter was sent off,
with directions to the messenger to wait for an answer. The messenger
came back with tidings that his Lordship was in bed. Then there was
another consultation. The Marquis, though in bed, had of course
read the letter. Had he felt at all as a son and a brother ought to feel,
he would have sent some reply to such a message. It must be, they felt,
that he intended to live there and utterly ignore his mother and sisters.
What should they do then? How should they be able to live? The
Marchioness surrendered herself to a paroxysm of weeping, bitterly
blaming those who had not allowed her to go away and hide herself in
some distant obscurity. Her son, her eldest son, had cast her off because
she had disobeyed his orders! "His orders!" said Lady Sarah,
in scorn, almost in wrath against her mother. "What right has he to
give orders either to you or us? He has forgotten himself, and is only
worthy to be forgotten." Just as she spoke the Manor Cross phaeton,
with the Manor Cross ponies, was driven up to the door, and Lady
Amelia, who went to the window, declared that Brotherton himself
was in the carriage. "Oh, my son; my darling son," said the Marchioness,
throwing up her arms.</p>
<p>It really was the Marquis. It seemed to the ladies to be a very
long time indeed before he got into the room, so leisurely was he in
divesting himself of his furs and comforters. During this time the
Marchioness would have rushed into the hall had not Lady Sarah prevented
her. The old lady was quite overcome with emotion, and prepared
to lay at the feet of her eldest son, if he would only extend to
her the slightest sign of affection. "So, here you all are," he said as
he entered the room. "It isn't much of a house for you, but you
would have it so." He was of course forced to kiss his mother, but
the kiss was not very fervent in its nature. To each of his sisters he
merely extended his hand. This Amelia received with empressement;<!-- Page 136 -->
for, after all, severe though he was, nevertheless he was the head of
the family. Susanna measured the pressure which he gave, and
returned back to him the exact weight. Lady Sarah made a little
speech. "We are very glad to see you; Brotherton. You have been
away a long time."</p>
<p>"A deuced long time."</p>
<p>"I hope your wife is well;—and the little boy. When will she
wish that we should go and see her?" The Marchioness during this
time had got possession of his left hand, and from her seat was gazing
up into his face. He was a very handsome man, but pale, worn, thin,
and apparently unhealthy. He was very like Lord George, but
smaller in feature, and wanting full four inches of his brother's height.
Lord George's hair was already becoming grey at the sides. That of
the Marquis, who was ten years older, was perfectly black;—but his
Lordship's valet had probably more to do with that than nature. He
wore an exquisite moustache, but in other respects was close shaven.
He was dressed with great care, and had fur even on the collar of his
frock coat, so much did he fear the inclemency of his native climate.</p>
<p>"She doesn't speak a word of English, you know," he said, answering
his sister's question.</p>
<p>"We might manage to get on in French," said Lady Sarah.</p>
<p>"She doesn't speak a word of French either. She never was out of
Italy till now. You had better not trouble yourselves about her."</p>
<p>This was dreadful to them all. It was monstrous to them that there
should be a Marchioness of Brotherton, a sister-in-law, living close to
them, whom they were to acknowledge to be the reigning Marchioness,
and that they should not be allowed to see her. It was not that they
anticipated pleasure from her acquaintance. It was not that they
were anxious to welcome such a new relation. This marriage, if it
were a marriage, was a terrible blow to them. It would have been infinitely
better for them all that, having such a wife, he should have
kept her in Italy. But, as she was here in England, as she was to be
acknowledged,—as far as they knew at present,—it was a fearful thing
that she should be living close to them and not be seen by them. For
some moments after his last announcement they were stricken dumb.
He was standing with his back to the fire, looking at his boots. The
Marchioness was the first to speak. "We may see Popenjoy!" she
exclaimed through her sobs.</p>
<p>"I suppose he can be brought down,—if you care about it."</p>
<p>"Of course we care about it," said Lady Amelia.</p>
<p>"They tell me he is not strong, and I don't suppose they'll let him
come out such weather as this. You'll have to wait. I don't think
any body ought to stir out in this weather. It doesn't suit me, I
know. Such an abominable place as it is I never saw in my life.
There is not a room in the house that is not enough to make a man
blow his brains out."<!-- Page 137 --></p>
<p>Lady Sarah could not stand this, nor did she think it right to put
up with the insolence of his manner generally. "If so," she said,
"it is a pity that you came away from Italy."</p>
<p>He turned sharply round and looked at her for an instant before he
answered. And as he did so she remembered the peculiar tyranny of
his eyes,—the tyranny to which, when a boy, he had ever endeavoured
to make her subject, and all others around him. Others had become
subject because he was the Lord Popenjoy of the day, and would be
the future Marquis; but she, though recognising his right to be first
in every thing, had ever rebelled against his usurpation of unauthorized
power. He, too, remembered all this, and almost snarled at
her with his eyes. "I suppose I might stay if I liked, or come back
if I liked, without asking you," he said.</p>
<p>"Certainly."</p>
<p>"But you are the same as ever you were."</p>
<p>"Oh, Brotherton," said the Marchioness, "do not quarrel with us
directly you have come back."</p>
<p>"You may be quite sure, mother, that I shall not take the trouble
to quarrel with any one. It takes two for that work. If I wanted
to quarrel with her or you, I have cause enough."</p>
<p>"I know of none," said Lady Sarah.</p>
<p>"I explained to you my wishes about this house, and you disregarded
them altogether." The old lady looked up at her eldest daughter
as though to say, "There,—that was your sin." "I knew what was
better for you and better for me. It is impossible that there should
be pleasant intercourse between you and my wife, and I recommended
you to go elsewhere. If you had done so I would have taken care that
you were comfortable." Again the Marchioness looked at Lady Sarah
with bitter reproaches in her eyes.</p>
<p>"What interest in life would we have had in a distant home?" said
Lady Sarah.</p>
<p>"Why not you as well as other people?"</p>
<p>"Because, unlike other people, we have become devoted to one
spot. The property belongs to you."</p>
<p>"I hope so."</p>
<p>"But the obligations of the property have been, at any rate, as
near to us as to you. Society, I suppose, may be found in a new
place, but we do not care much for society."</p>
<p>"Then it would have been so much the easier."</p>
<p>"But it would have been impossible for us to find new <SPAN name="tn_pg_146"></SPAN><!-- TN: single quote changed to double after "duties."-->duties."</p>
<p>"Nonsense," said the Marquis, "humbug; d——d trash."</p>
<p>"If you cannot speak otherwise than like that before your mother,
Brotherton, I think you had better leave her," said Lady Sarah,
bravely.</p>
<p>"Don't, Sarah,—don't!" said the Marchioness.</p>
<p>"It is trash and nonsense, and humbug. I told you that you were<!-- Page 138 -->
better away, and you determined to stay. I knew what was best for
you, but you chose to be obstinate. I have not the slightest doubt as
to who did it."</p>
<p>"We were all of the same mind," said Lady Susanna. "Alice said
it would be quite cruel that mamma should be moved." Alice was
now the wife of Canon Holdenough.</p>
<p>"It would have been very bad for us all to go away," said Lady
Amelia.</p>
<p>"George was altogether against it," said Lady Susanna.</p>
<p>"And the Dean," said Lady Amelia, indiscreetly.</p>
<p>"The Dean!" exclaimed the Marquis. "Do you mean to say that
that stable boy has been consulted about my affairs? I should have
thought that not one of you would have spoken to George after he had
disgraced himself by such a marriage."</p>
<p>"There was no need to consult any one," said Lady Sarah. "And
we do not think George's marriage at all disgraceful."</p>
<p>"Mary is a very nice young person," said the Marchioness.</p>
<p>"I dare say. Whether she is nice or not is very little to me. She
has got some fortune, and I suppose that was what he wanted. As
you are all of you fixed here now, and seem to have spent a lot of
money, I suppose you will have to remain. You have turned my
tenant out——"</p>
<p>"Mr. Price was quite willing to go," said Lady Susanna.</p>
<p>"I dare say. I trust he may be as willing to give up the land when
his lease is out. I have been told that he is a sporting friend of the
Dean's. It seems to me that you have, all of you, got into a nice
mess here by yourselves. All I want you to understand is that I
cannot now trouble myself about you."</p>
<p>"You don't mean to give us up," said the afflicted mother. "You'll
come and see me sometimes, won't you?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not, if I am to be insulted by my sister."</p>
<p>"I have insulted no one," said Lady Sarah, haughtily.</p>
<p>"It was no insult to tell me that I ought to have stayed in Italy,
and not have come to my own house!"</p>
<p>"Sarah, you ought not to have said that," exclaimed the Marchioness.</p>
<p>"He complained that everything here was uncomfortable, and
therefore I said it. He knows that I did not speak of his return in
any other sense. Since he settled himself abroad there has not been
a day on which I have not wished that he would come back to his own
house and his own duties. If he will treat us properly, no one will
treat him with higher consideration than I. But we have our own
rights as well as he, and are as well able to guard them."</p>
<p>"Sarah can preach as well as ever," he said.</p>
<p>"Oh! my children,—oh! my children!" sobbed the old lady.</p>
<p>"I have had about enough of this. I knew what it would be when<!-- Page 139 -->
you wrote to me to come to you." Then he took up his hat, as though
he were going.</p>
<p>"And am I to see nothing more of you?" asked his mother.</p>
<p>"I will come to you, mother,—once a-week if you wish it. Every
Sunday afternoon will be as good a time as any other. But I will not
come unless I am assured of the absence of Lady Sarah. I will not
subject myself to her insolence, nor put myself in the way of being
annoyed by a ballyragging quarrel."</p>
<p>"I and my sisters are always at Church on Sunday afternoons,"
said Lady Sarah.</p>
<p>In this way the matter was arranged, and then the Marquis took
himself off. For some time after he left the room the Marchioness
sat in silence, sobbing now and again, and then burying her face in
her handkerchief. "I wish we had gone away when he told us," she
said, at last.</p>
<p>"No, mamma," said her eldest daughter. "No,—certainly no.
Even though all this is very miserable, it is not so bad as running
away in order that we might be out of his way. No good can ever be
got by yielding in what is wrong to any one. This is your house;
and as yours it is ours."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes."</p>
<p>"And here we can do something to justify our lives. We have a
work appointed to us which we are able to perform. What will his
wife do for the people here? Why are we not to say our prayers in
the Church which we all know and love? Why are we to leave Alice—and
Mary? Why should he, because he is the eldest of us,—he,
who for so many years has deserted the place,—why is he to tell us
where to live, and where not to live. He is rich, and we are poor, but
we have never been pensioners on his bounty. The park, I suppose,
is now closed to us; but I am prepared to live here in defiance of
him." This she said walking up and down the room as she spoke,
and she said it with so much energy that she absolutely carried her
sisters with her and again partly convinced her mother.</p>
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