<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.<br/> BACK AT BRYNGELLY</h2>
<p>Geoffrey and Mr. Granger reached Bolton Street about six o’clock. The
drawing-room was still full of callers. Lady Honoria’s young men mustered
in great force in those days. They were very inoffensive young men and Geoffrey
had no particular objection to them. Only he found it difficult to remember all
their names. When Geoffrey entered the drawing-room there were no fewer than
five of them, to say nothing of two stray ladies, all superbly dressed and
sitting metaphorically at Honoria’s very pretty feet. Otherwise their
contributions to the general store of amusement did not amount to much, for her
ladyship did most of the talking.</p>
<p>Geoffrey introduced Mr. Granger, whom Honoria could not at first remember. Nor
did she receive the announcement that he was going to dine and stay the night
with any particular enthusiasm. The young men melted away at Geoffrey’s
advent like mists before a rising sun. He greeted them civilly enough, but with
him they had nothing in common. To tell the truth they were a little afraid of
him. This man with his dark handsome face sealed with the stamp of intellect,
his powerful-looking form (ill dressed, according to their standard) and his
great and growing reputation, was a person with whom they had no sympathy, and
who, they felt, had no sympathy with them. We talk as though there is one
heaven and one hell for all of us, but here must be some mistake. An impassable
gulf yawns between the different classes of mankind. What has such a man as
Geoffrey to do with the feeble male and female butterflies of a London
drawing-room? There is only one link between them: they live on the same
planet.</p>
<p>When the fine young men and the two stray ladies had melted away, Geoffrey took
Mr. Granger up to his room. Coming downstairs again he found Lady Honoria
waiting for him in the study.</p>
<p>“Is that individual really going to dine and sleep here?” she
asked.</p>
<p>“Certainly, Honoria, and he has brought no dress clothes,” he
answered.</p>
<p>“Really, Geoffrey, it is too bad of you,” said the lady with some
pardonable irritation. “Why do you bring people to dinner in this
promiscuous way? It will quite upset the table. Just fancy asking an old Welsh
clergyman to dine, who has not the slightest pretensions to being a gentleman,
when one has the Prime Minister and a Bishop coming—and a clergyman
without dress clothes too. What has he come for?”</p>
<p>“He came to see me on business, and as to the people coming to dinner, if
they don’t like it they can grumble when they go home. By the way,
Honoria, I am going down to Wales for a day or two to-morrow. I want a
change.”</p>
<p>“Indeed! Going to see the lovely Beatrice, I suppose. You had better be
careful, Geoffrey. That girl will get you into a mess, and if she does there
are plenty of people who are ready to make an example of you. You have enemies
enough, I can tell you. I am not jealous, it is not in my line, but you are too
intimate with that girl, and you will be sorry for it one day.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense,” said Geoffrey angrily, but nevertheless he felt that
Lady Honoria’s words were words of truth. It struck him, moreover, that
she must feel this strongly, or she would not have spoken in that tone. Honoria
did not pose as a household philosopher. Still he would not draw back now. His
heart was set on seeing Beatrice.</p>
<p>“Am I to understand,” went on his wife, “that you still
object to my staying with the Garsingtons? I think it is a little hard if I do
not make a fuss about your going to see your village paragon, that you should
refuse to allow me to visit my own brother.”</p>
<p>Geoffrey felt that he was being bargained with. It was degrading, but in the
extremity of his folly he yielded.</p>
<p>“Go if you like,” he said shortly, “but if you take Effie,
mind she is properly looked after, that is all,” and he abruptly left the
room.</p>
<p>Lady Honoria looked after him, slowly nodding her handsome head.
“Ah,” she said to herself, “I have found out how to manage
you now. You have your weak point like other people, Master Geoffrey—and
it spells Beatrice. Only you must not go too far. I am not jealous, but I am
not going to have a scandal for fifty Beatrices. I will not allow you to lose
your reputation and position. Just imagine a man like that pining for a village
girl—she is nothing more! And they talk about his being so clever. Well,
he always liked ladies’ society; that is his failing, and now he has
burnt his fingers. They all do sooner or later, especially these clever men.
The women flatter them, that’s it. Of course the girl is trying to get
hold of him, and she might do worse, but so surely as my name is Honoria
Bingham I will put a spoke in her wheel before she has done. Bah! and they
laugh at the power of women when a man like Geoffrey, with all the world to
lose, grows love-sick for a pretty face; it is a <i>very</i> pretty face by the
way. I do believe that if I were out of the way he would marry her. But I am in
the way, and mean to stay there. Well, it is time to dress for dinner. I only
hope that old clown of a clergyman won’t do something ridiculous. I shall
have to apologise for him.”</p>
<p>Dinner-time had come; it was a quarter past eight, and the room was filled with
highly bred people all more or less distinguished. Mr. Granger had duly
appeared, arrayed in his threadbare black coat, relieved, however, by a pair of
Geoffrey’s dress shoes. As might have been expected, the great folk did
not seem surprised at his presence, or to take any particular notice of his
attire, the fact being that such people never are surprised. A Zulu chief in
full war dress would only excite a friendly interest in their breasts. On the
contrary they recognised vaguely that the old gentleman was something out of
the common run, and as such worth cultivating. Indeed the Prime Minister,
hearing casually that he was a clergyman from Wales, asked to be introduced to
him, and at once fell into conversation about tithes, a subject of which Mr.
Granger was thoroughly master.</p>
<p>Presently they went down to dinner, Mr. Granger escorting the wife of the
Bishop, a fat and somewhat apoplectic lady, blessed with an excellent appetite.
On his other side was the Prime Minister, and between the two he got on very
well, especially after a few glasses of wine. Indeed, both the apoplectic wife
of the Bishop and the head of Her Majesty’s Government were subsequently
heard to declare that Mr. Granger was a very entertaining person. To the former
he related with much detail how his daughter had saved their host’s life,
and to the latter he discoursed upon the subject of tithes, favouring him with
his ideas of what legislation was necessary to meet the question. Somewhat to
his own surprise, he found that his views were received with attention and even
with respect. In the main, too, they received the support of the Bishop, who
likewise felt keenly on the subject of tithes. Never before had Mr. Granger had
such a good dinner nor mingled with company so distinguished. He remembered
both till his dying day.</p>
<p>Next morning Geoffrey and Mr. Granger started before Lady Honoria was up. Into
the details of their long journey to Wales (in a crowded third-class carriage)
we need not enter. Geoffrey had plenty to think of, but his fears had vanished,
as fears sometimes do when we draw near to the object of them, and had been
replaced by a curious expectancy. He saw now, or thought he saw, that he had
been making a mountain out of a molehill. Probably it meant nothing at all.
There was no real danger. Beatrice liked him, no doubt; possibly she had even
experienced a fit of tenderness towards him. Such things come and such things
go. Time is a wonderful healer of moral distempers, and few young ladies endure
the chains of an undesirable attachment for a period of seven whole months. It
made him almost blush to think that this might be so, and that the gratuitous
extension of his misfortune to Beatrice might be nothing more than the working
of his own unconscious vanity—a vanity which, did she know of it, would
move her to angry laughter.</p>
<p>He remembered how once, when he was quite a young fellow, he had been somewhat
smitten with a certain lady, who certainly, if he might judge from her words
and acts, reciprocated the sentiment. And he remembered also, how when he met
that lady some months afterwards she treated him with a cold indifference,
indeed almost with an insolence, that quite bewildered him, making him wonder
how the same person could show in such different lights, till at length,
mortified and ashamed by his mistake, he had gone away in a rage and seen her
face no more. Of course he had set it down to female infidelity; he had served
her turn, she had made a fool of him, and that was all she wanted. Now he might
enjoy his humiliation. It did not occur to him that it might be simple
“cussedness,” to borrow an energetic American term, or that she had
not really changed, but was angry with him for some reason which she did not
choose to show. It is difficult to weigh the motives of women in the scales of
male experience, and many other men besides Geoffrey have been forced to give
up the attempt and to console themselves with the reflection that the
inexplicable is generally not worth understanding.</p>
<p>Yes, probably it would be the same case over again. And yet, and yet—was
Beatrice of that class? Had she not too much of a man’s
straightforwardness of aim to permit her to play such tricks? In the bottom of
his soul he thought that she had, but he would not admit it to himself. The
fact of the matter was that, half unknowingly, he was trying to drug his
conscience. He knew that in his longing to see her dear face once more he had
undertaken a dangerous thing. He was about to walk with her over an abyss on a
bridge which might bear them, or—might break. So long as he walked there
alone it would be well, but would it bear them <i>both?</i> Alas for the
frailty of human nature, this was the truth; but he would not and did not
acknowledge it. He was not going to make love to Beatrice, he was going to
enjoy the pleasure of her society. In friendship there could be no harm.</p>
<p>It is not difficult thus to still the qualms of an uneasy mind, more especially
when the thing in question at its worst is rather an offence against local
custom than against natural law. In many countries of the world—in nearly
all countries, indeed, at different epochs of their history—it would have
been no wrong that Geoffrey and Beatrice should love each other, and human
nature in strong temptation is very apt to override artificial barriers erected
to suit the convenience or promote the prosperity of particular sections of
mankind. But, as we have heard, even though all things may be lawful, yet all
things are not expedient. To commit or even to condone an act because the
principle that stamps it as wrong will admit of argument on its merits is mere
sophistry, by the aid of which we might prove ourselves entitled to defy the
majority of laws of all calibres. Laws vary to suit the generations, but each
generation must obey its own, or confusion will ensue. A deed should be judged
by its fruits; it may even be innocent in itself, yet if its fruits are evil
the doer in a sense is guilty.</p>
<p>Thus in some countries to mention the name of your mother-in-law entails the
most unpleasant consequences on that intimate relation. Nobody can say that to
name the lady is a thing wicked in itself; yet the man who, knowing the
penalties which will ensue, allows himself, even in a fit of passion against
that relative, to violate the custom and mention her by name is doubtless an
offender. Thus, too, the result of an entanglement between a woman and a man
already married generally means unhappiness and hurt to all concerned, more
especially to the woman, whose prospects are perhaps irretrievably injured
thereby. It is useless to point to the example of the patriarchs, some foreign
royal families, and many respectable Turks; it is useless to plead that the
love is deep and holy love, for which a man or woman might well live and die,
or to show extenuating circumstances in the fact of loneliness, need of
sympathy, and that the existing marriage is a hollow sham. The rule is clear. A
man may do most things except cheat at cards or run away in action; a woman may
break half-a-dozen hearts, or try to break them, and finally put herself up at
auction and take no harm at all—but neither of them may in any event do
<i>this</i>.</p>
<p>Not that Geoffrey, to do him justice, had any such intentions. Most men are
incapable of plots of that nature. If they fall, it is when the voice of
conscience is lost in the whirlwind of passion, and counsel is darkened by the
tumultuous pleadings of the heart. Their sin is that they will, most of them,
allow themselves to be put in positions favourable to the development of these
disagreeable influences. It is not safe to light cigarettes in a powder
factory. If Geoffrey had done what he ought to have done, he would never have
gone to Bryngelly, and there would have been no story to tell, or no more than
there usually is.</p>
<p>At length Mr. Granger and his guest reached Bryngelly; there was nobody to meet
them, for nobody knew that they were coming, so they walked up to the Vicarage.
It was strange to Geoffrey once more to pass by the little church through those
well-remembered, wind-torn pines and see that low long house. It seemed
wonderful that all should still be just as it was, that there should be no
change at all, when he himself had seen so much. There was Beatrice’s
home; where was Beatrice?</p>
<p>He passed into the house like a man in a dream. In another moment he was in the
long parlour where he had spent so many happy hours, and Elizabeth was greeting
him. He shook hands with her, and as he did so, noticed vaguely that she too
was utterly unchanged. Her straw-coloured hair was pushed back from the temples
in the same way, the mouth wore the same hard smile, her light eyes shone with
the same cold look; she even wore the same brown dress. But she appeared to be
very pleased to see him, as indeed she was, for the game looked well for
Elizabeth. Her father kissed her hurriedly, and bustled from the room to lock
up his borrowed cash, leaving them together.</p>
<p>Somehow Geoffrey’s conversational powers failed him. Where was Beatrice?
she ought to be back from school. It was holiday time indeed. Could she be
away?</p>
<p>He made an effort, and remarked absently that things seemed very unchanged at
Bryngelly.</p>
<p>“You are looking for Beatrice,” said Elizabeth, answering his
thought and not his words. “She has gone out walking, but I think she
will be back soon. Excuse me, but I must go and see about your room.”</p>
<p>Geoffrey hung about a little, then he lit his pipe and strolled down to the
beach, with a vague unexpressed idea of meeting Beatrice. He did not meet
Beatrice, but he met old Edward, who knew him at once.</p>
<p>“Lord, sir,” he said, “it’s queer to see you here
again, specially when I thinks as how I saw you first, and you a dead ‘un
to all purposes, with your mouth open, and Miss Beatrice a-hanging on to your
hair fit to pull your scalp off. You never was nearer old Davy than you was
that night, sir, nor won’t be. And now you’ve been spared to become
a Parliament man, I hears, and much good may you do there—it will take
all your time, sir—and I think, sir, that I should like to drink your
health.”</p>
<p>Geoffrey put his hand in his pocket and gave the old man a sovereign. He could
afford to do so now.</p>
<p>“Does Miss Beatrice go out canoeing now?” he asked while Edward
mumbled his astonished thanks.</p>
<p>“At times, sir—thanking you kindly; it ain’t many suvrings as
comes my way—though I hate the sight on it, I do. I’d like to stave
a hole in the bottom of that there cranky concern; it ain’t safe, and
that’s the fact. There’ll be another accent out of it one of these
fine days and no coming to next time. But, Lord bless you, it’s her way
of pleasuring herself. She’s a queer un is Miss Beatrice, and she gets
queerer and queerer, what with their being so tight screwed up at the Vicarage,
no tithes and that, and one thing and another. Not but what I’m thinking,
sir,” he added in a portentous whisper, “as the squire has got
summut to do with it. He’s a courting of her, he is; he’s as hard
after her as a dog fish after a stray herring, and why she can’t just say
yes and marry him I’m sure I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps she doesn’t like him,” said Geoffrey coldly.</p>
<p>“May be, sir, may be; maids all have their fancies, in whatsoever walk
o’ life it has pleased God to stick ‘em, but it’s a wonderful
pity, it is. He ain’t no great shakes, he ain’t, but he’s a
sound man—no girl can’t want a sounder—lived quiet all his
days you see, sir, and what’s more he’s got the money, and
money’s tight up at the Vicarage, sir. Gals must give up their fancies
sometimes, sir. Lord! a brace of brats and she’d forget all about
‘em. I’m seventy years old and I’ve seen their ways, sir,
though in a humble calling. You should say a word to her, sir; she’d
thank you kindly five years after. You’d do her a good turn, sir, you
would, and not a bad un as the saying goes, and give it the lie—no, beg
your pardon, that is the other way round—she’s bound to do you the
bad turn having saved your life, though I don’t see how she could do that
unless, begging your pardon, she made you fall in love with her, being married,
which though strange wouldn’t be wunnerful seeing what she is and seeing
how I has been in love with her myself since she was seven, old missus and all,
who died eight years gone and well rid of the rheumatics.”</p>
<p>Beatrice was one of the few subjects that could unlock old Edward’s
breast, and Geoffrey retired before his confusing but suggestive eloquence.
Hurriedly bidding the old man good-night he returned to the house, and leaning
on the gate watched the twilight dying on the bosom of the west.</p>
<p>Suddenly, a bunch of wild roses in her girdle, Beatrice emerged from the
gathering gloom and stood before him face to face.</p>
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