<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</SPAN></h2>
<p>The news was not long in reaching England. When
Lady Vaughan read it she knew it was Clare's death-warrant.
They tried to break it to her very gently, but
her keen, quick perception soon told her what was wrong.</p>
<p>"He is dead," she said; "I knew that I should never
see him again."</p>
<p>Clare Vaughan's heart was broken; she hardly spoke
after she heard the fatal words; she was very quiet, very
patient, but the light on her face was not of this world.
She lay one day with little Hyacinth in her arms, and Lady
Vaughan, going into her room, said,</p>
<p>"You look better to-day, Clare."</p>
<p>"I have been dreaming of Randall," she said smiling;
"I shall soon see him again."</p>
<p>An hour afterward they went to take the little one from
her—the tender arms had relaxed their hold, and she lay
dead, with a smile on her face.</p>
<p>They buried her in Ashton churchyard. People called
her illness by all kinds of different names, but Lady
Vaughan knew she had died of a broken heart. The care
of little Hyacinth devolved upon her grandmother. It
was a dreary home for a child: the rooms were always
shaded by trees, and the sombre carvings, the satyr heads,
the laughing fauns, all in stone, frightened her. She never
saw any young persons; Sir Arthur's servants were all old—they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
had entered the service in their youth, and remained
in it ever since.</p>
<p>Sir Arthur and Lady Vaughan felt their son's death very
keenly; all their hopes died with him; all their interest in
life was gone. They became more dull, more formal, more
cold every day. They loved the child, yet the sight of
her was always painful to them, reminding them so
forcibly of what they had lost. They reared her in the
same precise, formal manner in which their only son had
been reared. She rose at a stated time; she retired at a
certain hour, never varying by one minute; she studied,
she read, she practiced her music—all by rule.</p>
<p>The neighborhood round Queen's Chase was not a very
populous one. Among the friends whom the Vaughans
visited, and who visited them in return, there was not one
young person, not one child. It never seemed to enter
their minds that Hyacinth, being a child, longed for the
society of children. At certain times she was gravely told
to play. She had a doll and a Noah's ark; and with these
she amused herself alone for long hours. As for the
graces, the fancies, the wants, the requirements of childhood,
its thousand wordless dreams and wordless wants,
no one seemed to understand them at all. They treated
the child as if she were a little old woman, crushing back
with remorseless hand all the quick fancies and bright
dreams natural to youth.</p>
<p>Some children would have grown up wicked, hardened,
unlovely and unloving under such tuition; but Hyacinth
Vaughan was saved from this by her peculiar disposition.
The child was all poetry. Lady Vaughan never wearied
of trying to correct her. She carefully pruned, as she
imagined, all the excess of imagination and romance. She
might as well have tried to prevent the roses from blooming,
the dew from falling, or the leaves from springing.
All that she succeeded in was in making the child keep
her thoughts and fancies to herself. She talked to the
trees as though they were grave, living friends, full of
wise counsel; she talked to the flowers as though they
were familiar and dear playfellows. The imagination so
sternly repressed ran riot in a hundred different ways.</p>
<p>It was most unfortunate for the child. If she had been as
other children—if her imagination, instead of being cruelly
repressed, had been trained and put to some useful purpose—if
her love of romance had been wisely guarded—if her
great love of poetry and beauty, her great love of ideality,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
had been watched and allowed for—the one great error that
darkened her life would never have been committed. But
none of this was done. She was literally afraid to speak
of that which filled her thoughts and was really part of her
life. If she asked any uncommon question Lady Vaughan
scolded her, and Sir Arthur, his hands shaking nervously,
would say, "The child is going wrong—going wrong."</p>
<p>It was without exception the dullest and saddest life
any child could lead. At thirteen there came two breaks
in the monotony—she had a music-master come from
Oakton, and she found a key that fitted the library door.
How often had she stood against the library windows,
looking through them, and longing to open one of those
precious volumes; but when she asked Sir Arthur for a
book, he told her she could not understand them—she
must be content to play with her doll.</p>
<p>There were hundreds of suitable books that might have
been provided for the child; she was refused any—consequently
she read whatever came in her way. She found
this key that fitted the library door, and used it. She
would quietly unlock it, and take one of the books nearest
to her without fear of its being missed, for Sir Arthur
seldom entered the room. In this fashion she read many
books that were valuable, instructive, and amusing. She
also read many that would have been much better left
alone. Her innocence, however, saved her from harm.
She knew so little of life that what would have perhaps
injured another was not even noticed by her.</p>
<p>In this manner she educated herself, and the result was
exactly what was to be expected. She had in her mind
the most curious collection of poetry and romance, the
most curious notions of right and wrong, the most unreal
ideas it was possible to imagine. Then, as she grew older,
life began to unroll itself before her eyes.</p>
<p>She saw that outside this dull world of Oakton there
was another world so fair and bright that it dazzled her.
There was a world full of music and song, where people
danced and made merry, where they rode and drove and
enjoyed themselves, where there was no dulness and no
gloom—a world of which the very thought was so beautiful,
so bewildering, that her pulse thrilled and her heart
beat as she dreamed of it. Would she ever find her way
into that dazzling world, or would she be obliged to live
here always, shut up with these old, formal people, amid
the quaint carvings and giant trees? And then when she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
was seventeen, she began to dream of the other world
women find so fair—the fairyland of hope and love. Her
ideas of love were nearly all taken from poetry: it was
something very magnificent, very beautiful, taking one
quite out of commonplace affairs. Would it ever come
to her?</p>
<p>She thought life had begun and ended too, for her, when
one day Lady Vaughan told her to come into her room—she
wished to talk to her. The girl followed her with a
weary, hopeless expression on her face. "I am going to
have a lecture," she thought; "I have said a word too
little or a word too much."</p>
<p>But, wonderful to say, Lady Vaughan was not prepared
with a lecture. She sat down in her great easy-chair and
pointed to a footstool. Hyacinth took it, wondering very
much what was coming.</p>
<p>"My dear Hyacinth," she began; "you are growing
up now; you will be quite a woman soon; and it is time
you knew what Sir Arthur and I have planned for you."</p>
<p>She did not feel much interest in learning what it was—something
intolerably dull it was sure to be.</p>
<p>"You know," continued Lady Vaughan, "there has
never been the least deception used toward you. You are
the only child of our only son; but it has never been understood
that you were to be heiress of the Chase."</p>
<p>"I should not like to have the Chase," said Hyacinth
timidly. "I should not know what to do with it."</p>
<p>Lady Vaughan waved her hand in very significant
fashion.</p>
<p>"That is not the question. We have not brought you
up as our heiress because both Sir Arthur and I think
that the head of our house must be a gentleman. Of
course you will have a dowry. I have money of my own,
which I intend to leave you. Mr. Adrian Darcy, of whom
you have heard me speak, will succeed to Queen's Chase—that
is, if no other arrangement takes him from us;
should he have other views in life, the property will perhaps
be left differently. I cannot say. Sir Arthur and I wish
very much that you should marry Mr. Darcy."</p>
<p>The girl looked up at the cold, formal face, with wonder
in her own. Was this to be her romance? Was this to be
the end of all her dreams? Instead of passing into a
fairer, brighter world, was she to live always in this?</p>
<p>"How can I marry him?" she asked quickly. "I have
never seen him."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Do not be so impetuous, Hyacinth. You should always
repress all exhibition of feeling. I know that you
have never seen him. Mr. Darcy is travelling now upon
the Continent, and Sir Arthur thinks a short residence
abroad would be very pleasant for us. Adrian Darcy always
shows us the greatest respect. You will be sure to
like him—he is so like us; we are to meet him at Bergheim,
and spend a month together, and then we shall see
if he likes you."</p>
<p>"Does he know what you intend?" she asked half shyly.</p>
<p>"Not yet. Of course, in families like our own, marriages
are not conducted as with the plebeian classes; with
us they are affairs of state, and require no little diplomacy
and tact."</p>
<p>"Was my father's a diplomatic marriage?" she asked.</p>
<p>"No," replied Lady Vaughan, "your father pleased
himself; but then, remember, he was in a position to do
so. He was an only son, and heir of Queen's Chase."</p>
<p>"And am I to be taken to this gentleman; if he likes
me he is to marry me; if not, what then?"</p>
<p>The scornful sarcasm of her voice was quite lost on
Lady Vaughan.</p>
<p>"There is no need for impatience. Even then some
other plan will suggest itself to us. But I think there is
no fear of failure—Mr. Darcy will be sure to like you.
You are very good-looking, you have the true Vaughan
face, and, thanks to the care with which you have been
educated, your mind is not full of nonsense, as is the case
with some girls. I thought it better to tell you of this arrangement,
so that you may accustom your mind to the
thought of it. Everything being favorable, we shall start
for Bergheim in the middle of August, and then I shall
hope to see matters brought to a sensible conclusion."</p>
<p>"It will not be of any consequence whether I like this
Mr. Darcy or not—will it, Lady Vaughan?"</p>
<p>"You must try to cultivate a kindly liking for him, my
dear. All the nonsense of love and romance may be dispensed
with. Well brought up as you have been, you will
find no difficulty in carrying out our wishes. Now, draw
that blind a little closer, my love, and leave me—I am
sleepy. Do not waste your time—go at once to the piano."</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span></p>
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