<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p class="p2">Eoa was now sixteen years old, tall, and lithe,
and graceful as the creepers of tropic woodlands.
Her face was of the clearest oval, a
quick concise terse oval, such as we find in the
eggs of wild birds rather than of tame ones.
Her eyes were of bewildering brightness, always
flashing, always in motion, rarely allowing the
gazer a chance of guessing what their colour was.
Very likely they were of no positive colour, but a
pure dark lustre, such as a clear swift river has,
when overhung by palm–trees. Her complexion,
beautifully soft and even, was toned with a delicate
eastern tinge, like that fawn–coloured light which
sometimes flushes a cloudless sky before the midsummer
sunrise. And her warm oriental blood
suffused it, at the slightest emotion, as the leaping
sun pervades that sky with a flood of limpid
rubies.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She had never been flattened by education: all
her qualities and feelings, like her beauty, were in
excess. You could see it in the quick rise and fall
of her breath, in the sudden grace of her movements,
in the infinite variety of her attitudes and
aspects.</p>
<p>Whatever she thought, she said at once; yet
none ever called her a bold girl. Her modes of
thought were as widely different from those of an
English maiden, as a wild honeysuckle differs in
form, habit, and scent, from a rose. She cared
for no oneʼs opinion of her, any more than the
wind cares how a tree swings; unless indeed it
were one whom she loved, and then she would
crawl to please him. For she loved with all her
heart and soul, and hated with no less; and she
always took care in either case to apprise the object
of it. And yet, with all her depth of passion, Eoa
was pure of heart and mind,—ay, as pure as our
own Amy.</p>
<p>She soon recovered from her bruises, being perfectly
healthy, and elastic as india–rubber. Nevertheless,
she would not have been saved from that
terrible sea but for the generosity of poor Captain
Roberts, and the gallantry of Bob Garnet.</p>
<p>Now Bob was hurt rather seriously, and, being
(as we are well aware) an uncommonly shy young
fellow, he was greatly astonished, and shocked a
little, when on the Friday morning a beautiful
girl, very strangely dressed, ran to the side of his
sofa, threw her arms round him, and kissed him<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
till he was out of breath, and his face was wet with
the dew of her tears.</p>
<p>“Oh, please donʼt,” said Bob; “I am sure I
donʼt deserve it.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you do; and I will marry you when I am
old enough. I donʼt know what you are like, and
I donʼt care two straws, directly they told me
what you had done. Only I must have papaʼs
leave. Kiss me again, I like it. Now where is my
darling papa?”</p>
<p>“What, donʼt you know? Havenʼt they told
you? Oh, poor thing!”</p>
<p>At the tone of his voice she leaped back, like a
bird at the gun–flash, and stood with her little
hands clasped on her head, her eyes with their deep
light quivering, and the whole of her form swinging
to and fro, from the wild push of sudden
terror. Then she spoke with a hollow depth,
which frightened Bob more than the kissing.</p>
<p>“They told me that he was well, gone to his
brother somewhere, and I thought it wasnʼt like
him to leave me so, and—tell me the truth, or
Iʼll shake you to pieces.”</p>
<p>“No, donʼt,” said Bob, as she leaped at him;
“I have had shaking enough.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you poor boy, and for my sake. I am
a brute, I know. Tell me the truth, if you love
me.”</p>
<p>“Your dear father is dead. But they have
found his body<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say that God has been so
wicked as to kill my father?”</p>
<p>“God knows best,” said Bob; he could think
of nothing else to say.</p>
<p>“No, He doesnʼt. No, He doesnʼt. No, He
never knows anything. He couldnʼt have known
who he was, and how terribly I loved him, or
He wouldnʼt have the heart to do it. Oh, you
wicked boy; oh, you wicked boy! I will never
forgive you for saving me. Hya, hya, hya!”</p>
<p>Bob never saw such a thing before, and never
will again. And he wonʼt be much the loser;
although the sight was magnificent. The screams
and shrieks of the clearest voice that ever puzzled
echo brought up the landlord and landlady, and
our good friend Rufus Hutton, who had set forth
full speed from home on hearing about the <i>Aliwal</i>.
He caught Eoa in his arms, carried her back
to her room, and dosed her. He gave her some
Indian specific, some powder of a narcotic fungus,
which he had brought on purpose.</p>
<p>It stupefied her for nearly three days, and even
then she awoke into the dreamy state of Nirwana,
that bliss of semi–consciousness, like mild
annihilation, into which the Buddha is absorbed,
and to which all pious Buddhists look as their eternal
happiness. Then she opened her delicate
tapering arms, where you could see the grand
muscles moving, but never once protruding, and
she called for her darling father to come. Finding
that he did not come, she was satisfied with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
some trifling answer, and then wanted to have Bob
instead; but neither was Bob forthcoming.</p>
<p>On the very day when Dr. Hutton came to look
for Eoa, Mr. Garnet found himself getting better
from that wretched low nervous fever into which
his fright had thrown him. Then he asked Dr.
Hutton whether there would be any danger in
moving Robert, and, finding that there would be
none whatever, if it were carefully managed, he
ordered a carriage immediately, and with some of
his ancient spirit. The Crown, which had the
cross–bar of its N set up the wrong way (as is done,
by–the–by, on the roof of Hampton Court chapel,
and in many other places), made public claim to be
regarded as a “commercial hotel and posting–house.”
No Rushford folk having yet been
known to post anything, except a letter at rare
intervals, and a bill at rarer, this claim of the
Crown had never been challenged, and strangers
entertained a languid theoretical faith in it. But
Mr. Brown looked very blue when Bull Garnet in
reviving accents ordered “a chaise and pair at the
door in half an hourʼs time; a roomy chaise, if you
please, because my son must keep his feet up.”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir; yes, to be sure, sir; I quite understand,
sir. It shall be attended to, sir.”</p>
<p>“Then why donʼt you go and order it?”</p>
<p>“To be sure, sir; I forgot. I will speak to
Mrs. Brown, sir.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Brown, being a woman of resource, mounted
the boy on her donkey, the only quadruped she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
possessed, but a “wonner to go,” as the boy said,
“when you knows the right place to prog him in,”
and sent him post–haste to Lymington, whence the
required conveyance arrived in about an hour and
a half.</p>
<p>Rufus Hutton, having promised to be at home
that evening, left Eoa to sleep off her heavy
soporific, and followed the carriage on horseback;
neither did he leave its track where the Ringwood
Road turns off, for he had undertaken to tell Sir
Cradock how his niece was getting on. He started
nearly half an hour after the Lymington chaise,
for Polly would never demean herself by trotting
behind the “posters.” During that half–hour he
drank hot brown brandy–and–water, although he
could not bear it, to ingratiate him with Mrs.
Brown for the sake of the poor Eoa. For Mrs.
Brown had no other hot method of crowning the
flowing bowl. And now, while I think of it, let
me warn all gentle and simple people who deign on
this tale of the New Forest, never to ask for pale
brandy within the perambulations. How do you
think they make it? By mixing brown brandy
with villanous gin. Rufus was up to this, of
course; and, as he must take something for the
good of the house, and to get at the kindly kernel
of the heavy–browed hostess, he took that which he
thought would be least for his own evil. Then,
leaving Mrs. Brown (who, of course, had taken her
own glass at his sole charge and largesse, after fifty
times “Oh no, sir, never! Oh Lord, how my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
Brown would be shocked!”), having imbued that
good Mrs. Brown, who really was not a bad woman—which
means that she was a good one, for women
have no medium—with a strong aromatic impression
that he was a pleasant gentleman, and no pride,
not a bit of it, in him, no more than you nor me
might,—off he trotted at a furious pace, smoking
two cheroots at once.</p>
<p>I believe that there was and is—for I am happy
to say that he still inhales the breeze of life down
his cigar, and looks browner and redder than ever—I
believe that, in spite of all his troubles in connexion
with this story, which took a good deal out
of him, there was and is no happier man in our
merry England than the worthy Rufus Hutton.
And, as all happiness is negative, and goes without
our knowing it, and only becomes a positive past
for us to look back upon, so his went before it came,
and goes or eʼer it comes. And yet he enjoys it
none the less; he multiplies it by three for the past
and by nine for the future, and he never finds it
necessary to deduct for the present moment.</p>
<p>Happy man who never thinks beyond salutary
average, who can accept, in perfect faith, the traditions
of his forbears, and yet is shrewd enough to
hope that his grandsons will discard at least a portion
of them,—who looks upon the passing life as a
thing he need not move in, a world which must
improve itself, and every day is doing it. And
all the while he sympathises with his fellow–men,
enjoys a bit of human nature, laughs at the cross–purposes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span>
of native truth and training, loves whatever
he finds to be true, and does his best to foster
it, is pleased with his after–dinner story, and feels
universally charitable; then smiles at his wife, and
kisses his children; and goes to bed with the firm
conviction that they are worth all the rest put
together.</p>
<p>Yet this manʼs happiness is not sound, because
it is built upon selfishness.</p>
<p>In Nowelhurst village Dr. Hutton met Mark
Stote, the gamekeeper, who begged him to stop for
a moment, just to hear a word or two. Rufus,
after hearing his news, resolved to take the upper
road to the Hall, past Mr. Garnetʼs house; it was
not so very far out of his way, and perhaps he
might be of service there, and—ah, yes, Dr. Hutton,
this last was the real motive, though you may
not have thought so—what a fine opportunity to
discover something which plagued him! Perhaps
I ought to say rather, the want of which was
plaguing him. Rufus took so kind an interest in
his neighbours’ affairs, that anything not thoroughly
luculent in their dealings, mode of life or
speech, or management of their households, was to
him the subject–matter of continual mental scratchings.
Ah, how genteel a periphrase, worthy of
Bailey Kettledrum; how happily we have shown
our horror of that English monosyllable, beginning
with the third vowel, which must be (according to
Dr. Aldrich) the correlative of scratch! Score
two, and go on after Dr. Hutton.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He overtook the Garnets twain just at their front
gate, whence the house could not be seen, on
account of a bank of evergreens. The maid came
out with her cap flying off, and all her mind perturbed.
Rufus Hutton, checking his mare, for the
road was very narrow, heard the entire dialogue.</p>
<p>“Oh, sir! oh, master! have you heard of it?
Such a thing, to be sure!”</p>
<p>“Heard of what, Sarah? Of course I have
heard of the great disaster at Rushford.”</p>
<p>“No, no. Here, sir, here! The two big trees
is down on the house. Itʼs a mussy as Nanny and
me wasnʼt killed. And poor Miss Pearl have been
in hysterics ever since, without no dinner. There,
you can hear her screeching now, worse than the
mangle, ever so much.”</p>
<p>Mr. Garnet did not say a word, but set off for the
house full speed, even forgetting that Bob wanted
help to get from the gate to the doorway.</p>
<p>Rufus Hutton jumped down from his mare, and
called to the driver to come and hold her, just for
a minute or two; no fear of <i>his</i> horses bolting.
Then, helping Bob to limp along, he followed
through the shrubbery. When they came within
full view of the house, he was quite amazed at the
mischief. The two oaks interlocked had fallen
upon it, and, crashing as they did from the height
above, the breaches they made were hideous. They
had cloven the house into three ragged pieces, from
the roof–ridge down to the first floor, where the solid
joists had stopped them. It had happened in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
afternoon of the second day of the tempest; when
the heart of the storm was broken, but tremendous
squalls came now and then from the bright north–west.
Mr. Garnetʼs own bed was occupied by the
tree which he detested. Pearl had screamed
“Judgment, judgment!” and danced among the
ruins; so the maid was telling Mr. Garnet, as he
feared to enter his own door.</p>
<p>“Judgment for what?” asked Rufus Hutton,
and Mr. Garnet seemed not to hear him.</p>
<p>“I am sure I donʼt know, sir,” answered the
maid, “for none of us done any harm, sir; unless
it was the bottle of pickled onions, when master
were away, and there was very few of them left,
sir, very few, I do declare to you, and we thought
they was on the turn, sir, and it seemed such a
pity to waste them. And please, sir, weʼve all been
working like horses, though frightened out of our
lives ‘most; and we fetched down all the things
from your room, where the cupboards was broken
open, for ‘fraid it should come on to rain, sir; and
weʼve taken all our meals standing, sir; and made
up a bed in the meat–screen, and another upon the
dresser; and Miss Pearl, what turns she have given
us—— Here she comes, I do declare.”</p>
<p>“Dr. Hutton,” said Bull Garnet, hastily, “good–bye;
I am much obliged to you. I shall see you,
I hope, next week. Good–bye, good–bye. Excuse
me.”</p>
<p>But, before he could get him out of the way—for
Rufus lingered strangely—Pearl Garnet came<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
into the little hall, with her eyes distended fearfully.
“There, there it is,” she cried, “there it is,
I tell you! No wonder the tree came down upon
it. No wonder the house was crushed for it.” And
she pointed to a shattered box, tilted up endwise,
among a heap of account–books, clothes, and furniture.</p>
<p>“Oh yes, you may look at it. To be sure you
may look at it. God would not have it hidden
longer. I have done my best, God knows, and my
heart knows, and my—I mean that man there
knows. Is there anything more I can do for you,
anything more, <i>dear father</i>? You have done so
much for me, you know. And I will only ask you
one little thing—put me in his coffin.”</p>
<p>“The girl is raving,” cried Mr. Garnet. “Poor
thing, it comes from her mother.”</p>
<p>“No, it comes from her father,” said Pearl,
going boldly up to him, and fixing her large bright
eyes upon his. “Do as you like with me; I donʼt
care; but donʼt put it on any one else. Oh,
father, father, father!”</p>
<p>Moaning, she turned away from him; and then
sprang into his arms with shrieks. He lifted her
tenderly, and forgot all about his own safety. His
great tears fell on her wan, sick face; and his
heavy heart throbbed for his daughter only, as he
felt hers bounding perilously. He carried her off
to an inner room, and left them to their own
devices.</p>
<p>“I should like uncommonly,” said Rufus Hutton,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
rubbing his chin, “to know what is in that box.
Indeed, I feel it my duty at once to ascertain.”</p>
<p>“No, you shanʼt,” cried Bob, limping across in
front of it; “I know no more than you do, sir.
But I wonʼt have fatherʼs things pryed into.”</p>
<p>“You are very polite,” replied the Doctor; “a
chip of the old block, I perceive. But, perhaps,
you will believe me, my boy, when I tell you that,
if ever there was a gentleman totally devoid of improper
curiosity, it is Dr. Rufus Hutton, sir.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I am so glad,” said Bob; “because you
wonʼt be disappointed, then.”</p>
<p>Rufus grinned, in spite of his wrath; but he
was not to be baffled so easily. He could not push
poor Bob aside, in his present disabled state, without
being guilty of cowardice. So he called in an
auxiliary.</p>
<p>“Betsy, my dear, your young mistress wished
me just to examine that box. Be kind enough to
bring it to the light here, unless it is too heavy for
your little hands.”</p>
<p>Oh, if he had only said “Miss Sarah,” what a
difference it might have made!</p>
<p>“Betsy, indeed!” cried Sarah, who had followed
her mistress, but, being locked out, had come back
to see the end of it; “my name, sir, is nothing so
low as that. My name is Sarah Mackarness, sir,
very much at your service; and my mother keeps
a potato–shop, the largest business in Lyndhurst,
sir. Betsy, indeed! and from a stranger, not to
say a strange gentleman, for fear of making a mistake.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
And as for my hands”—she thought he had
been ironical, for her hands were above regulation
size—“my hands are such as pleased God to make
them, and honest hands, anyhow, and doesnʼt want
to interfere with other peopleʼs business. Oh, what
will poor Nanny say, to think of me, Sarah Mackarness,
be permiscuous called Betsy?”</p>
<p>At this moment, when Sarah Mackarness, having
recovered breath, was starting into another native
discourse on prænomina, and Rufus was calling
upon his resources for some constitutional measure,
Bull Garnet came back, treading heavily, defiant
of all that the world could do. His quick eyes,
never glimpsing that way, but taking in all the
room at once, espied the box unmeddled with, and
Bob upon guard in front of it. He was his own
man now again. What did he care for anybody,
so long as he had his children?</p>
<p>“Dr. Hutton, I thought that you were gone.”</p>
<p>“You see I am not,” said Rufus, squaring his
elbows, and looking big, for he was a plucky little
fellow, “and, whatʼs more, I donʼt mean to go till
I know what is in that box.”</p>
<p>“Box, box!” cried Bull Garnet, striking his
enormous forehead, as if to recall something;
“have we a box of yours, Dr. Hutton?”</p>
<p>“No, no; that box of <i>yours</i>. Your daughter
told us to examine it. And, from her manner, I
believe that I am bound to do so.”</p>
<p>“Bound to examine one of my boxes!” Bull
Garnet never looked once that way, and Rufus<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
took note of the strange avoidance; “my boxes
are full of confidential papers; surely, sir, you
have caught my daughterʼs—I mean to say, you
are labouring under some hallucination.”</p>
<p>“There are no papers in that box. The contents
of it are metal. I have seen one article
already through the broken cover, and shall not
forget its shape. Beware; there have been strange
things done in this neighbourhood. If you refuse
to allay my suspicions, you confirm them.”</p>
<p>The only answer he received was a powerful
hand at the back of his neck, a sensation of being
lifted with no increase of facilities for placid
respiration; finally, a lateral movement of great
rapidity through the air, and a loud sound as of a
bang. Recovering reasonʼs prerogative, he found
himself in a dahlia, whose blossoms, turned into
heel–balls by the recent frost, were flapping round
his countenance, and whose stake had gone through
his waistcoat back, and grazed his coxendix, or
something; he knows best what it was, as a medical
man deeply interested.</p>
<p>He had also a very unpleasant reminiscence of
some such words as these, to which he had no
responsive power—“You wonʼt take a hint like a
gentleman; so take a hit like a blackguard.”</p>
<p>Dr. Rufus Hutton was not the man to sit down
quietly under an insult of any sort. At the moment
he felt that brute force was irresistibly in
the ascendant, and he was wonderfully calm about
it. He shook himself, and smoothed his waistcoat,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
and tried the stretch of his garters; then never
once looked toward the house, never shook his fist,
nor frowned even. He walked off to his darling
Polly as if nothing at all had happened; gave the
man a shilling for holding her, after looking long for
a sixpence; then mounted, and rode towards Nowelhurst
Hall, showing no emotion whatever. Only
Polly knew that burning tears of a brave manʼs
sense of ignominy fell upon her glossy shoulder,
and were fiercely wiped way.</p>
<p>At the Hall he said nothing about it; never
even mentioned that he had called at Garnetʼs
cottage; but told Sir Cradock, like a true man, of
Eoaʼs troubles, of her poor forlorn condition, and
power of heart to feel it. He even contrived to
interest the bereaved man, now so listless, in the
young life thrown upon his care, as if by the
breath of heaven. We are never so eloquent for
another as when our own hearts are moved deeply
by the feeling of wrong to ourselves; unless, indeed,
we are very small, and that subject excludes
all others.</p>
<p>So it came to pass that the grand new carriage
was ordered to the door, and Sir Cradock would
himself have gone—only Rufus Hutton had left
him, and the eloquence was oozing. The old man,
therefore, turned back on the threshold, saying to
himself that it would be hardly decent to appear
in public yet; and Mrs. OʼGaghan was sent instead,
sitting inside, and half afraid to breathe for
fear of the crystal. As for her clothes, they were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
good enough, she knew, for the Lord Mayorʼs
coach. “Five–and–sixpence a yard, maʼam, lave
alone trimming and binding.” But, knowing what
she did of herbs, she could not answer for the
peppermint.</p>
<p>Of course, they did not intend to fetch poor Eoa
home yet; but Biddy had orders to stay there
until the young lady was moveable. Biddy took
to her at once, in her heavy, long–drawn sleep, with
the soft black lashes now and then lifting from the
rich brown cheek.</p>
<p>“An’ if she isnʼt illigant, then,” said Biddy to
Mrs. Brown, “ate me wiʼout a purratie. Arl coom
ov’ the blude, missus. Sazins, then, if me and Pat
had oonly got a child this day! Belikes, maʼam,
for the matter o’ that, a drap o’ whisky disagrays
with you.”</p>
<p>Biddy, feeling strongly moved, and burning to
drink her new childʼs health, showed a bottle of
brown potheen.</p>
<p>“To tell you the truth, mem,” said Mrs. Brown,
“I know nothing about them subjects. Spirituous
liquors is a thing as has always been beyond me.”</p>
<p>“Thin Iʼll clap it away again,” said Biddy, “and
the divvil only the wiser. I never takes it alone,
marm.”</p>
<p>“It would ill become me, mem,” replied Mrs.
Brown, “to be churlish in my own house, mem. I
have heard of you very often, mem. Yes, I assure
you I have, from the people as comes to bathe here,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
as a lady of great experience in diseases of the
chest. If you recommend any cordial, mem, on
the strength of your experience, for a female of
weak witality, I should take it as a dooty, mem,
strictly as a dooty to my husband and two darters.”</p>
<p>“Arrah, then, Iʼm your femmale. Me witality
goes crossways, like, till I has a drap o’ the crather.”
And so they made a night of it, and Mr. Brown
had some.</p>
<hr>
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