<h2><SPAN name="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII.<br/> EXPLANATORY</h2>
<p>About two o’clock Geoffrey rose, and with some slight assistance from his
reverend host, struggled into his clothes. Then he lunched, and while he did so
Mr. Granger poured his troubles into his sympathetic ear.</p>
<p>“My father was a Herefordshire farmer, Mr. Bingham,” he said,
“and I was bred up to that line of life myself. He did well, my father
did, as in those days a careful man might. What is more, he made some money by
cattle-dealing, and I think that turned his head a little; anyway, he was
minded to make ‘a gentleman of me,’ as he called it. So when I was
eighteen I was packed off to be made a parson of, whether I liked it or no.
Well, I became a parson, and for four years I had a curacy at a town called
Kingston, in Herefordshire, not a bad sort of little town—perhaps you
happen to know it. While I was there, my father, who was getting beyond
himself, took to speculating. He built a row of villas at Leominster, or at
least he lent a lawyer the money to build them, and when they were built nobody
would hire them. It broke my father; he was ruined over those villas. I have
always hated the sight of a villa ever since, Mr. Bingham. And shortly
afterwards he died, as near bankruptcy as a man’s nose is to his mouth.</p>
<p>“After that I was offered this living, £150 a year it was at the best,
and like a fool I took it. The old parson who was here before me left an only
daughter behind him. The living had ruined him, as it ruins me, and, as I say,
he left his daughter, my wife that was, behind him, and a pretty good bill for
dilapidations I had against the estate. But there wasn’t any estate, so I
made the best of a bad business and married the daughter, and a sweet pretty
woman she was, poor dear, very like my Beatrice, only without the brains. I
can’t make out where Beatrice’s brains come from indeed, for I am
sure I don’t set up for having any. She was well born, too, my wife was,
of an old Cornish family, but she had nowhere to go to, and I think she married
me because she didn’t know what else to do, and was fond of the old
place. She took me on with it, as it were. Well, it turned out pretty well,
till some eleven years ago, when our boy was born, though I don’t think
we ever quite understood each other. She never got her health back after that,
and seven years ago she died. I remember it was on a night wonderfully like
last night—mist first, then storm. The boy died a few years afterwards. I
thought it would have broken Beatrice’s heart; she has never been the
same girl since, but always full of queer ideas I don’t pretend to
follow.</p>
<p>“And as for the life I’ve had of it here, Mr. Bingham, you
wouldn’t believe it if I was to tell you. The living is small enough, but
the place is as full of dissent as a mackerel-boat of fish, and as for getting
the tithes—well, I cannot, that’s all. If it wasn’t for a bit
of farming that I do, not but what the prices are down to nothing, and for what
the visitors give in the season, and for the help of Beatrice’s salary as
certificated mistress, I should have been in the poor-house long ago, and shall
be yet, I often think. I have had to take in a boarder before now to make both
ends meet, and shall again, I expect.</p>
<p>“And now I must be off up to my bit of a farm; the old sow is due to
litter, and I want to see how she is getting on. Please God she’ll have
thirteen again and do well. I’ll order the fly to be here at five, though
I shall be back before then—that is, I told Elizabeth to do so. She has
gone out to do some visiting for me, and to see if she can’t get in two
pounds five of tithe that has been due for three months. If anybody can get it
it’s Elizabeth. Well, good-bye; if you are dull and want to talk to
Beatrice, she is up and in there. I daresay you will suit one another.
She’s a very queer girl, Beatrice, quite beyond me with her ideas, and it
was a funny thing her holding you so tight, but I suppose Providence arranged
that. Good-bye for the present, Mr. Bingham,” and this curious specimen
of a clergyman vanished, leaving Geoffrey quite breathless.</p>
<p>It was half-past two o’clock, and the doctor had told him that he could
see Miss Granger at three. He wished that it was three, for he was tired of his
own thoughts and company, and naturally anxious to renew his acquaintance with
the strange girl who had begun by impressing him so deeply and ended by saving
his life. There was complete quiet in the house; Betty, the maid-of-all-work,
was employed in the kitchen, both the doctors had gone, and Elizabeth and her
father were out. To-day there was no wind, it had blown itself away during the
night, and the sight of the sunbeams streaming through the windows made
Geoffrey long to be in the open air. He had no book at hand to read, and
whenever he tried to think his mind flew back to that hateful matrimonial
quarrel.</p>
<p>It was hard on him, Geoffrey thought, that he should be called upon to endure
such scenes. He could no longer disguise the truth from himself—he had
buried his happiness on his wedding-day. Looking back across the years, he well
remembered how different a life he had imagined for himself. In those days he
was tired of knocking about and of youthful escapades; even that kind of social
success which must attend a young man who was handsome, clever, a good fellow,
and blessed with large expectations, had, at the age of six-and-twenty,
entirely lost its attractiveness. Therefore he had turned no deaf ear to his
uncle, Sir Robert Bingham, who was then going on for seventy, when he suggested
that it might be well if Geoffrey be settled down, and introduced him to Lady
Honoria.</p>
<p>Lady Honoria was eighteen then, and a beauty of the rather thin but statuesque
type, which attracts men up to five or six and twenty and then frequently
bores, if it does not repel them. Moreover, she was clever and well read, and
pretended to be intellectually and poetically inclined, as ladies not specially
favoured by Apollo sometimes do—before they marry. Cold she always was;
nobody ever heard of Lady Honoria stretching the bounds of propriety; but
Geoffrey put this down to a sweet and becoming modesty, which would vanish or
be transmuted in its season. Also she affected a charming innocence of all
vulgar business matters, which both deceived and enchanted him. Never but once
did she allude to ways and means before marriage, and then it was to say that
she was glad that they should be so poor till dear Sir Robert died (he had
promised to allow them fifteen hundred a year, and they had seven more between
them), as this would enable them to see so much more of each other.</p>
<p>At last came the happy day, and this white virgin soul passed into
Geoffrey’s keeping. For a week or so things went fairly well, and then
disenchantment began. He learned by slow but sure degrees that his wife was
vain, selfish and extravagant, and, worst of all, that she cared very little
about him. The first shock was when he accidentally discovered, four or five
days after marriage, that Honoria was intimately acquainted with every detail
of Sir Robert Bingham’s property, and, young as she was, had already
formed a scheme to make it more productive after the old man’s death.</p>
<p>They went to live in London, and there he found that Lady Honoria, although by
far too cold and prudent a woman to do anything that could bring a breath of
scandal upon her name, was as fond of admiration as she was heartless. It
seemed to Geoffrey that he could never be free from the collection of young men
who hung about her skirts. Some of them were very good fellows whom he liked
exceedingly; still, on the whole he would have preferred to remain unmarried
and associate with them at the club. Also the continual round of society and
going out brought heavier expenses on him than he could well support. And thus,
little by little, poor Geoffrey’s dream of matrimonial bliss faded into
thin air. But, fortunately for himself, he possessed a certain share of logic
and sweet reasonableness. In time he learnt to see that the fault was not
altogether with his wife, who was by no means a bad sort of woman in her
degree. But her degree differed from his degree. She had married for freedom
and wealth and to gain a larger scope wherein to exercise those tastes which
inherited disposition and education had given to her, as she believed that he
had married her because she was the daughter of a peer.</p>
<p>Lady Honoria, like many another woman of her stamp, was the overbred, or
sometimes the underbred, product of a too civilized age and class. Those
primitive passions and virtues on which her husband had relied to make the
happiness of their married life simply did not exist for her. The passions had
been bred and educated out of her; for many generations they have been found
inconvenient and disquieting attributes in woman. As for the old virtues, such
as love of children and the ordinary round of domestic duty, they simply bored
her. On the whole, though sharp of tongue, she rarely lost her temper, for her
vices, like her virtues, were of a somewhat negative order; but the fury which
seized her when she learned for certain that she was to become a mother was a
thing that her unfortunate husband never forgot and never wished to see again.
At length the child was born, a fact for which Geoffrey, at least, was very
thankful.</p>
<p>“Take it away. I do not want to see it!” said Lady Honoria to the
scandalised nurse when the little creature was brought to her, wrapped in its
long robes.</p>
<p>“Give it to me, nurse—I do,” said her husband.</p>
<p>From that moment Geoffrey gave all the pent-up affection of his bruised soul to
this little daughter, and as the years went on they grew very dear to each
other. But an active-minded, strong-hearted, able-bodied man cannot take a babe
as the sole companion of his existence. Probably Geoffrey would have found this
out in time, and might have drifted into some mode of life more or less
undesirable, had not an accident occurred to prevent it. In his dotage,
Geoffrey’s old uncle Sir Robert Bingham fell a victim to the wiles of an
adventuress and married her. Then he promptly died, and eight months afterwards
a posthumous son was born.</p>
<p>To Geoffrey this meant ruin. His allowance stopped and his expectations
vanished at one fell swoop. He pulled himself together, however, as a
brave-hearted man does under such a shock, and going to his wife he explained
to her that he must now work for his living, begging her to break down the
barrier that was between them and give him her sympathy and help. She met him
with tears and reproaches. The one thing that touched her keenly, the one thing
which she feared and hated was poverty, and all that poverty means to women of
her rank and nature. But there was no help for it; the charming house in Bolton
Steet had to be given up, and purgatory must be faced, in a flat, near the
Edgware Road. Lady Honoria was miserable, indeed had it not been that
fortunately for herself she possessed plenty of relations more or less grand,
whom she might continually visit for weeks and even for months at a stretch,
she could scarcely have endured her altered life.</p>
<p>But strangely enough Geoffrey soon found that he was happier than he had been
since his marriage. To begin with, he set to work like a man, and work is a
great source of happiness to all vigorous-minded folk. It is not, in truth, a
particularly cheerful occupation to pass endless days in hanging about
law-courts amongst a crowd of unbriefed Juniors, and many nights in reading up
the law one has forgotten and threading the many intricacies of the Judicature
Act. But it happened that his father, a younger brother of Sir Robert’s,
had been a solicitor, and though he was dead, and all direct interest with the
firm was severed, yet another uncle remained in it, and the partners did not
forget Geoffrey in his difficulties.</p>
<p>They sent him what work they could without offending their standing counsel,
and he did it well. Then by degrees he built up quite a large general practice
of the kind known as deviling. Now there are few things more unsatisfactory
than doing another man’s work for nothing, but every case fought means
knowledge gained, and what is more it is advertisement. So it came to pass that
within less than two years from the date of his money misfortunes, Geoffrey
Bingham’s dark handsome face and square strong form became very well
known in the Courts.</p>
<p>“What is that man’s name?” said one well-known Q.C. to
another still more well known, as they sat waiting for their chops in the Bar
Grill Room, and saw Geoffrey, his wig pushed back from his forehead, striding
through the doorway on the last day of the sitting which preceded the
commencement of this history.</p>
<p>“Bingham,” answered the other. “He’s only begun to
practise lately, but he’ll be at the top of the tree before he has done.
He married very well, you know, old Garsington’s daughter, a charming
woman, and handsome too.”</p>
<p>“He looks like it,” grunted the first, and as a matter of fact such
was the general opinion.</p>
<p>For, as Beatrice had said, Geoffrey Bingham was a man who had success written
on his forehead. It would have been almost impossible for him to fail in
whatever he undertook.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />