the skin, soothes an< etc., and produces a ESSENCE ( EUKONIA. A Is powder. Boxes, 1/-, 20, hatton garden, READ T EMORY UNIVERSITY " bf.ar sir. —i an ______ to thank you, for your lc zen'ges'Eave 'clone wonders"ILfPirfc'iV Since I had the operation of ' Tracheotomy' (the same as the late Empercrof Germany, and unlike him, thank God, I am still alive and getting on well) performed at St. Bar- tholomew's Hospital for abduct, or paralysis of the vocal chords, no one could possibly have had a more violent cough ; indeed, it was so bad at times that it quite exhausted me. The mucus also, which was very copious and hard, has been softened, and I have been able to get rid of it without difficulty. " I am, Sir, yours truly, " Mr. T. Keating. "J. Hill." M EDICAL NOT E. The above speaks ft r itself. From strict inquiry it appears that the benefit from using Keating's Cough Lozenges is understated. The operation was a specially severe one, and was performed by the specialist, Dr. H. T. Butlin, of St. Bartholomew's Hospital. Since the operation, the only means of relief is the use of these Lozenges. So successful are they that one affords immediate benefit, although from the nature of the case the throat irritation is intense. Mr. Hill kindly allows any reference to be made to him. THE UTTERLY UNRBVALLED REMEDY eok DOUGHS. HOARSENESS, AND THROAT TROUBLES. "KEATING'S COUGH LOZENGES " are sold everywhere, in Tins, 1/ii; and 2j9 each. Free by Post, 75 Stamps. THOMAS KEATING, Chemist, London. Tenth] Routledge's Railway Library Advertiser. [Issue. Thoughts, like Snowflakes on some far-off Mountain Side, go on Accumulating tilt some great Truth is loosened, and Falls like an Avalanche on the Waiting World. At present our lawgivers do not see that tlio- responsibilities ol' thoroughly qualified Plumbers are frequently more important than a Medical Practitioner's. Important to all leaving hom«\- What Health Re-tort, what Watering Place, what Climate in the World could show results of Preventible Death like these of the power of Sanitation ? IGNORANCE OP SANITARY SCIENCE, direct and iudirect, Costs Threefold the amount of Pcor-Rate for the Country gene- rally. " He had given as models of sanitation of adult life, well constructed and well-kept prisons, where of those who came in without well- developed disease, and not good lives either, the death-rate did not exceed I HREE IN 1,000. In Stafford County Jail the death-rate had, during the last ten years, been actually less than one in every thousand— not a tenth of the death-rate of adult outsiders." —Inaugural Address by E. CHAD WICK, C.B., on the Sanitary Condition of England. THE KING OF PHYSICIANS, PURE AIR. JEOPARDY OP LIFE, THE GREAT DANGER OP VITIATED AIR. " Former generations perished in venial ienoranre of all sanitary laws. When Black Death massacred Hun- dreds of Thousands, neither the victims nor their ruleis could be accounted responsible for their slaugnter."— Times. After breathing impure air for two minutes and a half, everv drop < f blood is more or less poisoned. There is not a point in the human frame but has been traversed by poisonous blood ; not a point but must have suffered injury. Finn's "Fruit Salt" i-< the best known remedy; it temoves 'ootid or pooonous matter (the aroundwork of disea-e) Irom the blood by natural means, allavs nervous excitement, depression, and restores the nervous tystem to its proper condition. Use EnO'S " Fruit Salt." It is pleasant, cooling, re- freshing, and ii.vigoiatipg. You cannot overstate its great value in keeping the blood puie and free from disease. TNFLHENZA.—FEVERISH COLD.—Instructions : When attacked with influenza or A feverish cold, lie in bed for three or four days in a warm room, well ventilated by a good fire, take ENO'S " FRUIT SALT " freely, and ENO'S " VEGETABLE MOTO " as occasion may require. After a few days the marked symptoms will pass away. Asa Preservative of Nervous Force, or a Recuperative Diet, use Scalded Milk ireely. Use the greatest care to avoid relapse. TlRAWING AN OVERDRAFT ON TFF. BANK OF LIFF-Late horns, fagged, un- JU natural excitement, breathing impure air, too rich food, alcoholic drinks, etc.-ENO'S "FRUIT SALT" is the best known remedy. It removes foetid or poisonous matter—the groundwork of disease—from the blood by natural means, allays nervous excitement, depres- sion, headaches, etc., and restores the nervous system to its proper condition. Use ENO'S "FRUIT SALT." It is pleasant, cooling, refreshing, and invigorating. You cannot over- state its great value in keeping the blood pure and free from disease. PALPITATION OF THE HEART, caused by Liver Derangement and Indigestion, fre- A quently called (or mistaken for) Hfakt Disease.—" On the 14th of April I purchased a bottle of your' FRUIT SALT,' not feeling very well at the time, and it had an effect that I never anticipated when I bought it. I had suffered more or less since the year 1841 from Palpitation of the Heart, but very badly during the last few years. The least thing would produce it during the day, and at night my sleep was very much disturbed. Strange to say, after the first dose of ' FRUIT SALT,' palpitations suddenly ceased, and have not since re- turned. Out of gratitude for the benefit which. I have received, I have recommended it to all my friends both in London and Yarmouth ; at the same time I feel it my duty to state the above facts, of which you can make whatever use you please. " I am, dear Sir, yours respectfully, TRUTH." mHE SECRET OF SUCCESS — STERLING HONESTY OF PURPOSE, WITHOUT IT A LIFE IS A SHAM I—" A new invention is brought before the public, and commands success. A score of abon inable imitations are immediately introduced by the unscrupulous, who, in copying the original closely enough to deceive the public, and yet not so exactly as to infringe upon legal rights, exercise an ingenuity that, employed in an original channel, could not fail to secure reputation and profit."—Adams. CAUTION.—-Examine each Bottle, and see that the Capsule is marked UNO'S "FRUIT SALT." Without it you have been imposed on by worthless imitations. Sold by all Chemists. Directions m Mxteen Languages how to prevent Disease. Protection in every Country. Prepared ODly at Eno's " Fruit Salt " Works, London, S.E., by J. C. Eno's Patent. Tenth] [Issue. FOR INFANTS AND INVALIDS. "31, Harwood Square, "n.W; "Mrs. Millars little hoy— taken the day he was a year eld —brought up on MELLIN'S FOOD till then MELLIN'S FOOD BISCUITS (Manufactured by Carr if Co., Carlisle, specially for G. 2Ifllin). For Children after Weaning, the Aged, and Dyspeptic. Digestive, Nourishing, Sustaining. Price 2/- and 3 6 per Tin. MELLIX'S LACTO GLYCOSE or MILK FOOD Simply dissolved in warm water is recommended for nse when fresh cow's milk disagrees or caiuiot be obtained. Price 2/- and 3 - per Bottle. SHAKESPEARIAN WISDOM ON THE FEEDING AND REARING OF INFANTS. A pamphlet of quotations from Shakespeare and portraits of beautiful children, together with testimonials, which are of the highest interest to all mothers, to be had with samples free by post, on application to— G. MELLIN, Marlboro' Works, Peckham, S.E. 80.000.S.&B., 21/1/92 MASTER MILLAR, aged 12 months. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. J.ONDON : PRINTED BY J. OGDEN AND 172, ST. JOHN STREET, B.C. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD by MRS. G. W. GODFREY author of "dolly," "my queen," "the beautiful miss roche," etc. LONDON GEORGE ROUTLEDGE AND SONS Broadway, Ludgate Hill NEW YORK : 9 LAFAYETTE PLACE ROUTLEDGE'S RAILWAY LIBRARY. Recent Volumes. JOCK O' HAZELGREEN. By Helen Mathers. OLIVIA RALEIGH. By the Author of " Tom Singleton." HERE BELOW. By J. A. Scofield. BRIDGET. By M. Betham-Edwards. A WOMAN'S GLORY. By Sarah Doudney. THE TALE OF A HORSE. By Author of " Blair Athol." MISS DAISY DIMITY. By May Crommelin. " CHERRY RIPE ! " By Helen Mathers. MISS CHEYNE OF ESSILMONT. By James Grant. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. PART I. «' Wi' lightsome heart I pull'd a rose Fu' sweet upon its thorny tree ; But my fause lover stole the rose, And ah ! he left the thorn wi' me," CHAPTER I. It is one of the last and loveliest days of the loveliest month of the young year. Over Cecil Darrell's head, and on to the gnarled old stile on which he leans, a May-tree sheds scenty pinky blossoms that fill the air with a subtle perfume that is a good deal pleasanter than any he has ever smelt in Bond Street. In the woods the young trees are unfolding leaves of a thousand different and delicate shades of green and brown—never so tender, so fresh, as in this their first youth. Under his feet tiny unexpected blossoms are springing up among the meadow-grasses; high up above his head among the topmost branches of the trees, where the young birds have built their nests—nearest to heaven, and the strong, bright rays of the spring sun—farthest from earth and marauding boys, they are singing gladsome songs with voices that are not so shrill and clear as they will be a month or two hence, but that are very tuneful for all that. " Ilka bird sang o' his love, And fondly so did I o' mine "— hums Darrell, remembering a song that he used to hear long ago, and which seems to him a good deal prettier than many pf those he has heard of late years, 6 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. He does not sing of his love, but he thinks of her a great deal as he waits there, very impatiently, for her coming. He is not perhaps quite so sure that she is his love in the good old-fashioned sense in which the song counts love. There have been so many of them—a score or so, more or less—and of each one he has been so sure that she was the one. He laughs a little to himself, and reddens a little too—he is not too old for that—as he remembers how sure he has been of each in her turn—and how completely cured ! After all, there is no reason to suppose that the same law, so well established by precedent, may not hold good with this one, and every possible reason to hope that it may. Never was a blinder, madder, more impossible-to-be-grati- fied fancy!—and never one to which he has more suddenly and completely yielded. For in spite of all his cynicism, in spite of all modern care- for-nothing, strive-for-nothing philosophy—in spite of all the derision he brings to bear upon himself and which he knows all his friends, could they understand his plight, would bring to bear upon him, he is as hotly, insanely, passionately in love as though he were twenty, instead of thirty, and the only pos- sible excuse he can find for himself is that nine men out of ten would have been the same in the same case. She is so pretty!—so delightfully, irresistibly, maddeningly pretty ! As he dunks of it he flings away the end of his cigar into the hedge, where it falls upon a cluster of violets and scorches some few modest buds to untimely death. It is the second he has smoked since he has been waiting for her; and his desire to see her, his impatience for her coming, have certainly grown with the waiting. At one moment he tells himself there is not a chance that she will come now, at the next he feels certain that she must be drawn to him by the very force of his UA SPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 7 desire. And all the while he is surprised at himself that he should care so greatly one way or the other. Up from the little hollow among the trees, where the smoke from a few score chimneys, curling in little faint wreaths up to the clear, bright sky, marks where the sleepy hamlet lies, church bells clang suddenly and merrily through the air. They are not very musical or very rhythmical bells. Some go laggingly, some too quickly—some clash all together, as though the ringers were pulling with more will than judgment. Yet Darrell has an undefined notion that they add artistic comple- tion to the quiet scene. " Some one has been married," he thinks to himself. " Some poor fool going to share his sixteen or eighteen shillings a week and his wretched little three-roomed cottage with another poor fool—going to rise up a little earlier and a little later take his rest, that he may earn by the sweat of his brow the doubtful blessing of seeing Phillis's brown eyes and ruddy cheeks oppo- site to him for the remainder of his life." But somehow he does not feel that unmitigated pity for this unknown someone which he might have expected of himself —which he has indeed so often felt for his own friends when he has seen them coming out of St. George's. Down here in this man-forgotten, dead-alive place (he had called it a dead-alive hole three weeks ago, but he had for- gotten that), where there is so little to do, except fall in love, and such an immensity of time to do it in, marriage does not seem altogether such an unbearable affliction as it has hitherto seemed to him. And if ever a man had a good excuse for it here she is ! A break in the trees has given him a glimpse of her white gown, and in a moment he has leapt over the stile and is going in hottest haste to meet her. If blindness be an indispensable characteristic of love, and love but the natural sequence of blindness, then is he not in love—for he by no means merges the clear-sightedness of a 8 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. man of the world in the obliquity of a lover. On the con- trary, he appreciates most thoroughly with his mind, as well as with his heart, every one of her many beauties. Would she seem as lovely in a drawing-room under the glare of artificial light, with all the trappings and.trammels of fashion about her, as she seems here in her simple white gown under the open sky, with the green leaves for her background, and the long grasses for her carpet ? Over and over again he has asked the question of himself, and always failed to find the answer. Indeed it is hard to imagine her under any artificial circum- stances at all. Her absolute naturalness is, perhaps, her most prevailing characteristic, and her chiefest charm. There is a certain audacity of youth, and health, and perfect joyous hope about her of which it would be difficult to rob her, even in imagination. He understands that her gown is of the simplest and cheapest kind, and that it does nothing to enhance the beauties of her figure, though it does nothing to hide them—and he is by no means one of those who think that simplicity and cheapness are the most desirable attributes in a gown. But, on the other hand, the cream rose lying among the laces about her neck is not more exquisitely veined, more delicately tinted than her fresh young skin; and after all, a gown may be bought, but such a skin as that cannot be had for all the money in the world. " I thought you were not coming," he says, going to meet her with outstretched hands. " I thought that my good luck had deserted me at last." " I have been a prey to good resolutions," she answers, looking up at him with a glance that is at once brilliant and shy, " or rather," laughing a little, " to a conflict between good resolutions and bad ones. You see, I could no longer pre- tend to myself that I did not know you would be here, or," hesitating, " knowing that you were here, that I had any right to come and see you. But at last UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 9 " But at last ? "—he says with a confident smile, looking down at her with his handsome, laughing eyes. " But at last," she says, laughing outright, " I grew so unut- terably, so insufferably tired of my own company, that if I had known my worst enemy was waiting for me on the other side of the stile I should have come to meet him." •'Your worst enemy?" he says, still holding her two slim hands, still looking into her lovely joyous face. " As if you could possibly have an enemy in the world ! " " When I come to think of it, I am not sure that I have. That is one advantage of a limited circle of acquaintance. Unless," with a sudden show of seriousness, " unless you are one." tl I!" he says, dropping her hands and moving a pace or two away. (Already she has found that it is not difficult to ruffle his temper.) " How is it possible that I could be your enemy ? " " Are you sure," she says, looking at him with a straightness and directness that makes him a little uneasy, " that you have not been misleading me ? Are you sure—quite sure, that in meeting you and talking to you without anyone knowing any- thing about it, I have not been doing a very dreadful thing ? " " Absolutely sure ! " he says hotly. "Ask yourself—what harm can there possibly be in it ? What have we said or done that all the world might not have known and been none the wiser ?" "But," she persists, with a certain wistful uneasiness, born more of his look than his words, " if any other girl had done the same as I have done, what would you have thought of her?" He knows very well what he would have thought of any other girl under the same circumstances, and reddens guiltily at the knowledge. But then, on the other hand, he knows that the laws by which he would have judged all the many girls of his acquaintance would not hold good with this one, and 10 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. that he has never for an instant confounded her with them. " I should have thought," he says, a little irritably, " that if she had happened to find herself in almost solitary confine- ment on one side of the hedge, while I am in a similar con- dition on the other, she would have been a prude or a fool if she had refused to alleviate our mutual misery by exchanging a few words with me. And you," looking at her, " are neither the one nor the other—or so I take it." " And yet," says the girl, with a little sigh, " it seems so mean to deceive Dolly. Do you know," fixing her clear, lovely eyes on his face, " that I have never kept a secret from Dolly in all my life ? " Something in her look vexes him—he scarcely understands why—unless it is that it makes him feel himself worse than he has ever intended to be. " Then by all means tell Dolly," he says, a good deal more carelessly than he feels. " After all—what is there to tell ? That you and I have occasionally come across each other in the woods and the lanes—living so close together, by-the-bye, we should have been very clever not to come across each other, if we ever took our walks abroad at all. That once or twice you have found me like the fellow in the song who is for ever ' Sitting on the stile, Mary.' Is not that about all ? Probably," he goes on still in that tone of well-assumed indifference, 11 as she will take a purely conventional view of the subject, she will offer to accompany you in your walks for the future—and much as I admire and respect her, I am not sure that we do not get on better with- out her—you and I." " Poor Dolly !" says the girl, leaning her elbows, whose round, young curves the tight cotton sleeves so clearly reveal, on the rough wooden stile, and looking up—straight up—into the clear blue of the sky with the undazzled eyes of a child. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. n " Does it not strike you that you are a little ungrateful ? But for her you would never have known me." " Should I not ? " he asks, coming a little closer, and won- dering more than a little how he could ever have admired any other face than this. "Do you think I could have lived for three weeks within a stone's throw of you and not have found you out; or having found you out, that I should not have moved heaven and earth to know you ? " " I think," she answers gravely, " that we might have lived for ever, you on that side of the meadow, I on this—that we might have looked at each other through the hedges, across the stile, over our park palings, and if we had not been pro- perly, formally introduced, we should have gone to our graves without speaking to each other. Are we not English, both English to the back-bone ? " He laughs then. " Speak for yourself! You might not have spoken to me, but I should most assuredly have spoken to you. And you —what would you have done ? Would you have turned the cold shoulder on me ? I do not believe you have a cold shoulder to turn. It is certainly hard to imagine you fixing anyone with a stony British stare. And, after all," smiling at the recollection of the day he had first met her, "I do not know that I have much to thank Miss Dalrymple for. She certainly held out to the utmost verge of politeness. I believe she would never have introduced us, if I had not almost forced her into it." " How you stuck to us all down that muddy lane ! " says the girl, laughing too as she recalls the scene. " How persist- ently you held your umbrella over Dolly's head ! How polite you were ! How undaunted by all her frozen little speeches ! But at least you will acknowledge that when she did give in, she did it very graciously—nothing that Dolly does is ever un- gracious ! My sister, Psyche ; Psyche, Captain Darrell— Sir Adrian's nephew !" 12 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. She mimics her sister's voice and manner to the very life. At one moment her face is alive with mischievous merriment— at the next it sobers suddenly. " I am wrong," she says, with swift contrition. " I ought not to make fun of Dolly, for after all, she is the only friend I have in the world. There is no doubt," she goes on solemnly, " that I have a very bad habit of making fun of people, and that it has made a great many of them hate me. In fact," with a heavy sigh, "some of the girls at school, who found me out in doing it, would not even speak to me." " No wonder ! " he says mockingly. " It is certainly a most pernicious habit—and while we are about it, I may as well point out another bad way you have got into." "Yes?" she asks anxiously. " A way," he goes on, edging a little nearer to her, " of looking at people in the worst possible light. A few minutes ago you almost told me to my face that you counted me as your enemy. Now, you say you have but one friend in the world, and that is Dolly. Do not you think," looking at her with a tenderness that he finds hard to disguise under a jesting manner, " that if you ever come to such a pass that you should need a friend that you might count me as one ? " " I do not know," she answers very slowly, after a percept- ible interval, regarding him with the open-eyed, earnest scrutiny of a child. "You see, I have only known you for three weeks, and in those three weeks I have only seen the fair-weather side of you—I cannot tell what the other side may be like." "How do you know that I have another side?" he says jestingly—a little uneasy under the candid appraisal of her look. " At any rate, let us hope that you may never need to find it out, that it may always be fair weather with you. You do not look as if you could stand many storms." "In fact," she says, casting aside her seriousness as she would an unaccustomed garment, and thrusting her hands UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 13 through her hair with the careless and unpremeditated gesture of one who has not yet learned to study her pose, " I am like my emblem, a butterfly—born to sport in the sunshine, and to be washed away by the first heavy shower. I am not sure, after all, that that is not a better fate than to have a longer life with a good deal of work, and very little play. In all those endless fables about the bees and the butterflies, the ants and the grasshoppers, that I learnt at school, I am bound to con- fess my sympathies were always with the butterflies and the grasshoppers—were not yours ? " " Most certainly," says Darrell, laughing. " I always hated the good boys and loved the bad ones—that is the reactionary tendency of all stories with a moral. By the way, what were your godfathers and godmothers thinking of when they gave you such a name as Psyche ? Psyche"—lingering over it as if it is not altogether distasteful to him—"it is certainly horribly heathenish, but at any rate it has the merit of being uncommon." " I never had any godfathers or godmothers that I know of," says the girl—lightly seating herself on the stile, and swaying one foot backwards and forwards, while he leans against it so close to her that it is a little difficult to refrain from touching the hand by which she keeps her balance. " And as a matter of fact it is not my name at all! I was baptized out of a tea-cup or a hand-basin or something of the sort an hour after I was born, and the parson having no one to tell him any better, made the great, the irretrievable mistake of giving me my mother's name." " Good heavens ! " says Darrell, sympathisingly— " was it such a dreadful one ? " "On the contrary," she answers with some warmth, for indeed this is a sore subject with her. " It is Marguerite. It may not be a very pretty name, or a very grand one," looking at him as if she is prepared to combat both these points, " but no one can deny that for all ordinary work-a- 14 UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. day, serviceable purposes, it is a thousand times more useful and less ridiculous than Psyche—and yet, do you know," fixing her big dark eyes full on him, " that one might as well fire off a bomb-shell as let it pass one's lips up there," indi- eating her home with a little motion of her head, "so that after all I might just as well have no name at all." But of this rather unintelligible statement, he, strange to say—though he is usually by no means devoid of curiosity— asks no explanation. His eyes, usually so ready to seek hers, are fixedly regarding a little tuft of daisies that he is industri- ously digging to pieces with his foot. "That is hard lines," he says presently, seeing that she waits for him to say something. " But after all, you know," with renewed cheerfulness, "Psyche is not such a bad name. It is a little outlandish, perhaps, and it would not suit everyone — but you," looking at her with undisguised ad- miration—" you are the very image of a Psyche ! " " Am I ? " she says, a little doubtfully, nearly overbalancing herself in a sudden perilous effort to reach at a branch of May-blossom that is a good deal farther off than it seems. " That is what Dolly says. There is a Psyche among the pictures at home, and long ago Dolly fancied it was like me— that was why she gave me the name, and it has stuck to me for want of a better. But," dubiously, " I do not think she looks a very nice sort of person. She has a butterfly on her shoulder, and," reddening a little—" not many clothes on." He laughs. He cannot help it. "I am afraid that most of the classical subjects are not very nice sort of people regarded from your point of view," he says gaily. She has reached the refractory bough of the thorn-tree at last, but even when she has it well within her hand she finds it harder to break off than she had imagined. " Let me do it!" he says suddenly. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD, 15 And doing it, his hands touch hers, his eyes meet hers, and there is a silence;—a shy and embarrassed silence on her part—a pleasant and satisfying one on his- If one is in love, if one is so close to the woman one loves that one can count almost the long curled lashes that lie on the warm soft cheeks, the rise and fall of each breath as it comes, silence is not alto- gether a bad thing. He, at all events, has no desire to break it. He is conscious, perhaps, that if he does, he may say in his haste something that he may have to repent at his leisure. For though it is not to be denied that he is in love—love has not as yet overstepped the bounds of reason. CHAPTER II. It is she who speaks first, moving a little away from him and looking at him with eyes whose absolute innocence of coquetry recalls him suddenly to himself—not too soon. If that silence had lasted but a moment longer, heaven knows what foolish, irrevocable things he might not have said or done. And he is still sane enough to congratulate himself that they are left unsaid—undone. "There is something I want to ask you," she begins, hesitatingly. " I have wanted to ask some one ever since I came home from school, and Dolly and Puggeridge (that is my old nurse, you know) are no good—they will not tell me the truth. But you," regarding him earnestly—"are only an outsider. You can have no possible reason for deceiving me." "Heaven forbid!" he says, jestingly. "Why should I deceive you ? Ask me any questions you please, so long as they are not ' What are the latitude and longitude of Timbuc- i6 tJNSPOTtED FROM THE WORLD. too ?' Of ' What is the present population of Kamschatka ? ' Those are the sort of questions that floor me !" "Be serious, if you can," she says, with gentle reproach, "for it concerns me very nearly, and I—I think you like me well enough to help me to the truth." Then seeing that his face has changed tc a seriousness that is all, or indeed more, than she can desire— "I want you to tell me," she goes on, still with the same wistful earnestness, "if you had loved anyone very much and she were dead, should you—should you hate anything or anyone that reminded you of her?—should you dread them ?—should you avoid them"—her voice trembling a little—" as—as if they were poison ? " " Good heavens, no ! Most certainly not!" he answers with honest conviction, not yet seeing where the question leads him. " And if," she goes on, still fixing him with the questioning of big, deep eyes; "if she had been your nearest and dearest —your wife—and dying, she had left you a little child, who by-and-by, growing up, grew in so many ways like her mother, that, looking at her, you could not help remembering the woman you had loved, would you"—her voice rising and faltering so that it goes near to break—" would you so dislike the sight of her whose only crime was the heritage of her mother's looks and voice, that you would avoid, as far as was possible, the look of her eyes, the touch of her hands ?—■ or if one or the other were forced upon you by the necessity to hide to the world the dislike for which you had no excuse, would you touch her—would you look at her almost as if you loathed her ? " "God forbid!" says Darrell, flushing hotly, for indeed he sees now where she has led him, and seeing, he says no more. What, indeed, is there that he can say ? " Two months ago," says the girl, sadly, after a while look-5 ing not at him but straight up into the fleckless blue of the sky t/NSPOffED FROM TllF WoRLQ. iy above her head, and thoughtfully tapping her gown with the branch of May-blossom which no longer seems to her so sweet- smelling, so much to be desired now she has possessed herself of it, " I came home from school—only two months ago, though I am nineteen. I had been there four years without a break. Always when the holidays came there was some reason or another, good or bad, why I could not come back. Father had gone to this place or that to drink the waters, and Dolly had gone with him; or father was ill, or too poor to afford the journey backward and forward. One thing or another," with a smile that is over-bitter for such fresh lips, " served as an excuse to keep me out of his sight, as I had been kept out of it ever since I was born. But at last it was impossible to put off the evil day any longer, and I came home." "Yes?" It is not a very expressive or a very sympathetic word, and yet Darrell, finding it safer, perhaps, to confine himself to mono- syllables, contrives to throw such an amount of expression and sympathy into it as to satisfy her of his interest. "You cannot think," she goes on presently, with such a falter in her voice as convinces him, though he dare not look up, how very near the tears must be to her sweet brown eyes, " how much I had built upon that home-coming. One changes so much from fifteen to nineteen, and I had thought—it seems so foolish now, that I hardly dare tell you—but I had hoped that he would find me improved, that he would be pleased with me. I had even," with a poor little attempt at a smile, " tried to work hard at my few little accomplishments—they are not many, I confess, but I wanted to make the most of them. The other girls used to tell me how their fathers and mothers were so eager and interested about what they had learnt during the term. Well!"—breaking off with a laugh, " I might have spared myself the pains, as it turned out." There is a little pause. " Do not tell me any more," he says, in a voice that is £ 18 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. strangely moved, and at the same time strangely constrained. " I would much rather not hear any more." "Are you so tired of my poor little story?" she asks, reproachfully. " Do not be afraid—it is nearly done. I was only going to tell you how I came home." " I am glad at any rate you did come home," he says, per- mitting himself to lapse into a tenderness of tone that seems to him almost excusable under the circumstances. "Think how different these three weeks would have been to me if you had not been here." " I started in the highest spirits," she goes on narratively, altogether ignoring this compliment, being indeed too full of her own grievance, too anxious to tell it to someone—to any- one, to pause by the way. " I have mostly very good spirits, and though, heaven knows," with a heavy sigh, " I have not had much cause for them, they have not been altogether knocked out of me as yet. By the time I got to my journey's end I could scarcely contain myself—when I saw Dolly stand- ing on the little platform I hardly waited for the train to stop before I jumped out. I hugged Dolly in the face of the porters and station-master—I hugged the ' rats.' Do you know those little ponies of ours ? They are the only things driveable left to us. Through all the ups and downs of our fortunes—they are chiefly downs and no ups by the way—we have stuck to them, probably because they are such poor little things that no one would have them. I think I«nearly hugged the groom. Even Dolly's quietness—she is very quiet, you know," breaking off and knitting her brows—" terribly quiet, as if all the life had been knocked out of her—but even that did not damp me much. She was kind to me, and loving—she is always that, —and she was honestly glad, I think, to see me back; and so was nurse, but " She pauses a moment, but he does not look at her—does not speak. It is in his heart to tell her again that he would rather hear no more, but he refrains. Unspotted from the world. 19 u But," she goes on, with a laugh that has a little tremble in it, " if I had thought that father was coming to the door with open arms to receive me like a long-lost child, I was disap- pointed. I had been three hours in the house before I saw him at all—and then—and then Well!—let me tell you just how it was, that you may judge for yourself whether the greeting he gave me was such as I might fairly have expected. I had dressed for dinner. I had put on the best gown I pos- sess—I have one decent one, and though it may not be very good as gowns go, it is not altogether disfiguring—and I was standing by the window with my back to the door when he came in. Dolly was at the other end of the room. It was half dark and he could not see her. He came straight up to me and said, ' Dolly, am I late ? " and I turned round and held out my hands and said, ' It is not Dolly, father, it is I—Psyche.'" For the space of a second there is another silence. He has a horrible idea that the tremble in her voice is getting too much for her—that she is fighting with it. "And—and what did he do?" he asks stupidly, feeling constrained to say something. " He looked at me for a moment," she answers with suspi- cious quietness, "as if he were looking at something horrible or dreadful, and then he turned away without a word, and went out of the room, slamming the door after him." " Good heavens !" says Darrell, between his teeth. " What a brute!" " Dolly got up and went after him," she goes on, her voice faltering now beyond concealment, " and she left the door a little open. I heard her say, ' It is not her fault. Father, come back and speak to her ! Poor little Psyche !' but I was so confused, so miserable I could not catch his answer. After all it does not much matter, does it? One—one can guess pretty well what it was." Darrell has a terrible suspicion that the tears which he is so UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. pretty certain were somewhere near her eyes a minute ago have by this time brimmed over. If he sees them he is undone. He looks away from her, kicking viciously at the half-annihilated daisies, and casting about in his mind for words of friendly— and yet mot over tender—consolation. But before he can fix on those that hit the happy medium between the two, she herself saves him the trouble. " Dolly did her best to explain it," she goes on, in a voice that convinces him that he is wrong about the crying—however near the tears may have been, she has managed to get the better of them. " She told me that I was so like mother—who died when I was born, you know—that the sight of me gave him a shock and overcame his feelings. For my part," with a little laugh, " I do not think he has any feelings—but that is a detail." " She was right," says Darrell quickly, seizing eagerly this cold scrap of comfort; " no doubt she was right. I—I have often heard that there are people whose sorrow takes that peculiar form. They cannot bear to see a thing or hear a word that reminds them of—of the person they have lost." "His sorrow certainly takes a peculiar form," says the girl, drily. " He has banished even my mother's portrait into a lumber-room." " It is sure to come right," he goes on, consolingly. " It is not possible that he could help loving you, when he knows you." " Is it not ? " smiling coldly. " He has certainly since that first evening said ' Good morning' or 1 Good night' to me when he has been obliged. He has once or twice passed me the salt or the mustard at breakfast. When I ask him a question —it is not often, for I am too much afraid of him—he answers it with the civility he would show to a stranger. Without a doubt we are on the high-road to becoming better acquainted with each other." Then of a sudden—with one of those swift changes which UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 21 he has learned to look for in her—she drops her bitter lightness of tone, and turns on him with passionate earnest. " "Why do you try to make excuses for him ? " she asks quickly and vehemently. " Dolly and nurse put me off like that because they want to keep me quiet. They are afraid of him; but you —you can have no object in telling me what is not true. For it is not true—say what you will," her voice rising, " it is not natural—it is not even probable that he should hate me just because he loved my mother, I do not know why I should have bothered you with my troubles at all," reddening a little at the thought of the confidence she has bestowed on him unasked, " except that I have no one," lifting her hands with a little passionate gesture—literally no one to tell it to, and I had a sort of foolish thought that you, who know the world so much better than I, could help me to some solution of the mystery." " Do not be sorry that you told me," he says, stretching out his hand to her with a tenderness he no longer cares to control. " Do not you know that I would give the world to help you, if I could?" " All my life I have felt there was something strange about me; something unlike other girls," she says, letting him take the slim, white hand that lies passive in her lap, and looking at him with a sudden moisture in her lovely, childish eyes. " But no one will tell me what it is, and—and I think we will not talk about it any more, if you please." And in this he does not gainsay her. On the contrary, he turns the subject with an alacrity that is sufficiently suspicious, could she understand it. For in truth he has been sitting on thorns ever since she started it. The knowledge that the " something strange " about her life is no secret to him—no secret to anyone in the county but the girl herself—has made him feel absolutely guilty under the innocent questioning of her eyes; and a man does not care to feel more guilty than he needs, £2 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. CHAPTER III. The old church clock down in the hollow has struck one a good many minutes back, and the wedding-bells have long ago left off their joyous clanging. Somewhere down in the little village—where they were born, where they have been married, where they will, in all probability, die and be burried—the bride and bridegroom, having called in their friends and neighbours to rejoice with them, are, without doubt, eating, drinking, and making merry, with that happy-go-lucky philosophy which belongs only to the very poor, who, if they be not like the lilies of the field in purity, almost equal them in absence of thought for the morrow. Though it is certain that when that morrow comes they will have to toil a good deal harder and spin a great deal faster to pay for to-day's hardly-earned holiday, yet it is equally certain that they enjoy it while it lasts with an unbounded lightness of spirit, a childish forgetfulness of the care that lies behind and before them, that they who have never worked and never suffered cannot even understand. And under the thorn tree Psyche and Darrell are saying " Good-bye." "Good-bye " is a word that may be quickly enough spoken when one is not only willing but anxious to speed the parting guest. But it is also a word that admits of a good many renderings—that may be repeated again and again and yet not found nauseous. Thes e two are lingering over it still. Up among the young thick leaves of the trees above their heads the birds are taking their siestas. They have been sing- ing all the morning — ever since the sun first showed his face among the red-grey clouds of dawn—and their little throats are tired. The lowing of the kine in a distant meadow; the little quick, sharp bark of a dog in the farm yonder; the dull, slow buzzing of a bee who is thrusting his golden-brown head into the flowers that lie unsuspected among the thick,. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 23 lush grasses of the meadows over the stile, are the only sounds that break the sleepy stillness of the day. And in the midst of it these two stand face to face, hand to hand, as utterly alone as if they were in the garden of Eden. There is a right of way over the meadow, but there is no one to use it but a shepherd or two or a labourer going to his work, and they come only in the early morning or the late evening. As Darrell thinks of it his heart beats as it has not beat for ten years or more. If it were indeed the garden of Eden, and he were Adam and she were Eve, he would not be long in tell- ing her how much he loves her; how, looking in her soft brown eyes, he finds heaven there; how, seeing the tremble of her warm red lips, he longs to touch them with his own. But it is not Eden, and there are a good many weighty considera- tions that were unknown in Adam's time to hold him back. They have been very good friends since that day, three weeks ago, when he made her acquaintance in a muddy lane and an April shower—wonderfully good friends considering how short a time it is. But then they are both young, both fond of the sound of their own voices, both more partial to any company than their own, and both, by the chance of circum- stances, left absolutely to their own devices, and to the finding of their own amusement. Yet among all the many words that he has spoken to her, there has been none, not one, that has overstepped the boundary line between liking, admiration, friendship—call it what you will and—love. And he means—has meant all along —to go away, leaving it unspoken. The liking, the admiration, the friendship have been very warm—over-warm perhaps. He has even loved her—as men count love—but he knows that in his future life she can hold no serious part at all, and that he is therefore bound in honour to speak no word of actual love. For, you see, he belongs to a not unnumerous class who be- lieve that they can go to the very ut.most verge of love-making 24 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. —can say, do, look, imply anything they please, and so long as they speak not the irrevocable word that shall pledge them to a woman for life—their honour is no way involved. It is a creed that serves them well enough, and does no par- ticular harm in a society where it is pretty well understood; and if Darrell's conscience tells him that it is hardly a fair one with this girl, who knows nothing of society, it is certain those conscience-pricks are not sharp enough to make him forego his pleasure. . There can be no doubt that she is altogether forbidden to him, and a good deal the more tempting for being forbidden. If he had been the hero of a romance or a good little story- book he would have done his duty and gone away from her; but being not a hero, but only a man who lived and breathed and had his being in a prosaic and pleasure-seeking age, he considered his pleasure before his duty, and he had not gone away from her. But though he commits himself to no words, the look in his eyes is warm enough to bring a sudden rose-tint to her cheeks, and to make her loose her hands from his and clasp them with a little gesture of determination behind her back. Considered critically, that faint, soft blush is the prettiest thing he has seen for a long time. Considered aesthetically, that attitude leaves nothing to be desired. Personally he might wish it less uncompromising, and a good deal more tender. " I must go now—I must really go ! " she says, with a little quick drawing of her breath. " We have said ' good-bye' often enough, have we not? — and Dolly will be waiting. She will .scold me if the mutton-chops are burnt to cinders." " Do you mean," he asks, with a dismay that is largely mingled with compassion, " that—that you are going to lunch off mutton-chops?" " Not only to lunch off them," she answers, laughing like a merry child, " but most probably to dine off them also j and very glad we are to get them. You see we have but one UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 25 butcher in Combe-Avon, and we are such poor customers compared to you grand folks up there," indicating, with a bend of her head, the big house where Darrell fares most sumptuously every day, "that we have to take what he chooses to give us. Sometimes," she goes on confidentially, "we vary the menu with a fowl of our own rearing, but as the hens are laying so well just now, Dolly says it is a pity to kill them." "And," says Darrell, regarding her with a profound and genuine pity which not all her former troubles have evoked from him, " your father—does he also dine off mutton- chops ? " " Father is not so young as we are, and his appetite is bad— at least," with a small fine smile—" so Dolly says. She and Puggeridge spend most of their mornings with their heads over a cookery-book devising something to tempt it. It generally has some French name, something that was not in our dictionary at school, but it smells very good." "Do you mean," asks Darrell, pursuing the theme with an unassumed interest, "that ^has one dish, and you another? " "He lunches in his own room, thank heaven !" she an- swers quickly; "and we are young and healthy and can eat anything—thank heaven for that also ! If the mutton-chops are a little bit tough," laughing maliciously, " so much the better—they go all the further. The very thought of them makes me hungry ! Good-bye !" "Stay a moment!" he cries hastily, pursuing her. "Do not go like that! What are you going to do with yourself all the rest of the day ? " " What am I going to do with myself? " she repeats slowly, glancing at him from under her long lashes with the first trace of coquetry he had perceived in her. " What I generally do, I suppose, and that is—nothing." "And I also am going to do—nothing," he says gaily. " What a pity we cannot do it together." 26 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. " I might have driven the ponies this afternoon," she goes on, disregarding this last broad hint, " only Dolly is busy, and she will not let me go alone. And this evening she and father are going to dine out—worse luck ! They do not go out more than once in a month or so, and then it is only to the vicarage. Father hates most people, but he likes the vicar—though he is not very nice. He sticks butterflies and beetles on pins, and smells of camphor." "And you are not going? "he asks eagerly. " They have not asked me—no one ever asks me," she answers ruefully. " I suppose they do not know I am at home. To be sure," with a little smile "it does not matter much. There will be no one there but a curate or an old woman or two, and I do not greatly care for them." "And you will be all alone," says Darrell, slowly— " all alone, and with nothing to do. Six hours between this and dinner-time—ten hours before it can by any possibility be counted bed-time. Think what a horrible waste of time! How in the world will you get through it ? " " As well as I shall get through all the rest of the hours and days and weeks and years that go to make up the sum of a woman's life," she says, with a small grave smile, affecting not to understand the purport of this last question, though indeed it is not beyond the grasp of the densest imagination. " As far as I can see, there is no better prospect before me, and one may as well get used to it at once." And with that, she turns and leaves him with so determined and unrelenting an air that, though he takes a step or two in pursuit of her, he very soon abandons it. As a matter of fact he is helped to this decision by the remembrance that it wants but five or six minutes to lunch- time, and that if anything sours his uncle's already soured temper beyond repair, it is being kept waiting for his meals. As he jumps over the stile he casts a look back at Psyche's retreating figure, pausing a moment to admire the graceful UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 27 carriage of her small head, the free, untrammelled step with which she moves, mentally comparing it with the mincing and ambling gait of those women of his acquaintance whose every movement betrays a consciousness of watching eyes. Without a doubt she is so perfect a piece of heaven-born, inartificial beauty, as a man cannot hope to come across more than once in a lifetime. Almost he is persuaded that a life of mutton-chops, shared with her, would be not only bearable, but pleasant. And certainly, if he were to marry her, he could not hope for anything better than such plain fare, and might live to be thankful even for them. But as he turns his back upon her and goes quickly through the meadow, her many beauties begin to fade into the back- ground of his thoughts, while an appreciative prevision, to which the keen, strong air of the country has given zest, of 'what that most excellent chef\ who lives to minister to the jaded appetite of one old man, may have in store for him, takes the foreground. Certainly, there are degrees of misery as well as of pleasure. He, for instance, has pitied himself sincerely for the horrible monotony of the days that he has devoted to dancing attend- ance on an old man's pleasure. But in each of those days he has at least had something to break the eternal sameness of the hours—while Psyche As he thinks of her, admiration begins to dwindle into pity, and he tells himself again, as he has told himself a hundred times before, that there has been enough—too much, perhaps—of this pleasant fooling, and the sooner he gets back to London the better. 88 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. CHAPTER IV. Meanwhile Psyche goes with steps as swift as his, though quickened by an altogether different motive, through the little greenwood which separates the gardens of her own home from the meadow beyond. The meadow and all the outlying lands have long ago been parted with to anyone who could afford to rent or buy them, but this little copse, being altogether unprofitable, still remains in her father's possession. And it would be difficult to find a prettier place in all the country round. Though some of the big trees have been cut down and gone—as so much has gone before them—to make money, the young ones are thick and strong, and pretty well fill the places of their predecessors. To Psyche, fresh from the dull and trammelled life of a city school, the wonders of a wood in spring-time are as yet too beautiful and strange to be passed over. Before she has got to the end of it her hands are full of little strange mosses, of all manner of starry-headed blossoms, and small, curly fern- fronds—her hat has fallen off and is swinging over her arm, her hair has caught in a bough and is a good deal dishevelled, her hands are none the whiter for grubbing in the earth. " What a figure I must look!" she thinks to herself. " Thank goodness, there is no one to see me !" But even as she thinks it she hears voices, and stands a moment hesitating, and then going softly, peeps through the gate which divides the wood from the garden. It is an old green gate—solid half-way up, the other half of trellis-work—through which a good many straggling creepers have thrust their branches. Looking through, she sees a quaint old garden lying on one side of a big grey house where the sunshine seldom comes, where the shadow always dwells, and to whose straight paths, formal borders, and primly-cut trees not even the unbounded luxuriance of spring has been able to lend much beauty. Even unspotted prom the world. zg on this fair spring morning, with the sun shining so gladly in the unbroken blue of the sky, with the fresh, free air bending the tree-tops over Psyche's head, no brightness seems to come to it. By a broken moss-grown sun-dial at the end that is farthest from the house, nearest to the gate, a girl and a man are stand- ing talking. She has her hands clasped loosely in front of her, and is looking up at him. He is leaning against the sundial with his arms crossed, looking down at her. And, indeed,, standing there, with her neat brown head uncovered, and the folds of her sad-coloured gown falling straightly around her, there is a sweet and dainty grace about her that makes her worth looking at. She is talking—he is listening. Psyche cannot hear what she says, her voice is too low and soft; but his, though it is neither loud nor sharp, has a peculiar clearness that carries every word distinctly to her. And in an instant—hearing it—she recognises the man him- self, though his back is turned to her, and she has not seen his face nor heard his voice for eight years or more. It is a voice that being once heard could not be easily forgotten—but above all and beyond all it is one of the few, the very few, that used to speak kindly to her in her childhood. Her face beams with gladness. She lays her hand on the latch—then stops suddenly, listening. "Are you going to sacrifice yourself to her as you have sacrificed yourself to your father, all your life ? " he is saying. " Do not begin by troubling yourself about her. Have you not enough worries already ? " She cannot hear the answer. She only sees that Dolly flushes a little, and then looks up at him quickly. What shall she do to let them know that she is there ? Be» fore she can do anything he speaks again. " Lovely—is she ? " with a little laugh. " That is your way, to deify everything that belongs to you, and a very good way 30 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. too—but for all that, I must take leave to doubt the loveliness. Do you think I do not remember her ? Almost the last time I saw her was when she tumbled into the brook, and I picked her up and carried'her home. A nice little child—a dear little child; but not pretty. A little thing with a white face and red hair—horribly leggy." The words are hardly out of his mouth when a peal of laughter makes them start asunder as though they were shot, and the gate swinging open discloses Psyche — a flushed, dishevelled, laughing, and most lovely Psyche ! Her ferns and flowers have fallen on to the ground, thrown anywhere on the impulse of the moment; her two hands are outstretched in gladdest greeting. " Here are the white face and the red hair to speak for them- selves," she says gaily. " The legs, unfortunately, must go undefended. You see," breaking into fresh laughter, "I have taken to long gowns." She is looking up into his face—much as she used to look eight years ago, when, though others called him stern and grave and cold, she was always sure—so sure—of a kind and gentle smile—looking up with an undisguised, unmistakeable gladness ! Had she not said but a moment ago that she had not a friend in the world but Dolly ? And here is one whom she had forgotten—whom she is glad, most glad, to find again. But the warmth of her look is by no means returned. A man does not like to be startled; and he has been horribly, ridiculously startled. He has not had time to get accustomed to her; to understand that the little child whom he has petted and kissed and been so sorry for—has turned into this ! His eyes—cold, incisive eyes they seem to Psyche—appear to be taking her measure from head to foot. But, in truth, they are more startled than critical. He has always thought of her, he has just now spoken of her, and in her own hearing, as a little white-faced, red-haired, long-legged child, for whose lack of all those things that most Unspotted fpom tnk would. 31 belong to childhood he had been so sorry. And he finds her a woman^-a woman who, in her outer aspect, certainly carries no demand for pity. And for all young women, with the one exception of Dolly, he has a deeply-routed dislike; for all fast young women—and it seems to his fastidious taste that this first speech of Psyche's savours of fastness—a just and lively abhorrence. She meets the coldness of his look with wonder and dismay. Slowly—very slowly—it begins to dawn upon her that the out- spoken unreticent gladness of her greeting is not returned. "Are you not going to apologise to me ? " she says, dropping her hands and laughing a little still, more from nervousness than from mirth. "Do you know—have you any idea what rude things you have said of me? " "Were they rude?" he answers, slowly and very coldly. " If they were I can hardly blame myself. You see I did not know you were listening behind the gate." His look and his tone no less than his words seem to convey to her that she has been found out in an indiscretion—and an unladylike one. And of an instant the laughter and the glad- ness, that had made her face so lovely but a moment before, die out of it—leaving it very still and suddenly white. She regards him for a moment in silence, and then she turns her back upon him, utterly ignoring his presence. " Do you know, Dolly," she says, laying her hands on her sister's shoulders, and her face close against hers, " I expected a lecture. Ten minutes ago I was at the very end of the wood," reddening a little as' she remembers what she was doing there, " and I hurried all the way home, partly because I thought you would scold me, but chiefly—certainly chiefly—because I am so hungry. And it seems I might have spared myself the pains. You do not seem," with reproach, "to be even thinking of lunch!" It is a very pretty caress. Any man looking at it uncritically might well admire the pose of the girl's light figure, the rough 32 UNSPOTTED FROM TlLE WORLD-. goldembronze head against the sleek brown ond. But thig man has so warm a regard for Dolly that it makes him almost angry to see how absolutely the bright and radiant beauty of the one face pales the other into insignificance. Apart from her sister, Dolly might be, and indeed has been, all her life regarded as a very pretty woman. By the side of her there is just enough likeness between them to make her appear in the light of a poor pale copy of a most beautiful picture. Without doubt the caress is nothing but a piece of rank coquetry! But Dolly does not see it in that light. " The lunch will be ready directly," she says, looking into the lovely eyes so near her own with a grave smile of unqualified admiration. " It is not so sumptuous that it will not keep, and—we do not see our friends every day, you know, Psyche. Sir John only came home yesterday, and I am so glad to have him back." In her quiet eyes, as she turns them on him, there is the steady shining of a great and assured regard. In her looks there is just a suspicion of gentle reproach—or so Psyche takes it. "And no doubt you have a dozen things to say to each other," she says, dropping her hands, " so I will not interrupt you. I, for my part," laughing, " will go and see after the mutton-chops!" The laugh is still on her lips as nodding gaily and brightly to Sir John, but not again holding out her hand, she goes lightly and quickly away. But when she is well out of their sight it fades suddenly, her lips begin to quiver—like the lips of a child who expecting a caress receives a blow—and quick hurt tears spring into her eyes. But they cannot see that. " Well?" says Dolly, looking after her as she goes, and then up into her companion's face. " Was I not right ? Is she not just as lovely as I told you ? " " She is very pretty," he says slowly, looking too, but with unwilling admiration. " But—do not be vexed with me, UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 33 Dorothy—I am afraid she has something of the boarding-school taint about her." " You are wrong," she says quickly, " altogether wrong. In all the world it would be difficult to find a girl more absolutely innocent and childish than she is. Indeed," lifting her pretty sad eyes to his, " I am often troubled—sorely troubled—to think how it can fare with her in a world of which she knows so little, and trusts so much." " She will do well enough ; no doubt but she will get on all right," he says, kindly and heartily, all the coldness disappear- ing from his manner as he looks at her. " She has a pretty face, and, after all, that is the surest passport to most hearts. Promise me," coming a little nearer and looking at her with something more than kindness, "that you will not begin by worrying yourself about her ? " " How can I help it ? " she answers, with a sort of passionate earnestness, impelled to confidence not only by his kindly looks and kindly words, or by the fact that she knows him to be altogether worthy of confidence, but also by the habit of a lifetime. Has she not, ever since she was a little child, found in him her truest counsellor, her surest guide, her kindest consoler? " How can I help it, when the way seems so dark before us ? Do you know," lowering her voice and coming a little nearer to him, " that father will hardly speak to her or notice her at all ? He resents my having brought her home, and yet they would not keep her longer at school, and there was nowhere—literally nowhere," with a little despairing up- lifting of her hands, " where she could go ? " " Do you mean," he says, after a moment's pause, during which he is assailed by a quick pang of self-reproach, " that— that he is not kind to her ? " " Do not blame him—you must not blame him !" she answers quickly. "No doubt it is hard upon him—terribly hard. He," flushing a little, " cannot forget. But, at the same time, it is doubly hard on her—for she does not know the reason." c 34 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. For the space of a second or so he looks at her in grave and meditative silence. " And are you sure," he says at length, " that you are right to keep her in the dark ? Mind—I do not say that you are not; but have you well considered it ? " " Sure! How can I be sure ? " she answers, with a despair- ing intonation that does not escape his notice as being so 'unlike her ordinary quiet composure. " I know so little. I am so utterly ignorant of what is best and wisest. And I— who want so badly to serve her—may be all the while doing my best to injure her." " You must not think that," he says, very kindly, very gently. "Whatever happens, you can never think that. My only doubt was, whether you could keep this secret, such as it is— for my own part, you know, I attach no importance to it—for ever, and whether some day, either by accident or by malice, it might be told to her less kindly than you would tell it." " I have thought of that," she answers, with an eagerness which shows him how sorely this question has lain on her mind; how glad she is of a chance of unburthening herself of it. " And yet, when I see how happy she is in her ignorance, how light-hearted and innocent, it goes to my heart to think of casting such a shadow over her. It might do a good deal of harm, and it seems as if it could do no good to tell her now." " That is true," he answers quietly. " I am afraid," he goes on after a minute, with a sudden flush on his dark, honest face, " I was a little hard on her just now. But the fact is I was startled, and I was more angry with myself than with her. I felt as if I had been making a fool of myself, and I suppose," with a grim smile, " a man does not like to be a fool." " It is so like you to blame yourself," she says, with a smile that is as bright and soft as sunshine seen through clouds. " But she is only a child, full of fun and spirits, and I am sure she did not mean any harm. Will you promise,"—looking UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 35 straight up at him with soft, trustful eyes,—" you cannot tell what a relief it will be to me if you will promise me to be her friend, as you used to be ? " " Is there anything I would not promise you ? " he asks, half-jestingly, half-tenderly. " Ask me something harder than that." " You see," she goes on quite seriously, " she has no one but me, and father has no one but me either. I am divided between them. But if I could know that you would be on her side, would be kind to her and fond of her as you were when she was a child, I could be almost happy. She needs a friend so badly." Evidently there is nothing strange to her in the idea—and if a certain incongruity in it presents itself to him, he is cer- tainly not going to suggest it to her. No doubt she still thinks of him as they used to be when he was a man, and Psyche but a little child, to be petted and kissed and stuffed with sweet- meats; and if he does not feel as old as she evidently thinks him—that is his fault, not hers. " Then I will be as fond of her as you can desire," he answers, gaily, lt and could not you be quite happy while you are about it? " A minute or two later they say " Good-bye." " Then you are sure you will not come in and see father now," she says regretfully, " nor have some lunch ? " " I do not dare to venture in on him in the morning. Be honest, Dorothy, and .confess that he hates to be interrupted in his studies. Who knows," with a comical smile, " that I might not be the death of some inspiration which would be for ever lost to the world ? And as for the lunch, I have a fellow waiting for me at home who must be anathematising me by this time." Then he takes her hand and looks at her with grave and gentle concern. " I shall come over in a day or two—indeed, now that I 36 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. have eome back you will see so much of me that you will wish me away again; and, in the mean time, do not lose courage. Be brave and strong, as you have always been !" And so he goes. Dorothy stands a moment on the old stone steps in front of the house watching him, the sunlight falling on her brown head and long grey gown. Then she turns away, and the darkness and the gloom that lie inside the house seem to swallow her up. CHAPTER V. "There is no good denying it," says Psyche with decision, lying with her long young limbs stretched out at their ease in the deep and ample window-seat of Dorothy's bed-room, one arm uplifted to make a pillow for her bright, bronze head against the dark shutter. "I am terribly disappointed in him!" As a matter of fact, Dorothy has no intention of denying it. At a rough calculation she has heard the same unqualified statement a dozen times already, though it is barely six hours since she and Sir John Heathcote said good-bye by the old sun-dial. So she is enabled by this time to receive it with unruffled composure. She smiles serenely to herself, waiting for what shall come next, surveying the knot of neat brown hair that she has just twisted up at the back of her head with an air of calm and critical approval that is not at all damped by the fact that both hair and face, as she sees them reflected before her, have a greenish tinge which nature has not bestowed upon them. She either accepts it—being so long used tg see them so—<*s their vmsPotted from the world4 37 original tint, or having seen herself in other mirrors, makes allowance for the defects of this. It is quaint of shape, perfect in workmanship, and, indeed, serves every purpose but the one most to be desired in a mirror; and it has been, with all the other articles of furniture in the room, the despair of successive generations of Dalrymples— Dorothy's grandmothers and great-grandmothers—who could not foresee, or foreseeing, would probably not have found much comfort from the fact, that in another hundred years or so the very antiquity of their furniture would bring it to twice its value and to the very height of fashion. It is true that the mirror makes the loveliest face look green and spotty—that the garderobe, with its one big drawer and many shelves, has no place where Dolly's long-tailed gowns can hang; that the bed, with its carved coat-of-arms and em- broidered hangings, is deep and stuffy, and all that a bed should not be; that the carven high-backed chairs are so straight and narrow as to make the youngest bones ache; that the tapestry on the walls yawns in big rat-gnawed holes that are the despair of Dorothy's tidy soul; but for all that—ay, because of all that—they would be counted of priceless value among the present generation. The very patch-boxes and powder-pots that have so little use on Dorothy's simple toilet-table, and only stand there because they have always stood there, have gained from their very age a rarity, which, if Dorothy could have understood it, would have tempted her sorely to turn them into money many a time in her life. "I am only nineteen," Psyche goes on reflectively, seeing Dorothy says nothing, " and I have already outlived most of my illusions." And at this Dolly smiles outright, looking across at her much in the sort of way that an elderly couple, who have a child born to them late in life, may be seen to look at it with a mix- t are of wonder, amusement, and unbounded pride. 38 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. She herself was never young, or to speak exactly, she had but seven years of youth, and they lie so far away in the back- ground of her memory that they are almost forgotten. At seven years old came the breaking up of her life—the loss of her mother, the birth of her sister, and the beginning of her cares. For from the first, the very first, when no one else had dared to go near her father, they had thrust her into the breach. " Let the child go," they had said, and the child had gone, and from that time until now had stood between him and the outside world, learning much that she ought not to have learned; suffering much that she ought not to have suffered; understanding almost from the very first that somehow—she could not tell how or why—the baby, that was her delight and her plaything, the one sole joy of her poor, little, broken, motherless life, must be kept out of his sight. And when it had grown to be seven years old, and she more its mother than its sister, with all her little soul wrapped up in it, they had taken it away from her, and her heart had nearly broken—broken silently, be it understood—all Dorothy's griefs were silent. But now that she has got her back—this piece of wonderful, glad, beautiful life—she is never tired of listening to -her, never tired of looking at her, no more than a mother is tired of listening to or looking at her child. "Poor Psyche!" she says with that little fond, amused smile. " What were the illusions ? " " There were three of them," says the girl, turning her head a little, the better to observe her sister. "No doubt there were others—but there were only three that particularly con- cern us at the present moment. The first was, that fathers and mothers loved their children, not because they were very great or good, or even because they were very loveable, but just because they were their children. That one," with a little smile, "died hard. It took a great deal of killing—it even survived in a sort of way until the other day, and then it was UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 39 knocked on the head. It is dead enough now," with a laugh, —" goodness knows ! The second," after a moment's pause, holding up her hands, and counting it off 011 her slim, white fingers, "was that Sir John Heathcote—Jack Heathcote, as I used to call him then, for he has changed even his name—was a hero, a preux chevalier, a Don Quixote, a Bayard of the nineteenth century, all rolled into one ! I thought"— raising her head, and speaking with eagerness and animation—■ " that he was a man whose very goodness would make him lenient to other people's want of it, whose strength would make him tender to other people's weakness, a man in whom little children and all frail things would naturally trust, whom big bullies and successful rogues would as naturally fear. I do not know," she goes on, with a small smile at her own expense, "that even the enchantment that my childish memories lent to him made me picture him to myself as a handsome man— but I thought," laughing, "that he would be better to look at than the handsomest man living—that his grey eyes would have a tenderness that would make one forget their gravity ; that though his mouth might be stern on occasion, and a trifle cynical, yet it would be apt to curve into so pleasant a smile for those he loved that his smiles would be a thousand times better than another man's laughter. Bah !" throwing her arms above her head, and resting it upon them; " laugh at me, jeer at me as much as you will!—That was how he figured in my imagination ! " But Dolly neither laughs nor jeers—indeed she looks as if the last would be impossible to her. She is tying a soft muslin kerchief—which, with its border of old lace, is the sole adornment of her straight black gown—with a dainty preci- sion that is peculiar to her, and a little flush on her pretty, tender face is the only sign that she has heard. " You have looked on that picture," Psyche goes on discur- sively, and indeed when she can get anyone to talk to it is seldom she misses the chance ; — " now look on this. Grey 40 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. eyes that are grave and critical enough, it is true, but without the least suspicion of tenderness; a mouth that can sneer very easily, but cannot afford a smile at his own expense; a manner that is a mixture of starched propriety and barely veiled rudeness. In short," laughing, " my hero has turned out a prig! Illusion number two has gone the way of number one !" " You are wrong," says Dorothy, coming and standing over against the window, and speaking with an earnestness and an energy that are not usual with her. Her toilet is completed by this time, and though it is not by any means an elaborate one, there is a quaintness about it that suits her gracious tender type of beauty; — " altogether wrong, and it is a terrible pity that you should start with a prejudice against him. If," she goes on, clasping her hands loosely in front of her, " you had known him all your life, instead of only when you were a little child, you could not have drawn a truer picture of him than you drew just now. Indeed, I can hardly tell how a child's intuition could have led you to so sure a knowledge of his character. He is all that you thought him," looking up with so bright a light in her serious eyes as makes them, for the moment, lovelier eyes even than Psyche's, " and more than that. No woman could find a truer, surer friend in all the world—and indeed, dear, there have been times when I have needed one most sorely." " Poor Dolly! " says Psyche, with a mocking laugh, that covers a softer inclination that rises in her at sight of her sister's face. " You must have been hard put to it to fall back on him ! " "You see," Dorothy goes on, simply, not heeding this taunt, "father has quarrelled with everyone of the few rela- tions we possess, and with most of the people about here, or if he has not quarrelled with them outright, he has alienated them by shutting himself up from them; but he has never quarrelled with Sir John—perhaps because he will not let him UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 41 —and he has more influence with him than anyone in the world. Sometimes, when no one else, not even I, could get him to look into his affairs, and to see what money he really has, Sir John has been able to make him. Sometimes, when he is away, and," sadly " he is a great deal away, you know, I have not known who to turn to. " What makes him go away? " says Psyche, more touched than she chooses to show, by the idea that Dolly, whom she has always thought so quiet and strong—Dolly, who has always seemed so well able to take care of herself and of every- one else, should have needed help, and should not have been able to get it. " He ought to stay here—it is his proper place." But Dorothy does not smile at this little piece of dogmatic assertion as she might well do. She has turned away, and is arranging all the little things on her toilet-table in the precise order in which they are accustomed to stand. " He has had troubles," she says, after a moment, " worse troubles, perhaps, than most people, and since his father has died it is very lonely for him in that big house all by himself." " When one has five thousand a year and a country house, loneliness must be a matter of choice, not of necessity," says Psyche, laughing. ''No doubt he might find someone who would be willing to share them with him—someone who, in consideration of these substantial advantages, would consent to put up with a little priggishness." " If you mean," says Dorothy, very quietly and very steadily, 11 that he might marry, I think you are wrong. I do not imagine," with a sudden flush, " that he is ever likely to think of that again. He has probably had enough of it. Did you not know," looking round at her, " that years ago, when you were a little child, he quarrelled with his father, and exchanged into a regiment that was stationed in India, because he would not give up the woman he was in love with?—and then, when he had been there about two years, trying to get on for her sake, 42 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. she married a friend of his. You see," with a little scorn, " she did not know then that his elder brother would die, and that in a few years he would be a rich man. But it is not to be wondered at, is it, that he should think badly of women— or at all likely that he should ever trust another, after that ? " "So that is what has soured him?" says Psyche, opening her eyes. " I thought he was horribly changed. But," mischievously, " I am not at all sure there were no excuses to be made for her. Is it not possible," laughing, " that she got tired of so much goodness ? And does it not occur to you, Dolly, with your fine sense of justice, that it is a little unfair of him to think badly of all women because of the short- comings of one ? " " He does not think badly of all women," says Dorothy simply. " Did I say so ? If I did—I said what is not true. He has been always good to me." Psyche looks round at her, her lips curving into sudden laughter, but as she looks the laugh dies, and turns into a smile, so soft, so tender that it is very near to tears. " I think," she says slowly, " that a man would be very bad indeed if he were not good to you, Dolly." Then of a sudden she jumps up, and going over to her, lays her hands on her shoulders and looks over them into the glass. " Do you know you look very nice ? " she says, smiling at her. " But all the same, I could find it in my heart to wish that you would look a little different. This morning when you had on that grey gown I thought that you only wanted -a little cap and apron to make the prettiest little Quakeress in the world ; this evening—well—just now when you stood there with the sunset light upon your face, I fancied you only wanted an aureole round your head to make you a saint—a very fair saint. Could not you," insinuatingly, " do not you think you could manage to look a little more of a sinner? It would be so much pleasanter and more com- panionablc if you would," UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 43 "Anything to oblige you," says Dolly, with a touch of that lightness of humour which is no doubt natural to her, and has only lain dead within her, slain by the sadness and loneliness of her life. " But in the mean time be good enough not to look over me into the glass. A moment ago I had an idea that I looked rather nice, but now you have put me out of conceit with myself. If you are a specimen of a sinner and I of a saint, decidedly I give the preference to sinners." " By-the-bye," says Psyche, laughing, " that reminds me that you have never asked me what my last illusion was. It con- cerned you—and it is the only one that is not yet wholly destroyed. Have you no curiosity about it ? " "On the contrary," she answers, smiling, "a most lively one ! But I must manage to stifle it for the present. It is time to go ! " And in fact at that very instant a voice, whose incessant de- mands she has never denied, makes itself heard, calling her name. It is not a loud or commanding voice, but rather one whose querulous impatience shows how unaccustomed it is to remain unheeded. Dolly flings on her hat and cloak, and in a moment is out of the room. " Stay !" cries Psyche, running after her. " I forgot to give you my rose, and I picked it on purpose for you. It was the only one on the tree." But Dolly does not even turn her head. " I must not wait," she says hurriedly. " I dare not wait. He will be vexed." She goes rapidly—too rapidly for safety—down the polished wood stairs, her long gown floating behind her. And a little way after her Psyche, with the rosebud still in her hands follows in the rear. The hall doors are thrown wide open, and the light that comes through them falls full on the man who stands there. Regarded from a distance, and without the keen critical glance 44 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD, that might discern the lines of feebleness and temper around his mouth, the restlessness in his large dark eyes—tokens of the monotonous brooding on one idea, the insatiable egotism that goes near to madness—this last descendant of a long race, whose chief claim to distinction has lain in their good looks, would still pass without doubt for a remarkably hand- some man. A man long past his prime, and looking older than his years by reason of his life—or the manner he has chosen to take his life—and yet of a picturesqueness—greatly heightened by the manner of his dress—which many younger men might find it hard to beat. Indeed, this vanity and fastidiousness in dress, strange enough in a man who seldom emerges from his own library, is one of poor Dorothy's sorest trials. At the present moment he has managed, in spite of the overwhelming difficulties presented by the evening dress of a gentleman in the nineteenth century, to retain some of that picturesqueness peculiar to himself. On his head is already placed, ready for departure, a sombrero hat of the kind that ten years or so ago was associated with the idea of Italian banditti or stage villains, but in the present day is not considered altogether out of place on the head of a country gentleman. In the back- ground the old servant, who is a great many inches short of his master's height, is holding out a big red-lined cloak that would not misbecome a Garibaldi, or any other foreign general. But he is waiting for orders. Something is still wanting. " You are late," says Mr. Dalrymple imperiously, as Dorothy comes in hot haste. " How is it you are not ready? And where is my flower? Have you forgotten it ? It was not in my room." Dorothy's face falls. Nothing but the unaccustomed dis- traction of Psyche's companionship could surely have made her forget this important item of an important toilette. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 45 "I had forgotten," she stammers shamefacedly — "I will get you one in a minute." " Put on my cloak, Andrew," says Mr. Dalrymple angrily, turning his back upon her. " Wait, indeed ! Do you know what time it is ? " In a moment—with a sudden impulse that leaves no time for thought, no time for remembering all the rebuffs she has received—Psyche speeds down the stairs, her hand out- stretched, her small cream rose-bud—daintily prepared for Dorothy—clasped in it. "Will you—will you have it?" she says very timidly, with such a sudden, pitiful yearning for kindness in her lovely face, in her imploring attitude, as it would seem impossible for a man to resist. " It is a very pretty one." He puts out his hand, coldly enough, it is true, but yet courteously. He has already taken the flower in his hand, when, of an instant, his face changes—his eyes dilate and fix themselves on her with horror and dismay. If suddenly she had taken some terrible and revolting shape, he could look at her no more cruelly. " Curse you !" he cries, flinging the flower at her feet. "Who has taught you these tricks?—Who has dared to tell you " " Father !" cries Dorothy, springing forward, and laying her hand on his mouth. " Stop ! stop ! Think what you are saying. Come with me—Come ! " It is all the work of an instant. The cloak is put on his shoulders, and Dorothy, casting one pitiful, imploring look at Psyche, has led him down the steps. And the girl is alone, her flower lying at her feet—even the old servant has slunk away and left her. She looks down at it, and then she flings her arms above her head and cries out aloud, " I will not bear it! I will not bear it! ' There is no one to hear—no one—not even God, so it seems. 46 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. No one has taught her that there is a God to comfort those that are unjustly treated; and she cannot see Him—cannot hear Him. Her passion reigns supreme. With a gesture that contains all the rage and fury that has been pent up during the past months and has gained its climax in the last minute, she beats her foot upon the flower, tramples it to pieces, and then relenting, gathers up the frag- ments, and clasping them to her bosom, falls to bitter weep- ing. ****** And in the housekeeper's room old Andrew is relating the incident with that dramatic force which is often found among the poor. " Do you remember the day the missis died ?—God bless her! The master was going out—you remember, Mrs. Pug- gerridge—and she came and stood there on those very steps. 'Twas nineteen years ago, but I see her now as I see her then, and she held out her little hand—so—with a rose in it; and she said—I heard her, I did—' Will you have it, Dick? ' says she—and he took it and fastened it in his coat. Well, I give you my blessed word, if she'd com'd back—God rest her soul! if she'd come'd back and stood there this day and said, ' Will you have it ?'—she couldn't have looked more like Miss Psyche, or Miss Psyche more like she." The linen that the old woman who once was Psyche's nurse —who now is housekeeper, cook, and many things in one— has been darning, falls on her knee. "And he—the master—what did he do?" she asks anxiously, pushing up her spectacles. " He flung her flower away, and he cursed her. That's what he did! " says the old man tersely. " And it's my opinion you had better put that there table-cloth away and go and look after her, that's what you'd better do, though maybe you'll find it easier to mend them holes than to mend her feelings, though your eyes are not what they used to be." UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 47 And with this parting shot he goes, leaving her to take his advice or not, as she pleases. And though she has no doubt as to taking it, though her heart is sore and the tears not far from her eyes—for the girl who was her nursling fills that softest spot that must be filled in every woman's heart either by lover or by child—she does it with deliberation. She has outlived the haste of youth. She folds up her table-cloth, and does not forget to put her spectacles in their case before she starts on her search. It is one that is not to be accomplished in a minute. What old Andrews said of her eyes, he might with equal truth have said of her legs. They are not what they used to be. Long ago rheumatism and hard work have robbed them of that youthful agility that made the long galleries, the slip- pery staircases of the big rambling house things to laugh at. It is a good while, in fact, before she finds out what room Psyche is in, and herself outside the closed door of it, and if she has all the while been picturing her to herself in a passion of tears or a white heat of anger, she has every reason to believe herself mistaken. The voice that answers her knock is -cheerful enough, and there is nothing in the girl's attitude, with a book in her hand, or in the small part of her face that is turned round on the old woman's entrance, to give the smallest opening for the conso- lation or the sympathy she has come ready primed with. Instead she finds herself called upon to make some excuse for coming at all. " I was wanting to know when you would like to have your dinner, if you please, miss," she says, taking the one that comes readiest to her. "And I was thinking that as you was all alone it would be more cheerful-like to have it in Miss Dorothy's little room than in the dining-room." This is a sudden inspiration, but it has all the appearance of p. well-prepared idea. 48 UNSPOTTED'JROM THE WORLD. " Wherever you please," says Psyche lightly,." so long as it comes at once. I am hungry." This is reassuring. Evidently she has not been crying. Tears never made anyone hungry yet. " There's a nice little dish of cutlets—cutlets allay Manty- nong, Miss Dorothy calls 'em—that the master left," says Mrs. Puggeridge, casting away her fears and relapsing into her ordinary homely thoughts. " He wont care to see them again. And I've made a roley-poley pudding. You used to be fond of them" looking at her wistfully. " I not only used to be, but I am—devotedly fond of them," she answers, in a voice that leaves no doubt as to her cheerful- ness. " By all means let me have it, and now that I know that it is coming I will not eat too many of the cutlets ! " " Andrew is a fool," thinks the housekeeper to herself as she goes away more lightly than she came. " She's not fretting— not a bit of it—not but what she has good cause to, if she only knew it—poor lamb ! CHAPTER VI. The day is nearly done. Of all the many hours that Captain Darrell had counted out, but one remains. But that one threatens to hang heavily on Psyche's hands. The big clock in the stable-yard has only just struck nine long-drawn strokes; and unless one be sick or sorry, or unless one has a better excuse for fatigue than she has, one cannot well count it bed-time, even in the country, before ten. Inside the house a deadly gloom, more deepened than relieved by the few dimly-burning lamps that are sparsely scat- tered here and there, a horrible silence reigns supreme. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 49 Andrew and Mrs. Puggeridge are hobnobbing somewhere in the housekeeper's room, and might be a hundred miles away for all that can be heard of them; the two buxom country girls who make up the meagre list of servants have gone to bed with the lark, to rise again with him; and to all intents and pur- poses Psyche is absolutely, utterly alone. But if there is gloom inside the house there is certainly none outside. A full pale-faced moon and an innumerable host of stars are making the park and the gardens almost as light and a great deal more beautiful than at mid-day. The fairness of the night tempts Psyche to open the door and look out; and looking out, she no longer hesitates. Though it is certainly over-late for wandering about alone, on the other hand it will be a far pleasanter way of getting through the hour that yet remains on her hands than by sitting within doors, starting nervously at the scuttling of the rats behind the wains- cot, at the creaking of the doors, at the very rustle of her own gown. The house has a thousand nameless terrors for her—terrors which not all her philosophy can overcome ; but at the first soft breath of the evening wind, with the first look up into the un- utterable serenity of the sky above her head, they all vanish as by magic. There is no room for terror on such an evening as this. The flowers are lying drenched in their night-bath of dew; the trees are shaking their boughs and whispering to each other; now and again a wakeful bird chirps drowsily to his mate, or one that has been belated, seeking, perhaps, for food for the little ones in his nest, flies darkly across the clear, pale sky. Far away in the pastures, a cow is lowing for her calf. But there is not a sound or a sign of human life anywhere. Yet for all that, she is not afraid, as she had been in the house. The quiet of the night seems to soothe the passionate disquiet of her heart. She is in a dangerous mopd, one of those moods in which p 5o UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. that spirit of evil who figures in our childish imagination in personal guise finds his best opportunities. It is not easy for any of us, having stretched out, timidly enough, a right hand of reconciliation, to find it flung back in our face. Neither is it easy to endure meekly and patiently a rank and palpable inj us- tice whence most we have a right to expect justice. Indeed, of all human wrongs human injustice is perhaps the greatest. The sense of it rankles in Psyche's heart with a bitterness that is not to be understood except by those who have suffered it. " Why should he hate me ? " she says to herself again and again, lifting a pale passionate face to the untroubled sky. 44 He does not hate Dorothy. I will not bear it!" But all the while she knows it is but an impotent protest. She must bear it. In all this wide earth there is no other home that will shelter her but this one, where she is so little wanted. " Nowhere to go to!" she cries to herself, with none but the flowers and the trees to hear her. 44 No one to love me !" But even as she says it her cheek flushes, and her head droops with sudden remembrance—not of Dorothy. It is the very nature of such a quiet and steady love as Dorothy's that it should go uncounted—be taken as a matter of course—to be remembered perhaps when all others fail—but not now, when—in spite of her anger—in spite of her despair, a greater and wider possibility lies stretching out before her in that vague unknown that, if one be very young, seems so infinitely tempting. There lies her danger. Rebuffed on the one side, wounded and mortified beyond telling, her thoughts turn naturally enough to the one who has never rebuffed—never wounded her; who has, on the contrary, fed her to her heart's content with the delicate flattery of eyes and lips. Again and again she goes over in her heart every word he has spoken, every look that has told her, as well as look can tell, how lovely he has found her. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 5i Her heart is empty indeed—swept and garnished— ready for any love, good or bad, to enter in and dwell there. Not that she counts Captain Darrell as her lover. She has, indeed, too little vanity to suppose that any man would so readily fall in love with her. For her unpampered life has had that one advantage, that it certainly has not fostered any tendency to suppose herself attractive. But her thoughts turn to the remembrance of his undisguised admiration, his open friendliness, with a gladness that is in itself sufficiently perilous could she understand it. Her idle, aimless footsteps have led her through winding paths, through gardens and shrubberies, to whose unkempt, weed-grown luxuriance the pale moonlight is more friendly than the unflattering daylight—marking indeed, no wide difference between weeds and flowers, bramble-bushes and shrubs—until she has reached a place where the park palings, broken a good deal short of their normal height and a miracle of picturesque decay, overlook a pretty grassy lane that leads straight down to the high-road. Leaning her elbows on the mossy rotten woodwork, and her chin on her hand, she looks wistfully across the meadows at the distant lights that, glimmering among the trees, mark the big house where Sir Adrian Darrell lives. " He will be gone soon," she thinks, not of Sir Adrian, but of the nephew who so seldom throws away his time in the pursuit of innocent country pleasures; " and I shall never see him again. Perhaps some day, when Sir Adrian is dead, he will come and live here—but I shall be an old maid then, and my hair will be grey and my cheeks all wrinkled." She has plenty of time for these cheering reflections, for there are not many passers-by to interrupt them. An old woman, bent so low with her bundle of sticks and her weight of weary years that she cannot see God's sky above her head nor all the sweet and lovely things around her, but 52 UNSPOTTED PROM 7HE WORLD. only the ground beneath her tired feet; a labourer, stumbling homeward, half blind with toil, or with drink—who shall say ?—a little child toddling by the hedgerow, with its small fat hands heavily laden with spring flowers, who, paying small heed to the admonishing of another child of the lateness of the hour, but catching sudden sight of Psyche's white figure, is impelled to such sudden quickening of his uncertain foot- steps that he tumbles head-foremost into the ditch, and is picked up howling with fear—probably to carry with him to the grave a firm belief in ghosts. Psyche has hardly done laughing at this untoward effect of her white gown—for at nineteen it is, after all, easier to laugh than to cry—when another footstep, altogether different from these others—deliberate, yet not tired—firm, yet not heavy, makes her start erect and listen with palpitating heart and kindling eyes. A bend in the road turns suspicion into certainty. By the clear pale light of the moon she sees the broad square shoulders, the well-set figure she knows so well. His hands are in his pockets, his head a little thrown back, and a cigar in his mouth. A moment ago she would have given the half of her possessions, which are not many, to be quite sure that she would ever see him again—she would have counted the chance of meeting him here a chance so remote as to be past praying for; but being assured of a sudden that he is within a few paces of her, that she has only to stretch out her hand and she may touch him—only to speak his name and his voice will answer her, an unfathomable and newly-born timidity makes her shrink back and try to hide herself among the bushes out of his sight. Had she remained quiet the chances are that he, turning his head neither to the right nor to the left, but strolling along in meditative after-dinner tranquillity, would have passed hei by as the old woman and the labourer had done—unnoticed; but the sudden rustle among the bushes makes him look UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD, 53 round, and in a moment he has cast his cigar into a ditch, and has sprung towards her. " You !" he cries, in a voice in which surprise and delight contend for the mastery. " Who would have dreamt of seeing you here! Is "—with sudden nameless fear—" is anything the matter ? " "Nothing," she says, with a small smile, recovering her com- posure as she sees him on the point of losing his. Indeed, she is a little surprised, and not a little elated, to find her sud- den appearance has produced so great an effect upon him. " Nothing whatever. I only came here to meditate." "To meditate!" laughing aloud in his relief. "What a cheerful spot to choose! Have you been studying Young's ' Night Thoughts' or Hervey's * Meditations among the Tombs'?" Then changing his tone, "What are they think- ing about—what are they doing to let you come out by your- self in such a place as this at ten o'clock of night ? " "As a matter of fact," she answers gaily, "it is not ten o'clock; it cannot be more than half-past nine. And as for the rest, did I not tell you—do you not know, that I am abso- lutely alone—that there is no one to think, much less to care, where I come or go ? After all," with a smile, " it is a free- dom that many people might be inclined to envy me—I ought not to quarrel with it." Under the light tone there is so evident a soreness—the face upturned to his, looks in the pallor and softness of the moon- light, so far more lovely than ever it has looked in the radiance of daylight, that his heart is drawn to her with so irresistible, so overmastering a tenderness, that for a moment he dares not speak—he cannot trust himself. But the look in his eyes needs indeed no words to interpret it. " As a matter of fact," she goes on quickly, embarrassed a little by his silence, but more by his look—" do not laugh at me—but I was frightened to stay any longer indoors. I am almost sure," lowering her voice, and coming a little nearer to 54 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. the paling that divides them, " that there are ghosts in the house. Nurse has told me so many stories about the portraits of my grandfathers and grandmothers that hang all over the place", that they seemed to me like real people—I hardly dared look over my shoulder just now, I was so sure that I should see some of them behind me. At any rate," laughing, " if there are no ghosts, there are rats, and they are nearly as bad. It is not nearly so frightening out here." " You poor little thing," said Darrell, compassionately ; " upon my word it is a horrible shame. At any rate," reso- lutely, " you shall not go back alone. I will see you safe home." " Indeed, you will not !" very quickly. " I will not hear of it! " "Will you not?" with a twinkle of mischief in his eyes. " Suppose I do not ask your permission ? " " You will have to go nearly a quarter of a mile round to the lodge-gates to get in at all," she cries with a triumphant conviction of having the better of him. " And by that time I shall be safe at home." " Will you ?" laughing. " Stand back ! look out!" And in a moment, before she understands what he is going to do, he has leapt over the paling, and is standing by her side, having manoeuvred adroitly to avoid knocking her over altogether. "There!" laughing mockingly and triumphantly. "You have never asked me within your gates—indeed, now I think of it, you have shown a terrible lack of the fine virtue of hos- pitality. Blame yourself that you have driven me to coming in without an invitation." For a moment her indignation is lost in an astonishment that is not unmixed with admiration. " How did you do it ? " she says slowly, measuring the pal- ing with her eyes. " If I had been chased by a bull, or a mad dog, I might—it is just possible," doubtfully—" that I might UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 55 have managed to scramble over, but I could not have jumped it to save my life." " Of course not. I never yet saw a woman who could jump a couple of inches." " But all the same," quickly recovering from her astonish- ment, " it was not right of you—and you must go back at once; indeed you must. Supposing," looking around her frightenedly, '/father and Dolly were to come home earlier and find you here ? " " They will not," he answers coolly. " Not a chance of it. And if they did," laughingly, " I suppose the worst he could do to me would be to prosecute me as a trespasser. Come— let us go on ! " As he speaks he lays his hand lightly on her, and for the first time perceives that she has no other covering but her thin cotton gown, that, damp with the dew, is clinging tightly to her arms and shoulders. "You must be mad! " he says quickly and hotly. " Is there no one to take any care of you ? Do you want to kill your- self?" In all the many times that he has seen her he has always treated her with a reverent and perfect respect, of which the many women with whom he has flirted in society would not have believed him capable, and which indeed in their fashion- ably free-and-easy and unprudishly-familiar company he would have found a superfluous virtue. Now for the first time his hand lingers on her a little longer—a trifle more warmly than the occasion appears to warrant; his eyes look into her soft moonlit face with a passionate audacity of admiration that he no longer tries to restrain. Everything is against him. This unexpected meeting in an out-of-the-way place, while the genial warmth of Sir Adrian's good wines still lingers pleasantly in his veins—the very moon- light that adds the subtle charm of a beauty that is half-revealed, half-concealed—all combine to his undoing. 56 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WOULD. So long as they had kept to daylight he had done well enough—now he flings all his resolutions to the winds, and, forgetting all the many weighty arguments that lie on the side of prudence, remembers only that she is very pretty—and that he is in love with her. But though she is very innocent, so innocent that a man of less experience and coarser nature might very well have mis- taken her innocence for boldness, she is by no me^ns ignorant, and she is possessed of a finer instinct than often remains to a woman of larger experience. Though she does not understand his look, she flushes under it, and loosing herself resolutely from his touch moves a pace or two away. " I never catch cold," she says quietly and steadily, though in fact her heart is beating so that she can hardly hide the trembling of her lips. " And I have had enough of wrapping up at school. We hardly dared show our faces out of doors without waterproofs, umbrellas, and goloshes. I abjure all three for the remainder of my life ! " So saying, she turns away, and, the path being but narrow and a trifle confused by the tangled brushwood and the thick weeds, he is obliged to follow her as best he can. But after a few paces they come to a broader space, where there being no longer any excuse for her to go ahead of him, he overtakes her and walks by her side. Out here, in the open, where the trees grow but sparsely, casting their long, gaunt shadows on the glistening sward, they can see right up into such a sky as if one sees but once or twice in the short length of an English summer one may count oneself fairly blessed. " Is it not lovely ? " says Psyche, throwing back her head to take her fill of its beauty. "Yes," answers Darrell slowly, looking not at the sky, but at her soft, milk-white throat, and noting of what a murky white her gown looks against it. " It is very lovely. I like UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 57 moonlight. It's a pity it can't be laid on in pipes like gas, is not it ? Four-and-sixpence a thousand feet. Lovers and other lunatics supplied at a reduction." " I used to have a fancy about the stars," she goes on softly, scorning to notice this prosaic suggestion. " I used to think that the poor dead people came out at night to look down on those they had loved on earth, and that their shining rai- ment made little specks of light that we call stars." "Very pretty," says Darrell, with a slow smile that conveys an infinity of disbelief; " but hardly likely to conduce to the dead people's happiness." " Why not ? " combatively. " Do you suppose that when you are dead, you will care no more for anyone you have loved while you were alive ? " " Did you ever read the story about the poor soul in purga- tory who prayed so ceaselessly for one hour on earth to visit and console the man she had loved, that at last her prayer was granted on the condition that she should pay for that one hour by countless ages of torment ? " " And did she go? " asks Psyche, breathlessly. " She came to earth," says Darrell, with mock solemnity, " and she found him—how do you suppose? Planting flowers over her grave? Soaking countless pocket-handherchiefs for the want of her? Not a bit of it!—She found him with his arms around another woman, swearing eternal love to her." " He was a man," says Psyche, brought down suddenly with a cold shock of disillusionment. " If in your story you had reversed the cases, and it had been a man who came to console a woman, he would have found her " " Vexing her soul over the latest fashion in widows' caps, or," with a malicious smile, " if he had waited a month or two, he might have found her dispensing with such trifling sentimentalities altogether, and married to his dearest iriend." " I do not like you when you talk like that," she says slowly, moving a little away from him, and regarding him with cold 58 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. and disapproving eyes. " What have women done to you that you should think so badly of them all? " " I do not think badly of them all," dexterously decreasing the space she has put between them. "On the contrary," with a smile that emphasises his words, " there are some that I think very well of." But to this she answers nothing. She only walks a little quicker than she has walked before. " Can you blame me—can you blame any man," he goes on with an earnestness that surprises himself, for indeed, like a good many others, he is so accustomed to think lightly and to speak lightly of women that it seems hardly necessary to make an excuse for doing both, " that there are some women of whom it is impossible to think anything but badly ? On the other hand, there are others, thank heaven, of whom it would be equally impossible, even if one encountered them under the most flagrantly improper circumstances, not to think well." She is silent for a moment. "Do you mean," she asks presently, turning round to him with that absolute and outspoken candour which he has before now found not a little embarrassing in her, "that / am one of those women ? I have an idea, a very small idea, that this may be one of the improper circumstances for which you are so good as to make an excuse. If that be so," flashing a sudden reproachful look at him, " I think that you ought to have told me before; but at any rate," standing still and holding out a small cold hand to him, " we will run no more risks of such a thing—we will say ' Good-bye' now, if you please." " Is it possible, is it barely possible," he asks fiercely, taking her hand, but only that he may draw her nearer to him, " that you are not in jest—that you are in earnest ? Good heavens! What sort of a brute do you take me for, that I should first force myself upon you and then suggest that you are doing an improper thing by walking with me ? " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 59 " I do not take you for a brute at all!" she answers with a small fine smile. " But whether it is right or wrong, my con- science tells me I would much rather no one—not even Dolly— were to see you here." Then looking at him with a relenting glance, " Say ' Good-bye' now." " Promise me that you will come to the old stile to-morrow, and I will say it," he says, eagerly, holding her hand in a tight clasp; " I cannot bear to part from you like this without a chance of making you think less badly of me, when any day, perhaps to-morrow, I may have to go to town, and heaven knows when I may see you again ! " Then stooping lower, and looking. at her with all the persuasive tenderness of which his handsome and audacious blue eyes are capable—" Will you come ? Promise that you will!" But she only shakes her head slowly and tantalisingly. "What! You will not promise?" with some anger and a good deal of heat in his tone. " Do you mean that after being such friends—for say what you will, we have been friends— you are willing to let me go away without even caring to see me once more ? " But to this last speech she gives no direct answer. Her face has grown very white—whiter even than the moonlight has already made it, but she tries bravely enough to loose her hand from his. " Since you will not say ' Good-bye,'" she says at length, trying to smile, though he can see that her lips tremble—and seeing, loses the small remnant of self-restraint that yet remains to him—" I must go without." And so saying turns resolutely away. "No !" he says in a quick low voice, his handsome face alight with sudden uncontrollable passion—"I will not say ' Good-bye.' That is a poor cold word. I will say {Good- night'—Good-night, my darling ! " And in a moment, before she has power to prevent him, or 6 o UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. can understand what he is doing, he has caught her in his arms and has pressed his lips to hers. It is all indeed but a moment's work—but a moment's sweet, irrestrainable madness. Before he has time even to realise the pleasure of it she has loosed herself from him, and without a word, with one brief lightning-look, whether of anger, reproach, or love he would find it hard to say, she has turned and fled, swiftly as an arrow, across the grass. He waits a moment until he has seen her slender white figure pass out of sight into the house, and then he too turns and makes his way as quickly as he can, not by the paths through which he came, but by a straighter and less circuitous cut across country, with only the lights from Sir Adrian's big house to guide him to his destination. CHAPTER VII. For a little while Cecil Darrell does not repent of what he has done. In spite of the world, and in spite of himself, and though both have done their best to ruin the better capabilities of his nature, there yet remains to him some of the genuine fervour and passion of youth. Though he has frittered away the best part of his heart in a hundred ignoble flirtations, and still more ignoble intrigues, it is certain that all that is left of it has been given wholly and irrevocably to the girl he has just kissed in the moonlight. He would, indeed, be a worse man than he has as yet made himself, if he could, in the first tender remembrance of that unpremeditated embrace, find room for repentance. For a little while—just a little while out of all his pleasure- seeking and worldly life—he gives himself up to a genuine UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 61 emotion. He dwells with as passionate a tenderness on the thought of the pure and tender lips on which he has laid his own, the sweet girl-form he has held in his arms, as though he had never before experienced the passion of love, never mocked at it, never profaned it. And though, even in the first heat of his passion, it cannot but occur to him that, in some way or other, he or she will have to pay for what he has done to-night, he is, for the moment, as willing to risk that as he has been willing at other moments to risk his all on the turn of a card. It is, indeed, in the nature of such a life as he leads to make a man a gambler, even if he were not a born one; a life that leaves little room for thought, none for repentance; a life of incessant tearing, hurry-scurrying from one amusement to another—the life of a man of the world in the nineteenth century. He must go always, unless he would be left behind by his fellows, at this pace that the devil of fashion drives him, pushing off that evil day when he will have to meet his liabilities for all those pleasant sins he has been heaping up, until the last day of all, when, if he be not altogether a heathen, he has an idea that a man must make some sort of reckoning with his God, just as he pushes off that inevitable day when, his more mundane liabilities closing around him, he will be bound to reckon with his creditors. It is the same spirit of gambling that prevails throughout. It is easier to spend than to save, trusting to good luck to serve him at the last. It is easier to take any pleasure that lies in his path than to trouble himself about any abstract question of right or wrong, trusting to good luck to pull him through in that other world, just as he trusts to it to pull him through in this. It is so easy, when one is young and of good courage, to believe, with vague and happy-go-lucky philosophy, that every- thing will come right somehow. It is, indeed, the tendency, well nigh the necessity, of a rapid 62 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. age to live for the present, to ignore the morrow. What time, indeed, is there to take thought for it ? Now and again, maybe, when some comrade dies in our midst—someone whose life was so like ours that we cannot fail to see the resemblance—a sudden thought, like a ghostly hand, stretches out from the darkness to warn us that that " to-morrow" may not be so far off—may, indeed, be as near to us as it was to him; but we quickly enough shake off the thought, as we would shake off the hand. Ghosts cannot live in sunshine and laughter, and though one rose from the dead we should not believe him. Cecil Darrell is no worse, is, indeed, a great deal better, than most of his kind. By a large majority of his acquaint- ance he is most certainly considered, as he probably con- siders himself, one of the best fellows going. And if there are a few exceptions, not only among men but among women also, who have discovered, to their hurt, that a handsome face and a winning manner are not always the most to be trusted, they are but a small and silent minority. That good-looking face, those open and generous ways of his, coupled with small means and large expectations, have been his greatest curse. He has never had occasion to prove himself trustworthy; he has always been taken on trust. It is not easy to find fault with a man who borrows freely with the one hand, that he may fling away lavishly with the other. He disarms criticism; and if, in the course of such an easy-going, selfish, pleasure-seeking life, some wrongs are inflicted, they are, for the most part, silent ones. He is above all, and before all, a successful man. From his youth up he has had a very plethora of the good things of this world thrust upon him, and it is, as we know, " success that colours all in life, makes fools admired, and villains honest." If the poor weak voice of the unsuccessful were lifted up against him, there would be none to listen to it. It is not until he has got back to his own house, or to the UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 63 house that he has for a long time looked upon very certainly as to be his own, and is pacing quietly up and down the well- kept terrace, with a cigar in his mouth, that he begins to look upon what he has done in the colder light of a more dispas- sionate judgment. Glancing in at one of the windows where the shaded lamp- light reveals such an interior as only art and wealth, when they combine their forces, can possibly produce, his eyes rest for a moment on the worn and pallid face of an old man sleeping in a chair. And in that moment he realises, as he has probably never realised before, on what a precipice he stands. All his future, all that the world contains for him hangs on that old man's whim. By one sudden caprice, by one stroke of his pen, he can thrust him out from the possession of all those things that to him, brought up as he has been, mean life and happiness, into such an abyss of outer darkness, of debt and difficulty and social annihilation, as he dares not even contemplate. For the space of a second or so he, impelled by some sort of fascination, watches him in his sleep. Even in that deep rest, that seems so like death, it is not hard to guess at his naturei And Darrell has no need to guess; he knows that of all the wicked, whimsical, imperious, and violent old men the world contains—there lies the worst. Even he, with all his easy-going careless philosophy, dares not look ahead for more than a moment or so at the possibility that still lies within that old man's power, and not only within his power, but most assuredly within his will also, if he be thwarted. His eyes rest for a moment on the thin and nerveless white hand that hangs by the side of the chair, and then, with a sort of smile, he turns away, and looks across the rich and well-kept lands immediately around him, to the tumble-down ramshackle old house in the hollow, where his pretty little sweetheart lies, perhaps dreaming of him. 64 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. If he had not smiled, he might have groaned. For he knows that of all the foolish and impossible things that he has done in the course of a foolish and thoughtless life, there has been none perhaps more utterly foolish than that he has done to-night. With a sudden pang of conscience, keener than any he has felt for many years, he thinks of the pure and childish lips he has just now touched, and knows that never, through all the years to come, can he possibly claim the right to touch them again. Given to any other woman, such a caress would certainly not have troubled him more than a minute or so, if at all. A kiss more or less, according to the creed of his light-of-love, easy-going class, never did any woman harm. But by the light of that higher intuition that is born of love, he for once in his life is sure—so sure that he could stake his soul upon it—that his are the first lover's lips that have ever lain on hers; is sure — as sure as though an angel from heaven had told him, that he has been the first to rob them of their simple purity. For one instant, with the breath of the trees and the flowers in his face, with the ineffable serenity and peace of the evening sky above his head, there comes to him a heaven- born glimpse of such a life of purer love, of higher possibili- ties, as may lie within a man's grasp before he has altogether given himself over to the bondage of the world, the flesh, and the devil. Could he ever have found content and happiness in the pure and constant love of one woman's sweet eyes—in the unambitious tranquillity of such a quiet life as must have been his, if he had once and for all renounced all pretensions to his uncle's wealth ? He cannot tell—he only knows that whatever he might have done if such a chance had been presented to him at the outset, he is now too deeply meshed in debt and difficulty to have any choice left to him. Unspotted from The World. 65 As a rule he is accustomed to go straight ahead, without any superfluous and unprofitable thoughts of the possible retribution which the sins of to-day may bring on the morrow, being possessed of that cheerful philosophy which serves many men instead of a conscience; but to-night, having, with that selfishness which through the long practice of a life- time has become so much easier than self-denial, considered the pleasure of the moment before all other things, he is, for once, forced to consider what way there is out of it. And, so far as he can see, there are but two. He must either go away without meeting her again, and leave her to imagine the worst of him, and, in time, to forget that he ever existed; or he must stay and abide by what he has done, and so perhaps drag her still deeper into an entanglement, out of which he can see no possible good end. Which would be the best and kindest ? —or rather, which would be the least cruel ? Over and over again he thinks of it until his head and his heart ache. All the best of him lies uppermost in this hour. For the moment the passion of his love is forgotten—the tenderness remains. If she were but a little child he could feel no more tender, no more remorseful, as he thinks of the sadness of her life, and that he, perhaps, has made it more sad. " My poor little dear," he thinks, looking across the moon- lit expanse that separates him from her, " I wish to God I had never seen you ! " If he could have seen, or could have subtly divined that which was passing in the little room toward which his eyes so longingly tended, he might indeed have been smitten with a keener shame than his conscience had already brought him. With her white arms clasped above her head, and all her pretty hair unbound about her, the girl is lying—with a smile, and a half-breathed prayer upon her parted lips— asleep. £ 66 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. She had not prayed for many months ; not once, indeed, since she came back to her home; for the formula that had been unlovingly taught her when she went as a little child to school, "Pray, God, bless dear papa, and dear sister, and all kind friends," had seemed, in the light of a truer knowledge, so bitter a mockery that it had seemed but an insult to offer it to God. But to-night, with unfolded hands, with unbended knees, with voiceless lips, there had gone up, straight from her heart, a mute and simple form of thanksgiving, that, if Darreli could have known of it, he would have found the very anti- thesis of his own thought. " Thank God for making him love me. God must be kind to me, after all, since he has given me some one to love me," had been something the nature of her voiceless address to that unknown One to whom we all, in our great emotions, whether of love or of sorrow, are wont to appeal. In the first tumult of surprise and shame that followed on Cecil Darrell's unexpected caress, she had hardly been able to tell whether she were most glad or most sorry. For a: little while she had an idea that she ought to be angry with him ; but when it became clear to her that his kiss was but the sign and seal of the love which a thousand words and looks had before conveyed to her, she was only most simply and child- ishly grateful, most womanfully glad over this unexpected brightening of a life that a little while ago had seemed so sad and so loveless. She had not indeed been over-quick to imagine him in love with her, having no great faith in her own charm; but since he was, she was not ashamed to thank God with all her heart for it. " I will tell Dolly," had been one of her first thoughts. " I shall be able to tell Dolly now." For the sin against Dolly had weighed more heavily on her conscience than she had cared to acknowledge to herself. Her undressing had been a far slower process than usual. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 67 She had looked at herself in the glass with a fond and linger- ing glance that she had never before bestowed on herself. " I must be pretty since he loves me," had been the thought that had seemed to give a new sweetness to her eyes, a brighter ripple to her hair, a more dazzling fairness to her skin. She had meant to lie awake till Dolly came—perhaps, if she could find words, to confess all to her. But the fatigue and the emotion of the day overcame the resolution, and she had fallen asleep, for once in her life, absolutely and perfectly happy. Dolly, coming in a little later, finds her so—with a shaft of moonlight streaming through the unshuttered window full on her face, making it white as a dead face. She has never looked so beautiful—never so touchingly, childishly innocent. As Dolly watches her, a pang of love and of pity brings the tears nearer to her eyes than she often permits them to be when there is anyone there to see them. " What can become of her ? " she thinks with a most bitter anxiety, remembering the manner in which she had left her that very evening. " What is to come of it ? " CHAPTER VIII. The clock has counted out more than twelve hours since Psyche and Darrell said good-bye in the moonlight. The moon, who has so much to answer for, has hidden her pale face, and another royal May sun is shining with all his dazzling might. It wants but an hour of the time when Darrell had asked her to meet him by the stile, but as yet, whatever she may intend, she is making no preparations to go to him. She is, on the contrary, sitting on the well-scrubbed table of a small inner kitchen—more often used, and more appropriate 68 UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. to the present modest dimensions of the household than the larger one—looking on with a markedly discontented air, while Dolly, with a big spoon and well tucked-up gown, bends over a saucepan. When she had awakened in the morning to find an un- usual stir and bustle in the house, accounted for by the fact that Mr. Dalrymple had " one of his attacks," she had not found it an insupportable affliction. Breakfasts and dinners were the hardest times of her life. At all other times, being largely aided by his sincere desire to avoid her, she could manage to avoid him. But twice in the day they were forced to come face to face with each other; to keep up, as best they might, with forced lips and conscious eyes, such poor affectation of domesticity as constraint made possible. For anything in the nature of a reprieve, for anything which kept her out of his presence while the remembrance of the previous evening was still strong upon her, she was too sin- cerely and absolutely grateful to cavil at the means by which she had obtained it. And, in point of fact, she has a very shrewd idea that Mr. Dalrymple's illness, attributed by him- self and a sympathetic doctor to weakness of the heart and a sensitive disposition, are more fancy than fact; so that she can afford to indulge in some satisfaction at her freedom, with- out the drawback of feeling herself hard-hearted. But her satisfaction is beginning to be largely tempered with indignation. For two good hours she has been following Dolly upstairs and downstairs; waiting for her outside the thick-curtained door that shuts off Mr. Dalrymple's apartments from the rest of the house ; watching her prepare trays, mea- sure medicines, fetch papers and books, and do a hundred and one things, of which the last, but not the least, is the making of mutton-broth. Evidently Mr. Dalrymple's "attacks"—not unfrequent occurrences, by all accounts—only mean a deeper and more UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. 69 exacting tyranny on his part; a more unquestioning and un- wearying slavery on Dolly's part. " Are you never going to be done ? " asks Psyche, finding in the cooking the last straw that breaks the back of such patience as she is possessed of. " Is there no one in the house who can make mutton-broth but you ? " " I am afraid," says Dolly, lifting a pretty flushed face, to which the fire has lent a brilliance that does not rightly belong to it, " that there is no one else who can make it to please father. Last tiine Puggeridge put too much pepper in; this time " " She might put a grain too much salt—or he would say she did—it comes to the same thing. Do you not think," sarcas- tically, " that you might as well take a place as general servant or lady-help ? You might, perhaps, with your talent for cook- ery, get twenty pounds a year if you threw Christian piety and early rising into the bargain; whereas now—well, now—" laughing, " you certainly get more kicks than half-pence !" But to this Dolly makes no answer—unless a glance in which mild reproach mingled with a keen anxiety as to the skimming of the fat on her mutton-broth, be considered as answer. " It appears to me," Psyche goes on, swinging her legs to and fro with a growing impatience, " that for an invalid he," indicating with a little jerk of her head the direction of Mr. Dalrymple's rooms, " does pretty well. This is the third meal that you have prepared in two hours. First, tea and toast and buttered eggs; secondly, port-wine and chicken-sandwiches ; thirdly, mutton-broth, and what else, Dolly? He reminds me," laughing, " of the man who used to go about with a placard on his coat—' If I fall down in a fit, raise my head up and give me brandy.'" "Psyche!" says Dolly, this time with distinct reproach. But it fails of its effect. " Does it never occur to you, Dolly," she goes on defiantly, having reached that point of irritation when defiance is easier 70 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. than submission; " that you, with your large sense of duty— you do not talk much about it, but I have an idea that duty means a good deal to you—take nevertheless a rather one-sided view of life—that, for instance, I," with an emphasis on the word, "may have as great a claim on your time and your charity as father has ? " At this unexpected attack, Dolly lifts her eyes from her sauce- pan, to the imminent peril of her broth, and fixes them in un- bounded astonishment on her sister's face. " What have I done?" she asks anxiously. "My dear child, is anything the matter? " At sight of her expression, Psyche feels her indignation inclined to subside into half-irritated laughter. " Nothing much," she admits candidly, "except that it makes me cross to see you always fussing about when I want to talk to you." "Is that all?" with a sigh of relief. "Wait a moment— wait half a moment," returning to her saucepan, " and you shall talk to me to your heart's desire. There," setting it on the hob with a triumphant air, " it must simmer now for a quarter of an hour, and for that quarter of an hour I am abso- lutely at your disposal. What shall we talk about ? " But at this downright and matter-of-fact question, Psyche instantly feels all desire for conversation die within her. It is one thing to lie on one's bed in the shimmer of moon- light, with mind and heart filled with a tender exaltation at the remembered touch of a lover's hand, with the remembered look of a lover's eyes, and to make up one's mind to such a confes- sion as she had contemplated. But it is altogether a different thing when one finds oneself in a bare-boarded kitchen—whose prosaic details the full glare of daylight makes painfully plain —opposite to a young woman with a tucked-up gown and a scorched face, with a big and greasy spoon in one hand, and a still more greasy cup in the other. The sight of these homely implements seems to wither up all UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. 7i Psyche's best intentions. It is only by holding fast to them that she prevents them from deserting her altogether. It is only by reminding herself that Dolly must be told, and that it is altogether mean to deceive one who has so innocent a con- fidence in her, that she keeps herself up to the point at all. "My dear Dolly," she says laughing, half-vexedly, half- amusedly—for her sense of the ridiculous, at all times large, is irresistibly tickled by the situation—" for nipping up senti- ment, and bringing one down to hard and matter-of-fact prose, I will back you against any young woman in the United King- dom. How can I talk to you about anything but mutton-broth while your eyes are on the kitchen-clock measuring out the minutes, and your heart in the saucepan ? Cannot you sit down and look like a reasonable being? I knew that we were poor," she goes on with some heat, "that father somehow or another has muddled away most of his money; but are we so poor that we, who are one of the oldest families in the country," drawing up her pretty white,neck, "must turn ourselves into cooks and housemaids ? " "I am not a cook, dear," says poor Dolly, apologetically. " It is only that father is fanciful and likes the things I do. There !" putting down her spoon and cup and seating herself near the open window, whence the soft May air fans her heated face, " will that please you better ? " " A little better," regarding her with a critical air that is not entirely approving, " if you could only manage to look less troubled about many things. Now tell me," hesitating a little, and casting about in her mind as to the best means of beginning what she has to say, now she has brought Dolly up to the point of attention, "tell me how you enjoyed yourself last night. Do you know that you have hardly spoken a word to me since we parted in such pleasant fashion in the hall ? " At this remembrance a deeper flush comes into Dolly's already flushed face. "I did not enjoy myself much," she admits, with a little 73 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. sigh. " In fact, to be candid, not at all. Father had taken one of his manuscripts with him—I think it was his last poem, and he read it to the vicar after dinner; but I am afraid that he did not care for it quite so much as he ought. He and father had a little argument. Perhaps," naively, " that is why father is ill to-day. He is often ill when he is vexed. And then, dear," lifting her pretty, tender eyes, " how could I have enjoyed myself under any circumstances, knowing how I had left you, and that you were alone, and perhaps unhappy ? " It is certainly not a very propitious opening ; but Psyche is so sick of waiting for an opening of some sort or another, that such as it is she seizes upon it. " And supposing," she says, in a voice that is not so assured as she might wish it to be, and guiltily conscious, on the other hand, that her face is growing a good deal redder than she at all desires, " supposing that I was not alone ? " "Not alone!" repeats Dolly, her attention effectually gained, her eyes turning from the clock's plain and homely face to fix themselves, with a good deal of surprise, on the lovely, living face opposite to her. " Who could possibly have come to see you so late ? " For in Combe-Avon there is but one orthodox time of day for paying visits; and those few, those very few, who have not allowed the slights, the negligences, nor the pronounced misanthropy of the father, to deter them from still showing some civility to the daughter, mostly stick to it. " Did I say that anyone came to see me ? If I did, I said wrong. Now I come to think of it," laughing a little, " I might more rightly have said that I went to see him, though even that would not have been correct. As a matter of fact," she goes on, hurriedly, conscious of the dismay which is growing on Dolly's face, " I went out into the park—it was so pretty in the moonlight—and he saw me, and walked home with me." UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 73 "HeJ" repeats Dolly, slowly and bewilderedly, raking over in her mind the small and meagre list of their ac- quaintance, while a vague suspicion, a vaguer fear, makes her face grow paler. '' Who was it, dear ? Who do you know well enough down here, to —" then breaking off suddenly and brightening as by magic— " unless it was Could it have been Sir John ? " "Sir John!" echoes Psyche, with cold disdain. "My dear Dolly, do not you remember that you told him you were going out to dinner? Do you suppose," sarcastically, " that my red hair and my long legs are so attractive as to bring him over five miles twice in one day ? " Then, as Dolly answers nothing, having indeed, as is clearly expressed by her bewildered face, come to the very end of her resources, she takes her courage in both hands, feeling that if she does not it will slip away from her altogether. " Is there no one else," she goes on, in a more resolute voice, and with a braver manner, "whom you might have guessed ? While you have been searching far and wide, you have overlooked someone close at hand—someone you your- self introduced to me. Have you forgotten that pour of rain, and that muddy lane, Dolly, and—and—Captain Darrell ? " Having got out the name she feels that the worst is over. She is able to look at Dolly quite quietly and calmly while she waits for her answer. But she is hardly prepared for the terrible dismay—the something that is more than dismay—that she reads on her sister's pale face in the silence that follows. " Captain Darrell!" she says at last, when she can find voice. " I thought—I made so sure that he never stayed down here more than a day or two at the outside. Do you mean," very slowly, "is it possible that he had the pre- sumption to come in here and walk about with you alone—at night ? " " If you call ten o'clock night—yes," says Psyche, defiantly. " Why should he not ? " 74 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. And though in truth, the defiance covers a vague fear, for- gotten for awhile, beginning to grow again at Dolly's strange manner, she does not allow it to be apparent. "Because," says "Dolly, with a certain calm authority of manner that is not usual to her, " if you knew no better—and indeed I am sure you did not—there is so much the more blame to him for leading you to do a thing which ho knew was wrong—which he knew, if it got to be talked about," her voice trembling, "might irreparably injure you. At least," with some bitterness, " he cannot plead ignorance of the world's ways !" " Stay a moment!" cries Psyche hotly, anger getting the better of any vague fears as to the propriety of her conduct. " A minute ago you looked almost pleased because you thought I had been walking with Sir John Heathcote. Now, because it happens to have been Captain Darrell instead, you look as if I had committed a crime. Will you tell me where lies the difference? " "Is there indeed any need that I should tell you?" Dolly answers in a voice that she tries hard to make as steady and quiet as it ordinarily is. " Sir John is our friend, father's friend and mine, and he has known you since you were a little child; while Captain Darrell knows, as well as I do, that the acquaint- ance between Sir Adrian and ourselves is of the slightest. In- deed, it can hardly be said that we know him at all. I was sufficiently surprised when he almost forced himself on us that day in the rain; but," her voice rising, " I would not have believed that even he," with a bitterness of accent that is altogether new to her, " would have presumed on so slight an acquaintance to walk with you here in the moonlight, when he knew that we were out, and that he would not have ventured to come if we had been at home." "You are arguing on false premises," says Psyche, with suppressed passion, her anger at this imputation of duplicity overcoming her fears—overcoming her shame at making such UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 75 a confession. " Our acquaintance is by no means so slight. I have seen him a great many times since then. In fact," the colour on her face deepening, " we cannot be said to be acquaintances any longer—we are friends !/' But as she says it she averts her eyes from Dolly's face. She has not the courage to see how she takes it. There is a little silence—a horrible silence, during which the dull clicking of the loud-voiced clock alone sounds in the room. Evidently she is taking it badly. Evidently, when she speaks again, she has a difficulty in speaking at all. " You have seen him often," she says at length, very slowly, and with such pained reproach as goes near to touching Psyche's heart, "—and not told me?" " Why should I tell you? " she cries, jumping off the table, and beginning to pace up and down the bare-boarded kitchen, while all the bitterness and soreness of the past months, all the cruel slights pent up and surging in her heart, seem to thrust themselves to the surface and to gain voice. "Are you not always absorbed with father—or if it is not with father, is it not with the house? Have you any time, any attention, to spare for me ? Was it not plain," throwing out her hands with a little passionate gesture, "from the very first day I came home, how little I was wanted here ? You and he, you were enough for each other—you did not want me. I do not blame you," faltering a little, "no doubt you have done the best you can—only," with a laugh that covers a sob, "it has been the best for father, not for me. Ask yourself," turning round and facing her with bright and flaming eyes, "has there been such love, such friendship, such happiness in my home, that I should turn my back on them when they come in my way ? " For the space of a second or so she gets no answer, and when at last Dolly-speaks, she would scarce know the voice for hers—so pained is it, so broken. " That is true," she says very slowly, standing with her hands 76 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. clasped tightly in front of her. " It has been my fault—all my fault. I ought to have known; I ought to have understood how unhappy you were. I have been blind and foolish," her voice rising, " I who am so much older than you ; I who ought to have taken the place of a mother to you; but," faltering and going near to breaking down altogether, "it has only been blindness and ignorance—not carelessness, not neglect. God knows," with sudden, unbidden tears, pitiful enough in so self-contained a woman, filling her eyes, " it is not that I have not cared." Her tone and her manner would touch a harder heart than Psyche's. At sight of the tears in Dolly's eyes, a good deal of the bitterness of her anger seems to melt away. " Do not cry, Dolly!—you must not cry ! " she says, going over to her, and laying her hands upon her with a contrition that is as swift as her anger had been. " No doubt it will all come right somehow. Only, you see," faltering a little, and looking as if the tears are not very far from her own eyes, " you have your life, your friends ; and I have so little, so very little, you must not grudge me my one friend." "Dear," says Dolly, very gently, very tenderly, "do you think I would grudge you anyone who would make you happy? Do you know," with a watery smile, " I think I would give up a good deal of my life if it would bring any happiness to yours ? It is only that I am sure, so sure, that Captain Darrell will never bring you any, and that I fear so sadly, so sorely, that he may make you a great deal more unhappy than you have ever been yet." In an instant Psyche, forgetting her momentary softening, withdraws her hands and falls back a pace or two. "What have you to say against him?" she asks, cpldly enough. For a space of a second or so Dolly hesitates. Long ago it had been said of her, justly enough, that she had never any but a good word, a charitable excuse, for the worst of sipperg, UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. ft Evidently evil-speaking comes so hardly to her that it is only with difficulty she can bring herself to it even now. " I know," she says, flushing and faltering a little, though she does not permit her courage to desert her, " that in a world —a very fashionable world, that is reckless enough, heaven knows—he has the character of being one of the most reckless ; and that down here, there is little that is good said of him— much that is bad. Even old Sir Adrian, who, while health and strength lasted, lived such an evil life that no decent woman has been within their doors for near half a century, quarrels with him every time he comes here, because he will not settle down and marry." " Petty gossip !" says Psyche, with a fine scorn, and no- thing but her changing colour and her trembling lips to show that it has in any way effected her. "Do not we all know that they have nothing to do in this place but take away each other's characters ? I wonder at you, Dolly," turning on her, " that you should make yourself their mouthpiece. I do not believe a word of it—not a word," with an energy that is too vehement for conviction; " and if I did, it would not make any difference to me. I have not so many friends that I can afford to pick and choose the best amongst them. I like him, and— he likes me. That is all that matters." There is not much in the words, but there is much, a great deal too much, it appears to Dolly, in the manner and the look with which they are uttered—in the change from anger and bitterness to a tenderness so passionate and glad that it seems to light up her lovely childish face with a sudden glory. " Do you mean," says Dolly, after a moment, pressing her hand against her breast like one who, fearing evil tidings, suddenly hears the worst, " that he has told you that he is fond Of you? " " Did I say so ? " asks Psyche, feeling driven into a corner and bound to brazen it out, but all the same avoiding the eager questioning of her sister's eyes with a sudden shame at 78 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. the remembrance of how, and in what fashion, he had told her. " I do not think I did. But, on the other hand, is there any- thing so terrible, so revolting, about me, that you should seem so amazed at the idea ? " "Is it possible," the other goes on, still pursuing the cate- chism in accents in which surprise and dismay have almost obliterated all other emotions, " that in so little time he can really have grown so fond of you that—that he has asked you to marry him ? " This time Psyche no longer avoids her eyes. Instead, she looks at her with a dazzled bewilderment like one awakening from strange dreams into broad daylight. " To marry him /" she repeats slowly, while a sudden vivid flush mounts from her pretty white throat to the roots of the soft loose hair that lies on her forehead. " Do you suppose that we—that I—have even thought of that yet ? Are you going to be one of those old women, Dolly, wffio if a man looks at a woman, must talk directly of marriage ? " "I have had little to do with-love and marriage, it is true,'1 she answers very steadily, yet with a touch of sadness. " My life has been far enough away from them. Yet," colouring a little, " if a man loves a woman honourably, and talks to her of love, he talks to her of marriage also—so much I know. Psyche, dear," stretching out her hands to her with a passion- ate earnestness, "that Captain Darrell admires you—that he even loves you I do not doubt; indeed, it seems to me it would be difficult for him to help it; but little as I know of the world, still less of the men in it, yet I do know that there are some who, rather than forego the amusement of an hour or a day, will run the risk of breaking a woman's heart, and will gain a love they do not care to keep. If he marries against his uncle's wishes," gaining force as she goes on, "he will forfeit all those things that make life pleasant to him. Ask yourself," her voice trembling : " do you think he will give up everything for you ? " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 79 But the warmth of her eloquence lights no answering fire in Psyche's cold face. " I am sorry," she says slowly, regarding her with disdainful eyes, " with all my heart I am sorry I ever told you a word about him ! If I could have foreseen how you would have taken it," she goes on passionately, " I would sooner have cut my tongue out than have spoken to you of him ! It seems to me shameful, almost indecent," flushing furiously, " that you and I should be discussing the chances of his marriage. And for the matter of that," turning round on her suddenly, and altogether changing her ground, " can you tell me any good reason why I should not please his uncle as well as any other girl ? " But to this there is no answer. Dolly's face pales suddenly and strangely, her eyes drop, and she falls back a pace or two. " Answer me," cries the girl impatiently, coming a step nearer. " Are you dumb ?—Is there any reason ? " But still Dolly does not answer; indeed she cannot. Something in her look, in her silence, wakes a sudden inex- plicable, intangible fear in Psyche's mind. Her face pales too, her eyes widen. "Dolly," she says in a low passionate voice, and with a face that seems to try and master her, " you shall speak. Did you mean anything by what you said ? Answer me, quick ? " " You know," says Dolly- at last, slowly and hesitatingly, moving her head uneasily, " all the world knows that father hates Sir Adrian, and he " But she gets no farther. " Bah ! " cries Psyche, with a laugh that rings through the room. " Is that all? Do you know," laying her hand on her breast, and speaking quickly and sharply, as though her breath came unevenly, " that for a moment you—you absolutely frightened me. I began to have some sort of ridiculous fear that there was some real reason, some good reason. And after all," breaking off into fresh laughter^ 80 Unspotted prom the world. "it is only that father hates Sir Adrian. It appears to me that the only strange thing would have been if he had not hated him !" So saying, she turns away. She is already half-way towards the door, when Dolly springs after her, and lays a hand upon her. " At least, promise me," she says, with a most implorimg earnestness, " that you will not see him again alone. There is nothing I can do to prevent you—there is no one I can appeal to," she goes on, incoherently "yet, for my sake " She breaks down there. " No ! " cries Psyche, shaking off her hand with an anger that is now beyond control; " I will not promise. On the contrary, I am going straight to him now—this minute !" And without another look or word she opens the door and goes, slamming it after her. For the space of a minute or so Dolly stands absolutely still —mute, despairing. One or two tears steal quietly down her cheeks on to her clasped hands ; but she does not move, even to brush them away. The loud striking of the clock rouses her suddenly, and looking up she sees that the quarter of an hour that she promised Psyche has long ago gone by, and though her heart is aching and her eyes are wet, she turns resolutely back to the task she has, for a little while, forgotten. And if there are a good many tears mingled with Mr. Dal- rymple's broth, he does not know it. CHAPTER IX. The church-clock down in the valley has just chimed three. Three hours have gone since Psyche left the kitchen with the trenchantly expressed determination to go straightway to her lover. But for all that she has not seen him. They have UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 81 not been goodly hours, made short and sweet by gay and pleasant words, by pleasanter looks. They might, on the con- trary, fairly be counted as three of the most miserable that she has spent in the course of a life which she is apt, not unjustly, to regard as a not over-happy one. Her determination to go to him had not indeed been a mere empty piece of bravado. With her hat flung hastily on her head, and without one look in the glass, she had gone straight out, walking as fast as her feet could carry her, with but one burning and paramount desire—to get to him as quickly as might be, and to satisfy herself, even though she could not satisfy Dolly, that all she had said of him, all her doubts of him, were as false and untrue as she knew them to be. The heat of her anger and her indignation had indeed carried her half-way through the wood; but anger, though it may at some times prove a trusty ally, and may often enough carry us through scenes and help us to victories which could never have been achieved in cold blood, is not to be relied upon as a last- ing support. Half-way through the wood, when but a few minutes more of such hasty walking would in all probability bring her into Darrell's presence, Psyche's anger, which had been at white- heat when she started, began to fail her; and as its strength waxed fainter there had crept into her mind a small and sickly doubt that made her heart to grow weak, her footsteps to slacken their speed. It is, without doubt, one of the strongest powers of those whose words are habitually gentle, who are as slow to speak evil as to think it, that when they do lift up their voices in protest or remonstrance their words carry greater weight than those of others. Dolly's words, Dolly's dismay, come back to her with ten times the greater force that they were Dolly's. She had counted so surely on her confession being received with interest and sympathy—with a little tender remonstrance, a few vague words of reproach at the outside. Dolly's gentle- F 82 UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. ness and docility, Dolly's readiness to be guided and over-ruled by her, had been things she had so little doubted, that it had been sufficiently amazing to find them fail her. Slowly, unwillingly, as her anger weakened, that small, chill doubt of her own infallibility strengthened. Was it possible, barely possible, she began to ask herself, that Dolly was right and she was wrong—terribly wrong ? Had she been un- maidenly—immodest—indiscreet? And then, not slowly, but suddenly—striking her with the force of a blow—had come another and a far more overwhelming remembrance! —Her confession had been incomplete. If Dolly had been amazed and indignant at that which she had told, what would she have thought of that which had been left untold? If she could have known, if she could have guessed, that he had not only walked with her in the moonlight, but had held her in his arms—had called her his darling—and kissed her ? And at this thought her feet, so lately hurrying along, had stood stock-still; the warm fresh blood that exercise and hope had brought to her cheeks, had fled of a sudden, leaving them stone white, to return with a flush so furious and painful that she had hidden her face in her two hands, as if the very trees could see her. With a pang of shame, such as she had never felt before in all her life—for indeed there had been until now no shame in it, even if there had been little to boast of—she saw her own conduct and his as- Dolly or any other modest woman might see it, and of a sudden was deserted by that gay and happy confidence, that undoubted trust which had made his kiss a cause of gladness—not of shame. Was it possible, she had asked herself, lifting her face from her hands and looking about her with a bewildered glance— that she who had thought herself so happy, so loved, was after all only an indiscreet little fool?—that he, of whose liking, of whose friendship, of whose love even, she had UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 83 within the last few hours been so gladly sure, had been only laughing at her, amusing himself with her ?—worst, most un- bearable of all, thinking lightly of her ? It is three hours—three long most miserable hours—since she first asked that question of herself, and through all the weary, dragging minutes that go to make up the sum of them, she has been asking it ever since, with a hundred different variations and never a certain answer. Out of the chaos of perplexity and misery that had assailed her with the first strong doubt of her lover, on two points alone had she neither wavered nor doubted. She could not go to him, could not look into his face nor touch his hand, while yet the sense of shame and wrong were so strong upon her: neither could she go back home to Dolly to meet the question in her eyes, and let her guess that the cautions and fears that she had so vehemently scorned when she had pre- sented them to her, had after all got the better of her. For three hours she holds fast to this resolution; for three long weary hours hides herself out of sight and sound of human eyes and voice in the thickest and loneliest tangle in the wood, sounding the depths of such pain and ahame as she has never before even guessed at in all her young life. And at the end of them, though she by no means abandons her resolution, it abandons her;—driven out, routed and van- quished by a feeling that is stronger than love, stronger than fear, stronger even than shame. It is three o'clock; an hour and a half past lunch-time, six hours since breakfast-time; and she is horribly, siekeningly, prosaically hungry. After all it is a poor satisfaction to feel that she is punishing Dolly, when she is punishing herself so much more. She will have to give in ; to go home, and let Dolly guess from her red eyes and her forlorn aspect that her glad and loudly-expressed belief in her lover has failed her; that she has lacked even the courage to go to him. Even to punish her—and in her heart she knows that she 84 unspotted from the world. wants to punish her—that she bears against her that indefin- able grudge that we mostly feel to those who open our eyes to unpleasant truths—she cannot starve. She rises to her feet—stiff and cramped from long sitting on the. grass—and, smoothing her tumbled chestnut head and her crumpled gown, looks about her. The way by which she came, forcing a path through briars and brambles, through trees and brushwood, looks an impossible one now. In her desire to hide herself she had pushed her way through them with a passionate insistance which had not allowed any obstacles to stand in her path. It is an altogether different thing to get back. Looking about her a little, she sees that it will be a shorter and easier way to get straight out of the wood into the high- road, and so round to the lodge gates; and there are so few who come up the little-used avenue, that once inside them it will be easy enough to get in unperceived. For the little piece of high-road that she will have to cross, it will be ill- luck indeed if she cannot get over that without meeting any- one. At any rate, it is clear that she must get out somehow— anyhow. Desperation makes her brave—and so, gathering up with one hand what remains of her pretty blue cotton gown, the best that her scanty wardrobe contains, and which with a reckless disregard of those to-morrows when there might be no gowns to wear, no lovers to meet, she had put on with so gay a confidence in the goodly hours stretching out before her —she fights her way through the jumble of boughs and branches with the other. When she finds herself at last out of the thick and shady wood, in the open scorching sunlight, there are several larger and more unmendable rents in her gown; a long and disfigur- ing scratch where a bramble has torn across her hand; her hair is loose, and her hat is off; *and still between her and the high-road is that very paling that Darrell had jumped the night before. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 85 She remembers, with a small and sickly smile, how she had wondered at his jump. Well! she wonders no less now. If it were not for a friendly gap where two palings have altogether gone to decay, and no one has taken the trouble to replace them, she might stay for ever on this side of it. But through that gap, by dint of squeezing and pushing, she manages to stand at last—not altogether safe and sound, it is true, but a good deal the worse for wear—on a narrow grassy path that is raised a little above the high-road, and runs alongside of it. The grass is so plentifully powdered with dust that it is nearer white than green, and the sun is scorching down upon it with so unblenching a glare that Psyche, coming from the shade of the wood, stands for a moment dazzled, with one hand above her eyes, trying to look ahead of her, and make sure that there is no one to see her in her present dilapidated condition. And as she so stands, she hears her name called aloud in a quick sharp voice of gladdest surprise—sees some one jump over a gate in the opposite hedge; and in a moment is face to face with the one person whom of all others she would have avoided! " At last!" cries Darrell, springing up the bank, his hand- some face alight with pleasure, being indeed so pleased at find- ing her after long searching that he does not for the moment perceive anything strange in her. " Do you know that I have been hunting for you high and low ? I waited all the morning at the stile. I give you my word I was hardly half an hour over lunch, and I have been looking for you ever since. I made sure you would be out of doors, and that if you were I should find you somehow. I have not missed a place. What have you been doing ?—Where have you been hiding your- self?" He stops suddenly, and regards her with a slowly-growing surprise and dismay, 86 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. "Has anything happened? " he asks quickly. "Tell me what prevented you from coming? " And she must speak—must answer him—though her heart is beating and throbbing to sickness; though her lips are quivering so that, do what she will, she cannot control them; though she would give all that she possesses—nay more, would barter a good many.of the days that a little while ago seemed so bright, that now seem so little worth the having—to get out of his presence. " If you remember," she says, struggling hard for a seemly composure, but not looking at him—looking anywhere, indeed, rather than into his face ; " I never said that I would come. On the contrary," with a brave attempt at a smile, that is not altogether successful, " I think I said that I would not." " If you said it," he answers hotly, " you never meant it—I will swear that you did not. And besides, that was before " He halts there. Whatever he has intended to say, he does not say it. Instead, he comes close to her, re- garding her with a new and most earnest scrutiny. " Some- thing is the matter," he says, in quick, changed tones. "You have been—yes ! I am sure of it—you have been crying! " And she does not answer him—she cannot. What good is there in telling him a lie when she knows that the marks of tears are written on her face so plainly that they who look cannot fail to see them ? "What is it?" he goes on eagerly, coming a step nearer and putting out his hand to try and take hers. " Tell me what has happened ! What is the matter? " But she withdraws herself from him, quietly ignoring his outstretched hand. " If I have been crying," she answers, with a coldness and dignity that are altogether new in his experience of her, " that is my affair—mine alone. I suppose we all have some troubles. I, for my part," with a small and bitter smile, "am not UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 87 going to deny that I have my full share of them. Will you let me pass, please." For a moment he hesitates. He knows that he would do well to accept her rebuff, and, emulating her pride, take her at her word and let her go. He knows that all the morning long he has been casting about in his mind as to the best and least heartless way of saying " Good-bye " to her for ever; and though his resolution has grown a good deal weaker, and his desire to see her a good deal stronger with the long waiting, yet the necessity remains. He has only to take her at her word and let her'pass, and he need never see her again. But for the life of him he cannot do it! The very fact that she on whose pliancy, on whose tender- ness, he had so surely counted, is not only willing but anxious to get away from him makes it the more impossible. Her resistance gives to the desperate fancy he already feels for her the one spark of genuine fire it has hitherto lacked. " Give me your assurance that it is your affair, and not mine," he says, planting himself in her path, with a look in his face and a tone in his voice which might convince her, if she had ever doubted it, how passionate it would be possible for him to be. "Tell me, on your word of honour, that 1 have had nothing to do with your tears, and I will let you go !" And at this question—which, indeed, from the imperious tone of it, sounds more like a command than a question—her face, from which the flush of surprise and dismay has long ago fled, turns yet a great deal paler—her breath comes quick and hard. For the space of a second or so, she, too, hesitates —driven into a comer. " How is it possible," she begins slowly, desperately resolved to stick fast to her pride and her dignity at any cost, " that you—that anyone " But the words, halting and lagging on her lips, die there unuttered. Her eyes, wandering uneasily to and fro, are 88 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. compelled by some subtle force to meet his, and meeting them, of a sudden, light into a fire that equals, nay, surpasses, the fire in his. "No ! " she cries, with a most passionate anger, no longer faltering or trembling—" I will not tell you a lie ! Before I knew you I might have been unhappy—there were times, I know, when I thought myself miserable—but until to-day," clenching her hands in front of her, " until to-day I never knew what it was to be ashamed ! " " Ashamed! " he echoes, in accents of profoundest dismay, while a sudden fear drives the healthy brown colour from his face, leaving him pale almost as she is. With a keen remembrance of his imprudence of the night before, he jumps, not unnaturally, to the conclusion that someone has overseen them, and that she has been made to suffer for his folly. That she should herself have betrayed herself does not enter into his calculations. "Who has dared to put such an idea into your head? Tell me," quickly and fiercely, " what you can possibly mean !" But to this she needs no entreaty. Her small and ill- fitting mask of pride and reserve once thrown aside, the words come quickly enough, following each other so fast that she can scarcely find voice for them. There is no difficulty in telling him the truth—the only difficulty has been in keeping it back from him. " Do you remember," she says, looking straight at him with her lovely, angry eyes, "how I asked you only yesterday morning if you were sure, quite sure, that in meeting you, and talking to you, I was not doing a very dreadful thing—and how you answered me ? " " I told you then, as I will tell you now—a thousand times over, if you like," he answers, with extraordinary heat, " that there was no harm in it. That no one," with vehement emphasis, " but a fool would see any harm in it! " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 89 " And last night," she goes on with a growing bitterness, altogether ignoring this assertion, " when you walked with me—when you would walk with me—for, after all, it was your doing—you told me much the same thing, and all the while— all the while," clasping and unclasping her hands with a passionate gesture, " you knew that I was doing a thing that no one but a girl who was so ignorant that she knew no better, or so reckless that she cared nothing what was thought of her, would have done — a thing," her voice rising with every word, " that, if it got to be talked about, might irrepar- ably injure me !" There is a pause—he does not speak. Still looking straight into his face, and seeing the change in it, she knows that for the moment he is too angry to speak. Then he comes a step nearer. " Who put those words into your mouth ? " he asks, in a voice that is so unlike his ordinary voice that it almost frightens her. " They are not your words, not your thoughts— that I will swear. Whose are they ? " But she will not permit herself to be frightened. "They are not my words, nor my thoughts ; that is true," she says, with a courageous aspect, but at the same time remembering with an inward-dismay that she has used the very words that she had so vehemently repudiated only a few hours ago. " If I had known it—if I had thought of it like that, is it likely I should have done it ? It was not until I told Dolly that I even knew I had done anything very foolish." " Do you mean," he asks slowly, astonishment getting the better of every other feeling, " that you, yourself, told your sister ? " " If there was no harm in it, why should I not tell her ? " she answers, with a little touch of dignity, which being this time a real dignity and not an assumed one, does not sit badly on her. *'You told her everything?" he says, still in intense sur- go UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. prise, still trying to grasp this new and unexpected view of the situation, and without thinking how she may take the question. There is a moment's silence—a horrible and painful silence on the girl's part. The colour, of which hunger and emotion have almost completely robbed her, comes back to her face in a burning flush—a cruel flush, that mounts to her . very forehead—and for the first time her eyes drop before his. "Almost everything," she says after a moment, very low— so low that he can only guess at the words. Then, before he lias time to speak, or indeed to think what it shall be best for him to say and do under this new aspect of affairs, she lifts her eyes and speaks again so eagerly, so hur- riedly, that he cannot, if he would, stop her. " I had never meant to tell you—I never intended to say these things to you," she goes on, still with that painful flush upon her face. " During all these hours since Dolly told me — since I have been beginning to understand that she was right and I was wrong, all wrong, I have been trying to makeup my mind that I would hide myself away from you, and let you go away and forget that you ever knew me. Do not think," try- ing to lift her heavy, shamed eyes to meet his, " that I blame you—or at least," with that natural honesty of which she finds it difficult to rid herself, " not altogether. It is my own folly, my own ignorance, that I ought to blame—not you. No doubt," with a small and bitter smile, " you have only done what any other man would have done, if he had encountered a girl so foolish, so ignorant, as you have found me." There is a moment's pause. But a minute ago there had seemed no end to the many bitter words she might say to him—outcome of the many bitter thoughts which have been her portion during the last most wretched hours; but already the passionate force which made the saying of them possible begins to fail her. Already her courage, but a little while ago so strong within her, waxes faint in the face of his resolute silence and stern aspect. UNSPOi FED FROM THE WORLD. 91 " Go on," he says briefly, standing before her with folded arms and knitted brows. " Have you any mofe to say ? When you have said it, then I will answer you." " There is nothing more that can be said between us," she answers, faltering a little, and with a sudden childish quiver of her pretty mouth that goes near to softening his anger, " except —' Good-bye.' Now that I know what you have thought— what you must have thought of me all along—I could not bear to see you again. I should be too ashamed." Then lifting her heavy eyes, from which the light of passion has died out, leaving them dull and sad and very weary, she looks once more into his face. "There is but one thing I should like to ask you," she says, in a voice that trembles audibly, in spite of all her efforts to control it, " that when you have gone right away, you will think of me, if you ever think of me at all, as a girl who was ignorant and foolish, and very thoughtless, but who did not mean," with a sudden sob catching her breath—" who never meant to be as bad as you thought her." So saying, she turns away. There is no more to be said be- tween them, so she thinks ; and the one desire, the only desire that is for the moment left to her is to get away out of his presence before the small remnant of self-restraint that yet remains to her deserts her utterly. " Stay ! " he cries, springing after her, and laying his hand upon her so that he compels her to stop. " Did you think I was going to let you leave me like that ? Good heavens ! " draw- ing her round, and making her face him, "is it possible—is it barely possible—that you meant all that you said ?—that even a woman's ingenuity could so warp and distort the truth ? " But at the touch of his hands, at the sound of his voice, the tears with which she has been so bravely struggling get the better of her, and one or two overflowing run down her cheeks beyond concealment, and at sight of them all that is left of his anger—which has been, after all, mostly anger against himself 92 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. and his own exceeding folly in bringing this trouble on her— dies utterly. " Do not cry—for God's sake stop crying !" he says, in a voice that has no longer a suspicion of harshness, that is on the contrary exceedingly gentle and tender. "If there has been any blame in the matter, it has been mine, not yours. Don't you understand," trying to draw her closer to him, " that I have never thought of you—shall never think of you —but as the sweetest, most innocent, most loveable " But the words die on his lips. His eyes, seeking hers with a passionate tenderness, change slowly to a dismayed and hor- rifled stare, and he drops her hands and starts away from her as though he had been shot. And she, looking up and following the direction of his eyes with a startled and bewildered gaze, sees quickly enough the cause of this change. A large open carriage, bowling swiftly and silently along the soft dusty road, has turned the corner of the lane, and is, in fact, almost alongside of them before they, full of their own thoughts, have been aware of its approach. She has neither the time nor the presence of mind to school her face or her attitude into the semblance of a decent conven- tionality; no time even to wipe away the tears that are wet upon her cheeks. She is indeed too startled to do anything but stand stock-still, stupidly staring at it until it is gone. It is a very well-appointed carriage; but the couple of sleek and well-fed horses, the couple of equally sleek and well-fed servants, whose eyes—having no doubt taken in the whole scene at a glance, are at this moment discreetly averted— leave no impression on her. She sees only, or is conscious only, of the one solitary occupant of it. A little old man, a very little old man he looks to her, being so burried, even on this summer day, among wraps and pillows, with a thin, small, vicious-looking face—a face that appears to her as being exceedingly worn and very old— UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. §3 pitiably old—with the one exception of the eyes. The eyes give the lie to the rest of the features. They are young eyes, bright and dark and extraordinarily sharp, and brimful of malice and wickedness. They look from Darrell to Psyche and then back again, resting on her with a glance that conveys to her an infinite amusement at her expense, and at the same time manages to combine with it a leer of contemptuous admiration. Not all the words he could have spoken could make her understand more clearly what he thinks of her, and how he has inter- preted the little scene he has had the misfortune to interrupt. No insult could sting her more cruelly than the insult of his look; could make her more vividly, ashamedly conscious of the strangeness of her appearance, and of the whole situation. With limbs that tremble with sudden sickness, and dazed, wide-open eyes, she watches dully until the carriage is well out of sight; then her look slowly seeks Darrell's. "That"—she says, with a dangerous calm, raising one hand and pointing in the direction in which the carriage has disappeared, " is your uncle ? " " That," he answers with a little sneer and a face that is white almost as hers, " is my sweet-tempered, sweet-spoken, amiable uncle." " And," she goes on, still in the hard strained voice that is so unlike her ordinary voice, " he saw me like this," with a little gesture that seems to indicate and emphasise all the details of her forlorn appearance, "like this—holding your hands, and crying in a public road in the middle of the day !" "No doubt," he answers, laughing aloud, "but he saw you. There is not much," with venomous emphasis, " that escapes his eyes !" It is, as a matter of fact, a very miserable laugh. There is little of mirth or jollity in it—or if there is any mirth, it is of 94 unspotted from the world. that bitter sort that sometimes forces a man, even in the most critical or tragical crisis of his life, to see the farcical side of it. But it is chiefly the irrepressible vent of an unbearable vexa- tion, an uncontrollable irritation. If he had not laughed he must have cursed himself for the unpardonable folly which had brought himself and her to such a pass—must have cursed the old man who had chosen this day out of all days in the year to take a drive—this road out of all roads in the country for the direction of it. Since he could not curse, he had laughed. But she cannot understand that. His laugh is the crowning point of all the miserable hours she has endured since morning—the one overflowing drop in the bitter cup of her wretchedness and shame. She finds in it an indisputable proof of the heartlessness which she had not until now, in spite of all doubts, believed possible in him. She turns on him a look of such pain and reproach and unspeakable indignation as might well wound a man, eveh-as heartless as she takes him to be; and then without another word, good or bad, turns her back upon him : and since it is not possible to pass him on the narrow path on which they stand, or without passing him to get home by the way she intended to go, retraces her steps, and, pushing through the broken paling which had seemed so difficult to pass a few minutes ago, but which now forms but a trifling obstacle to her passionate strength, she forces her way through trees and brushwood, until she comes to a small open clearing,- and then—there being no longer any need for her strength, she allows it to desert her, and throwing herself prone on the ground, and burying her face in .her out-flung arms, out of sight even of the quietly waving tree-tops, the glimpse of tranquil summer sky over-head-^falls to passionate, irrestrain- able weeping—such weeping as for the moment carries with it its own consolation, and deadens both thought and feeling, or, indeed, anything and everything but the sound of her own sobs. unspotted from the world. 95 CHAPTER X. It is Darrell's voice that brings her back to consciousness. "Do not cry," he says, in tones that are rough and harsh from excess of feeling. "I want you to listen to me. For heaven's sake ! " seeing that she still goes on, " stop crying ! Upon my word—upon my soul—there is nothing to cry about." She tries to obey him—tries bravely, being not a little humiliated to think that he has followed her—that all the while, when she has thought herself alone, he has been listen- ing to her—but her sobs have by this time reached that stage when they are well-nigh beyond control. And his remonstrance having no effect, he stands for a moment silent, looking down on her. He has seen a good many women cry in his time, but not one whose tears have moved him as hers do. As a matter of fact, when he thinks of her as he saw her first, so bright and joyous, and full of a certain gladness of life which not all the sadness and loneliness of her childhood had been able to touch, and remembers that he has brought her to this, they move him so greatly that he is for the moment unwilling to trust himself to speech. And it is she who breaks the silence, raising herself and sitting erect, but still so shielding her face with her two hands that she may hide its disfigurement from him. "I know," she says in a voice that is still dull, and muffled with many tears,—"that there is no reason I should cry, or at least," faltering, " that there is no good in it, and I never was One to cry much—never. I do not think," with a furtive glance from the shelter of her fingers to see how he takes this assertion, " that I ever cried in all my life so much as I have cried to-day; but to-day," with a sob that is strangled at its birth, " everything has conspired against me. I am tired and faint, and oh t" with so sudden, so earnest an appeal, that she 96 unspotted from the World. forgets even the unlovely marks of tears on her lovely face, and looks straight up into his—" if you would only leave me—if you would only leave me to myself! " " No! " he cries, with a sudden passionate light in his eyes, and in a voice so clear and strong that it seems to echo through the silence of the wood. " That is the last thing I mean to do. On the contrary, I mean"—throwing himself down by her side, and stretching out his hands to her—"I mean, if you will let me, to stay with you always." But she does not answer him—indeed, she cannot. The change from a terrible heart-sickness, whose cause she has but dimly comprehended and only instinctively felt, to something that, though seen as yet only afar off, yet looks so like happi- ness, is too swift and too strange to be quickly realised. She falls a-trembling, and her face, white enough before, becomes white as a dead face. " You have suffered enough through me," he goes on, with the strong excitement of a great and desperate resolution, only finally arrived at during the last few minutes. "Well, now you shall suffer no more; or at least," with an obtrusive remembrance of all that lies before them, "it shall be only such suffering as even my love cannot spare you. There shall be no more sorrow, no more humiliation, that I shall not share with you." But even yet she does not speak—not a word; even yet her small white hands, closely prisoned in his strong brown ones, tremble in his clasp. But in her big, wide eyes there dawns, as she looks half-incredulously, half-believingly, at this new, strange, unrealisable gladness, a light, than which, it seems to him, he has never seen anything lovelier. It pays him even for the enormous sacrifice he contemplates. Though it may cost him dearly enough—how dearly, he does not at that moment care to consider—he exults in the thought that he has the power to make her happy. It confirms him in his desperate resolution—whether it be right or wrong, wise or foolish—at any and every cost to purchase that power. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. §7 He does not wait for any answer to his last words, or, indeed, ask for any. He probably understands her too thoroughly to need that she should speak. " I do not mean to tell you," he goes on, full of his own thoughts, " I do not mean to deny to you that I meant to leave you. Even last night, when I kissed you," with a sudden flush, that does not misbecome him, " I had no right to do it, for even then—even all this morning—I meant to go away without telling you that I loved you. Well!" with a long- drawn breath, "it was hard enough then—God knows. It is impossible now!" And feeling that at these words, her hands—lying until now willingly enough in his—make an effort to release themselves, he only clasps them the tighter, and draws her a little closer to him. " My dear," he says, looking with passionate fondness into hei face, which, in spite of the traces of tears, seems to him the prettiest he has ever seen, "there is no one in all the world, no beggar that you may meet in the roads, who has less right to ask you to be his wife than I have. Even the beggar," with a reckless laugh, " is better off than I am, for he has, at least, no debts. And even if I were rich, I suppose that your people and mine would be all against me. And yet—and yet," his voice rising, his face glowing with passionate fervour, " in spite of everything and everybody—will you stick to me, will you take the chances with me—only poor, bare chances, my darling, that someday, somehow, in the time to come we may be married ? " And so saying, he releases her hands, as if he would in no way constrain her, and drawing back a little, looks at her— waiting. And for the first time she lifts her eyes to his, and over her face there slowly spreads an exquisite smile—a smile of un- speakable tenderness—of passionate, child-like exultation. " Ah !" she says with a little cry, and a laugh that is half a a g8 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. sob. " You love me after all!"—and stretches back her hands to him. But he does not take them. He takes her to his arms in- stead, and for a moment—one of those moments that go far to atone for all the evil ones in a lifetime—they are silent. It is to her that the first chill doubt creeps in. He, for his part, has flung doubts to the winds, and being perfectly con- scious that he has done an exquisitely foolish thing, has at least the philosophy to enjoy it to the utmost. " Are you sure ? " she say's after a little, raising her head from his shoulder, and drawing back a pace or two the better to see his face—" are you quite sure that you do love me ; that you are not only saying it because," with a deepening of the lovely rose-flush that happiness has brought to her cheeks, "I cried—because you are sorry for me ? " But as she asks it she looks into his eyes, and sees that in them which even a woman who did not love him would scarcely doubt. Indeed in the exaltation of the moment all the best of him lies uppermost; all that is most unselfish, most noble, most genuine. " Am I sure ? " he answers with a joyous laugh, drawing her back to him. " I am sure of nothing, except that I love you. I think," gently touching the little soft curls that lie about her forehead, with an exquisite pleasure in the sense that his touch is no longer an indiscretion, " that I must have loved you from the very first minute I saw you, standing in a puddle, with the rain dripping off the brim of your hat." She is not difficult to convince. Indeed, conviction is so pleasant to her that any doubts of him have but a poor chance. They can, at best, lift up their voices in feeble protest against a power that is stronger than they; and if there remains any lurking sense that she has surrendered to this power over quickly, over completely for reason or prudence, the fervour UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. 99 of his ffianner, the undeniable conviction that he does love her quickly enough gets the better of it. " Do you know," he says, by-and-by, breaking one of those silences which lovers never find wearisome, and during which he has been counting over her many beauties with the first strong pride of personal possession; "that you, with your coloured hair, have no right to such dark eyes? Some women," laughing, " spend half their lives in trying to ape the colours you have arrived at without any trouble or merit of your own. By-the-by," gaily, " what colour are your eyes ? Now I think of it, you have not given me much chance of seeing them." " Does anyone know the colour of their own eyes ?" she answers, laughing too, and trying to lift them, and finding it not a little difficult. " Let me look," he demands, briefly. But, looking, he forgets to think about the colour of them. "'Sweetest eyes were ever seen,'" he says, gently under his breath, touching them with his lips. Then after a minute he goes on still in the same tone. " And all this while you have never said that you love me. As a matter of fact," smiling, " I have not much doubt of it. I have a notion that you would not be sitting with me here— like this—unless you did ; but all the same, I have a fancy to hear you say it. Come !" seeing that she hesitates, " will you not say it to please me?" - " How can I tell ?" she says presently, moving uneasily, embarrassed, and a little frightened by the ardour of his look. " How can I be sure that I know what love is ? After all," with some attempt at spirit, " it is no great flattery to say that I prefer you, for I never knew any other man—any young man—so that it cannot rightly be called a preference at all." Then perceiving with the quick sensitiveness of a woman who is so much in love that she would prefer to be wounded rather than to wound, that he has drawn back, hurt and angry, 100 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. she swiftly abandons her playfulness for a tenderness that is, after all, more natural to her. " What is it," she asks slowly, with a smile that softens, nay, disperses, his anger, " that people call being in love ? Is it," very softly—" is it to feel that your presence, your touch, your look are so pleasant, so desirable to me, that when I am with you no danger, no evil, seems possible to me, but all the world as bright as heaven ? Is it," with the tears springing unbidden to her eyes, "is it to feel that when I am away from you the sense of your love can make dull hours bearable, sad hours sweet?—to count over the minutes that may bring me back to you, to long for you, to care for you with all my heart—is that love ? " Her words and her look give him a pang of reproach so keen that he feels his own eyes suddenly moist. " Something so like it," he says briefly, drawing her back to him, " that it will do for me." And the moments go by uncounted.. She forgets that she is tired—forgets that she is hungry. She is, indeed, no longer either the one or the other. Whatever evils the future may hold for her, whatever the difficulties that may be ahead of her— difficulties of which she knows little and* cares less—she is, for the moment, perfectly and entirely content. Indeed, there seems little more to be asked of fate than that which she has already obtained. It is only the sudden striking of the clock that warns her that the minutes which have but one measure for the happy and for the unhappy, for those that laugh and for those that weep, have lengthened themselves out into hours in a manner that seems barely credible. " Five o'clock ! " she cries, starting to her feet, and remem- bering with an exceeding dismay that since the passing of Sir Adrian's carriage had turned the balance of her fortunes in a manner that its owner had certainly not counted on, she had never given one thought, either good or bad, to Dolly, or what UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. ioi Dolly might be thinking of her. " Dolly will have given me up for lost! In a little while," hastily putting on her hat over her ruffled bronze hair, " she will be looking for my remains!" Then she remembers in what different fashion she had pre- pared to go home two hours ago. Is it possible, barely possible, that she can be the same girl, who, with heart heavy as lead, tear-stained eyes and forlorn aspect, left this very spot so little while back ? " And to think that after all—after all," she says, with a smile of radiant exultation, " I shall be able to tell her that I was right and she was wrong ! " Darrell has risen too, and up to this moment has been looking down at her with an expression, which, if he had discovered it on the face of any of his acquaintance, he would have /considered one of fatuous and besotted tenderness. But at her words it changes considerably, and a good deal of the softness disappears. " On the contrary," he says, very quickly, and with no lack of decision either in his look or accent, " you must do nothing of the kind. Have I not made you understand that you must tell no one—least of all your sister ? " Psyche's face falls. He sees or suspects a little quiver at the corners of her mouth. After all, the greatest happiness in the world loses part of its charm if one may not share it with someone else; if one must keep the secret of it absolutely locked, up in one's own keeping. " Least of all, Dolly !" she repeats, in tones of undisguised disappointment. " Surely I must have belied her. I must somehow have managed to give you a wrong impression of of her. If she has misjudged you," looking straight at him with her lovely, candid eyes, " if she has thought badly of you, it was because she could not understand that you," with a smile of innocent flattery, "could really love me. I assure you," most earnestly, " that there is no one—no one in all 102 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. world that will be more ready, more glad to acknowledge her- self wrong than Dolly will be." " I am greatly obliged to her," he answers, with a peculiar smile; " but all the same, we will not try her. For the present, at all events, I must endeavour to bear her bad opinion of me." Then, seeing that she is going to speak, that there are evidently a dozen entreaties and arguments all ready at the end of her tongue, he takes her hand and draws her to him. "My dear," he says, very gently and yet with undeniable firmness, "if we are to have any chance at all—and, God knows, I have not deceived you, that it is but a poor one—we must keep our secret to ourselves. We will not talk about difficulties and troubles to-day—this one day at least shall be a pleasant one in our memories; but to-morrow, if you will come to me at the stile where we have sometimes met — where we will meet once more at any rate—we will look them in the face. I have a right to ask you to meet me now, have I not, Psyche ? " Then seeing that there is still a little trouble on her lovely, tell-tale face, he stoops and looks at her with all the tender- ness of which his handsome blue eyes are capable. " Is it so difficult," he asks with some reproach, " to choose between Dolly and me ? " And when it comes to that he knows before she answers him that Dolly has not a chance. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 103 CHAPTER XI. The day that follows Darrell's rash and unpremeditated avowal is the first of June, and though all the later days of May have been fair enough, this one, perhaps, beats them all. Though the sun has the heat of midsummer, there remains in the freshness of the air some lingering remembrance of spring. It blows softly in at the open casement windows, and gently ruffles the faded old curtains and the sleek, brown hair of the girl who is sitting in the window-seat. But it might be the dullest, murkiest, saddest day of sad November, for all she, Dorothy Dalrymple, sees of it. For once in her life she is absolutely idle; for once in her life the sober, steadfast cour- age with which she has faced more weary, hopeless days than fall to the lot of most women, has deserted her. Her sad eyes, fixed on vacancy, are dull with fear and heart-sickness ; mind and heart are full of a protest that is too despairing to be passionate. Even the opening of the door does not rouse her. Old Andrew, looking in, does not at first perceive her, so still is she—so silent. Then he catches a glimpse of her grey gown behind the curtain, and comes a step or two nearer. . "Sir John Heathcote is in the drawing-room, ma'am. I showed him in there, as I thought you was with master." She rises to her feet; she does not spring to them, as Psyche would do. The impulsiveness of youth has been long ago knocked out of her, and into her face there comes back some of the light which had been for a little time lost. " I will go to him," she says, quietly; and she goes. He is standing leaning against the window, and looking out across the weedy terrace, the unkempt flower-beds, the ill-kept park, where Psyche and Darrell had wandered the night before—not a cheerful prospect, even on this summer 104 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. day, to a man whose mind inclines to order and regularity— but he turns as she enters, and comes to meet her. " I am glad yqu have come," she says simply, giving him her hand, and her eyes and her whole manner say it no less than her words. One look into his kindly, honest face seems to have brought back the confidence and courage which for a little while had deserted her. Standing there, with the strong unblenching light of the summer-day full upon her face, he sees her at her best. There are women who by no means look their best in day- light; to whom an artificial light, softening defects, heighten- ing attractions, lends a charm and a brilliancy of which the hard, unflattering daylight robs them. But Dorothy is not one of these. Her fair, colourless skin, her unwrinkled brow and soft brown hair, though they might pale to insignificance before the meretricious charms of a ball-room beauty, can stand the fiercest glare without betraying a flaw or defect. Looking at her as she stands there, Sir John finds in her the perfect embodiment of his ideal woman. Of all those attractive qualities which to his maturer judgment seem most desirable in a woman, she lacks none. The innocent eyes the pure and tender mouth, the gentle reticent manner, are, in his eyes, just what they should be. He understands that no man living could desire a fairer, sweeter wife, and that he, who has given the best years of his life and his love to another woman, has no right to expect half so good an one ; and yet —such is the perversity of human nature—he can hold her hand in his with no more quickening of his pulses than if it were the hand of his mother or his sister. " I told you 1 should come again soon," he answers to her greeting; " that you would see so much of me you would be tired of me. If for nothing else, I should have come to make my peace with Psyche. Do you know, Dorothy," with a grim, half-comical smile, " that I have a notion that, after all, I am only an ill-conditioned sort of fellow; that I have UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. 105 knocked about the world so long in my own society that I am fit for no other ? I must have seemed like a brute to her the other day. Well," with a long breath, as if he has un- burthened himself by the confession, " I have come to ask her tof orgive me—to make friends with her, as I promised you." "You have come too late !" she answers slowly, all the light dying suddenly out of her face. " Psyche is going away." There is a little break between the words. He understands that they mean so much to her that even the saying of them is difficult " Going away! " he echoes, surprisedly. " I thought that she had come home for good! " " And it was because I thought so, it was with that one hope, that I have been able to live without her all these years," she answers, with a warmth that is altogether foreign to her. " Always, always, I have said to myself, ' It cannot be for ever.' Some day she must come back. Some day I shall have her, and keep her. But," dropping into a chair, and letting her hands fall into her lap with a small, sad smile, "it seems that even that is to be denied to me." It is the nearest approach to a complaint that, through all the years he has known her, he has heard from her lips. Coming from her, it carries a greater force than the most passionate protest of another woman. It moves him greatly. After all, if he does not love her, he is not far from it. "Tell me about it," he says, drawing a chair close to hers, and with so much concern in his look and his manner as might convince her of his interest, even if she doubted it. " How has it happened ? " " I had hoped that things were going on better with us," she says simply. " I thought that father was getting more used to Psyche. I had even "—with a poor little smile— " begun to hope that he must in time grow fond of her. It 10(5 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. seems so impossible, does it not, that anyone should live with her, and not be fond of her ? " He makes a grave assent to the glance which seems to appeal for confirmation to this question. " Well," she goes on, with a heavy sigh, " as it turns out, I was mistaken, miserably mistaken, for all the while he was planning to get rid of " her. It is not often he writes a letter without consulting me, but this time he told me nothing of what he was doing. He knew," with some bitterness, " that I should never have consented. But I do not believe—I cannot believe—that when it came to the point he would really have had the heart to send her away from me, but for a most un- fortunate accident." " An accident ? " " It was nothing more than an accident; it was neither her fault nor his," she goes on quickly, and in a voice that shows how greatly the telling of it moves her. "We were going out —father and I; and I had forgotten to get him a flower. You know," looking up with something she means for a smile, " how much he thinks of these little things. Psyche had one that she had meant to give me, and she offered it to him." " Surely," in accents of profound astonishment, " that could not have offended him ? " " It seems," dropping her voice and looking around her as if she were afraid of being overheard, " that on the very day my mother died she gave him a flower, standing—so far as I can understand—on the very same spot, and with the very same words." " That was unfortunate," he says gravely. " But, after all," more lightly, " he can attach no importance to such a trifle." There is a moment's silence. " On the contrary," she says presently, controlling her voice by an apparent effort, " he—cursed her ! He has never seen her since. I think," very slowly, very sadly, "he will never, if he can help it, see her again." UNSPO TTED FROM THE WORLD. 107 " It is impossible ! " he cries, starting up, with a disgust he does not attempt to conceal. " Good heavens ! it is brutal, it is incredible, that a man should carry a resentment like that beyond the grave! " They are both silent then; he, pacing up and down the room with his hands thrust in his pockets; she, with one arm resting on the back of her chair and her hand over her eyes. It is he who speaks first. " What does he mean to do with her?" he asks, with the strong indignation of a man who witnesses an injustice he is unable to avert. " Poor child ! Where is she to go ? " " That is the worst of it," says Dolly, dropping her hand and fixing her miserable eyes upon his. " He has arranged it all. She is to go—to Grannie." The last two words come slowly, as though she has a great aversion to them. " I suppose,—- no doubt," she goes on, seeing the puzzled expression on his face, " you did not even know we had a grandmother. She is my mother's mother—Lady Conynghame. Perhaps," regarding him keenly and doubtfully, " you have heard of her ? " "Yes," after a moment, "I have heard of her." " And," with a sudden sharp ring in her voice, "you have heard no good ? " For the space of a second he hesitates. Then he comes and sits down again by her side and looks her bravely in the face. "At any rate," he answers quietly, "I have not heard much that is bad. You know that I go little enough into society; but I fancy she is a woman who is pretty well known. A woman of the world—a woman of fashion; who has been a little bit talked about, a little bit laughed at, perhaps, because she has arrived at an age when folly finds less excuse. Upon my word, upon my honour," answering the miserable question- ing of her eyes, "that is the worst I know of her." " A woman who paints her face and spends her last penny on her back—at seventy ! " cries Dorothy, with a bitterness hitherto unknown to her—" who passes her nights at balls and io8 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. card-tables, her days in amusement—and it is to her I am to give Psyche!" Heathcote, looking at her with some amazement, realises for the first time something of the strength of that affection which will turn the sweetest woman's nature into gall. " Do not you think," he says, with a kindly attempt at cheer- fulness, "that you are looking at the worst side of things? After all," with a reassuring smile, " what can you, who see so little of the world, really know of Lady Conynghame? You can only judge from hearsay, and that is not, as you know, much to be relied upon." " I know, at any rate," she answers, with that same half- subdued passion—the passion that being latent in most women's hearts, needs but the appearance of danger to one that is loved and protected, to spring into life—"what father has told me of her. Until now," with a sorrowful shake of her head, "he has not had a good word to say of her. When my mother died they quarrelled outright—he and Grannie—and he has neither seen her nor written to her until now. I know," dropping her voice as though she were conscious of some indiscretion in the confidence, " that he wanted her to take charge of Psyche then, and she refused. She said," naively, "that she had not enough money to keep herself." " One would think," says Heathcote with matter-of-fact sense, "that the same objection would hold good now." "Only," says the girl with a bitterness that almost escapes control as she thinks of the old woman that is to have the charge of her sister, and the nature of the compact that has been made with her, " this time he has offered her money." He looks up quickly. " I did not know that he had "—then he halts suddenly—"any to offer" he had been going to say, " I mean that I did not think—I did not suppose," he goes on stammeringly, " that he had much to spare." Evidently she finds nothing strange in the suggestion. He has, indeed, been so long behind the scenes in her life, so UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. log often consulted in those matters of business of which she has so little experience and less knowledge, that he knows, almost as well as she does, the state to which a reckless thoughtless- ness, and some still more reckless speculations have reduced Mr. Dairymple's affairs. "There was a small sum of money that was left to my mother," she answers him simply and literally. "It was left to her after her marriage; but father, though he has wanted money badly enough, as you know, would never touch a penny of it. He has offered it to Grannie now to pay all Psyche's expenses, and she has written to-day and accepted, condition- ally. She will take her for a year; but at the end of the year if she is not married, she must return home." There is a moment's pause. Then after a moment, lifting her sad and anxious eyes to his face, " We," faltering a little—" we know what that means ! " It is more a question than an assertion, or so he takes it. " It means," he says in a cheerful voice, sticking with a praiseworthy resolution to a rose-coloured view of the subject, but at the same time feeling an unaccountable disinclination to meet her eyes; " that she will have every opportunity to marry, and that with her advantages and good looks she will no doubt marry well." " To marry well in Grannie's sense, does not mean to marry well in yours or mine," she says in quick, shaken tones. " What chance has she against the schemes of an old woman like that?" But to this he makes no answer. He pushes back his chair, and begins again to pace up and down the room. He has, in fact, come to the end of his resources. When a woman is determined not to be consoled it is difficult enough to offer her consolation. He is horribly sorry for her. He likes her so well, and has admired so greatly her simple and unselfish life, that there is nothing, within the limits of reason, he would not do to serve her; but at the no Unspotted from the world♦ same time, just because he is so sorry for her, he would give a good deal to be a hundred miles away at this present moment. Life presents no harder trial to a man of his temperament than the looking on at troubles he is unable to avert. When his restless walk brings him facing her, he sees that she has risen too and is standing with clasped hands and dilated eyes. " There is but one chance, one hope left to me," she says in eager, tremulous tones, " and they rest with you." Then seeing and understanding the surprise in his face—"You know," she goes on, so eagerly, so quickly that he cannot, if he would, say a word, " that you have always had more influence with father than anyone else.' He has always liked you; he has often listened to you when he would listen to no one else. If you would speak to him now—if you would tell him that Grannie is no fit person to be trusted with a young girl, he might believe you. I "—faltering—" I hardly like to ask you, but it is a chance—and," looking at him most imploringly, "it is my very last one." He does not immediately answer her. It is indeed no easy task that she has set him. Though Mr. Dalrymple has allowed, if not thanked him for his help in these matters of business, of which he is avowedly ignorant as a baby, he may well resent his interference in his more personal affairs. But, after all, there are few tasks, hard or easy, that he could not attempt for Dorothy's sake. His hesitation lasts but a moment. " If indeed you think " he begins. But she interrupts him. " I do not think—I do not even hope," she says incoher- ently ; " only if you will try!" "Yes," he answers quietly, "I will try." Then, more lightly, " As a matter of fact, if he sends me out of the room, and tells me to mind my own business, I should think that he is in the right of it; but all the same, I will try." Then, being of opinion that a disagreeable task having to be unspotted from the world. ill done, is best done quickly: "Shall I go now? Will he see me?" She nods assent, and he goes. At the door he turns. " I shall be back very soon1," he says with a cheerfulness he does not altogether feel. " Will you wait for me ? " And she waits. She hardly knows how long it is. The minutes go by uncounted; they might be hours for all she knows. But whatever she suffers, whatever her impatience, she gives no outward sign of it. She has long ago learned to control the visible expressions of her feelings. She stands against the window, with hands clasped, looking out—waiting. It is, in fact, but a quarter of an hour, reckoned by the clock, when the door opens again and he comes in, shutting it after him—and looking round sharply, she knows, before he speaks, how his mission has ended. He comes over to the window. " It was no good," shaking his head, " he would not even listen to me." Then seeing and comprehending the change in her face—" I wish," he says gently, coming a little closer to her, "that I could persuade you that, after all, it may be better for her. I am sure, from what I have seen," hesitating a little-as he recalls, not pleasantly, the interview that has just passed, " she has small chance of happiness here. After all," cheerfully, " is it not possible that she may get on very well with Lady Conynghame ? " For a moment she does not answer—he understands that for that moment speech is difficult to her—that she has reckoned on this last chance more than she imagined. Then she lifts her eyes and looks at him. " If—you had lived for a great many years—lonely and un- happy years," she says, with a trembling of her voice she can- not entirely conceal, " with but one hope, you would under- stand how hard it is to part with it." 112 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. Then, after a minute's silence, she suddenly stretches out her hands to him, trying very hard to smile. " I have troubled and distressed you enough," she says, in an altogether different voice. " I will trouble you no more ! I will only," with shining eyes, " thank you with all my heart for trying to serve me." The smile is so brave and so pitiful that he feels he would a good deal rather see her cry. It touches him to the heart. As he holds her soft white hands in his, and looks down into her sweet and troubled face, he is conscious of a stronger emotion than any he has felt for a great many years. To look on at her distress and be impotent to serve her galls him beyond measure. He would, at that moment, give all that he possesses to be able to gain for her her heart's desire. And in the space of these few seconds, while he silently holds her hands, a thought, long dormant perhaps in his mind, and needing but the touch of some strong feeling to quicken it, springs into life. He has loved a woman once, desperately and passionately; but with such love—with the folly and the sweetness of it—he has done for ever, so he thinks. He knows that a man could trust his happiness to no truer, sweeter, purer hands than these he holds within his own; and that in one way—and that way alone—can he help her, can he protect her, and give her the right to keep her sister with her always. The thought that he possesses the power to give her happiness stirs and quickens his heart with something that, if it is not love, is, at any rate, so like it that he is willing to take it for it. Into his grave, quiet face there comes a light, the like of which she has never seen there before. His hands close on hers with a grasp that unconsciously grows stronger. "Dorothy!" he says suddenly—impulsively. "There is but one way. If you—if I " But the words, coming quickly and incoherently—for the UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. thought that forms them has indeed but yet barely shaped itself—die on his lips, and he drops her hands and starts away from her. The door has opened slowly and so quietly that they have not heard it, and old Andrew's grizzly head and burly form appear in the doorway. " If you please, ma'am, the master wishes you to come to him at once. He," with emphasis, " has rung his bell twice." They all know what that means. It is a bell whose constant demands on her time and attention she has never denied. She has no thought of denying it now. " I must go," she says quickly and nervously. " I must not keep him waiting." Glancing at her, he sees that she is very pale—deadly pale —and that her eyes do not meet his; but he does not know— he cannot tell—whether she has understood or even guessed what he had been going to say to her. He makes no attempt to detain her. He is vaguely irritated and annoyed at the interruption, but it is not the strong irrita- tion of a man who is so hotly in love that he grudges a moment's delay. He notices that she does not ask him to stay, and that on the other hand she takes no formal leave of him. But in the hurry of going to her father she may well have overlooked that. When she is gone, he takes a few turns up and down the room, and then, finding the restraint irksome to him, he goes out on to the terrace. After all, what he has meant to say to her can be as well said at any time. As a matter of fact, when he finds himself out in the fresh air, with plenty of time to think, his first feeling is one of dis- tinct relief that he has not on the rash impulse of a moment, pledged himself to the fidelity of a life-time. It has always been one of his strongest opinions—and his opinions are by no means weak ones—that a man has no right to ask a woman to marry him unless he is able to give her of H H4 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. his best. For that reason, if for no other, has he, for a great many years past, put all thoughts of marriage from him. He has told himself that he has done with love, and love has done with him—and yet on that summer morning, with the shining of the sun on all the land, with the voice of the sing- ing-birds sounding pleasantly in his ears, and the perfume of the flowers sweet in his nostrils—a great and inexpressible longing fills his heart and stirs in his veins. He is a young man yet—and that the passion and glory of love should be for ever gone from him seems at that moment horribly hard to him. He knows then that neither esteem nor respect, tenderness nor pity can in any way fill the place of that love, which, whether wise or foolish, good or bad, justifiable or unjustifia- ble, leaves yet no room for doubt as to its existence, no choice but to follow withersoever it leads; and that such love as' that he has never had—never will have—for Dorothy Dal- rymple. And yet—on the impulse of the moment, with a rash hot- headedness which he might well have believed himself to have outlived—he had been near mistaking pity and sympathy for it! Before half an hour is gone he is ready to thank heaven with all his heart that he has been saved from the horrible mistake into which his own egregious folly had so nearly led him. And those interrupted words—he hardly knows himself how far they would have led him—are destined to remain for ever among the long list of those whose hindered utterance has changed the character of so many lives. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. "5 CHAPTER XII. And while Sir John paces the weedy terrace, ; the weedier paths of Mr. Dalrymple's ill-kept garden, there are two people, not a great way off from him, whom, if he could see them at that moment, he might find it in his heart to envy. Theyare both young, both full of health and spirits, and both as thoroughly and completely in love as any man and woman on whom the sun of that first June day shines down so royally. For one of them, at least, her whole life—not all that is past of it nor all that is yet to come—will never contain so glad an hour as this that has just passed. And if, for the other, there lurks in the background of his thoughts an uneasy conviction that his happiness is built upon frail and unsubstantial foundations—is, indeed, but one of those fair castles of the imagination which the first strong blast of common sense and worldly wisdom may blow into thin air—he allows it to remain in the background. He per- mits himself, for this hour at least, to take his fill of happi- ness with ,.a reckless abandonment that finds, perhaps, an added zest in the very knowledge of its insecurity. Whatever doubts he may have had in the past, whatever doubts he may have in the future, of the strength and sin- cerity of his love for Psyche, he at any rate for this hour has none at all. Indeed, a man would be less than a man, and more than a philosopher, if he could—lying at her feet and looking up into her eyes on this summer day—dole out the measure of his love for her. As minute by minute goes by, each one drawing him nearer, as he knows, to an inevitable parting with her, his heart grows softer and tenderer over her. . She is-so happy—so childishly, joyously, ignorantly happy— 1x6 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. that for a long time he cannot find it in his heart to dash her gladness. He contents himself with telling her—in a hundred different forms and words, but never in one that she finds wearisome—how much he loves her. But he is horribly con- scious that the time is growing very short, and that of all the many serious words he ought to say to her, he has not as yet said one. He is silent for a moment, casting about in his mind as to the best way to begin. He never was a coward before. To other women he has not found it impossible to communicate certain hard truths which circumstances made necessary, but his love for her has some of that unselfishness which his other passions have lacked. "Do you know," she says, breaking the silence, and lifting to his her shy and tender eyes, which with the new love-light shining in them seem to him ten times lovelier than ever they seemed before, " that I am almost afraid of being so happy ? When I think of how miserable I was only yesterday, it seems as if I must be asleep or dreaming. I have a sort of fear," with a low and happy laugh, " that I shall wake up, like the little woman in the nursery rhyme, and find that ' after all it is not I'! " Her words givehim a pang of reproach so keen that he can hardly endure it. When he thinks of how little happiness he is likely to bring her, and of how ignorant she is of all the troubles lying ahead of her—how utterly destitute of that worldly wisdom with which he had found most of the other women of his acquaintance so amply provided—he feels in truth what he has probably seldom in his life felt before— ashamed of himself. " And yet, some day," he says, stroking the little soft hand that lies so confidingly in his with something that is very near remorse, " you may wish to heaven that you had never seen me." Her eyes widen slowly with surprise and dismay—the words are §o unlike any that she has? hitherto heard from his lips— Unspotted from The World. 117 but she says nothing. She looks to him like some pretty dumb creature who, in the midst of itsin nocent gambols, has received a sudden and unexpected blow. " When you talk like that,'' he goes on, wincing under her look, and speaking with uncontrollable irritation, "you make me feel as if I must have deceived you. You make me almost wish," passionately, "that I had left you as I found you—a good little innocent child !" "Do not wish that," she says, quietly and gently—and though the happy light is quenched in her eyes, there is in them a sober and steadiast shining that might convince him, if he could understand it, how far her love surpasses his own. " You must never wish that. Even if it should happen, among the many changes of the world, that something," falter- ing, " should take you away from me—should separate us and keep us apart—I should always be glad—most glad—that once you had loved me. I should always," with a sudden moisture in her eyes, " be happier, not sorrier for it." The tender words touch him so nearly, that for the moment he dares not look up. " And if," he says slowly, after a while? not looking at her, and yet divining every change in her face, " the separation is nearer than you imagine, if—I " Then he breaks off suddenly, and stretches out his arms to her. " My darling ! " he says passionately, "it is no good beating about the bush. I never was one to do that sort of thing well. I have to leave you now—to-day—almost this very minute; and I have not had the pluck to tell you before." He sees the soft flush die suddenly out of her face, leaving her very pale. Her lips tremble. " To-day ? " she says slowly. " So soon ? " "As a matter of fact," he goes on hurriedly, finding it not so difficult now he has taken the first plunge, " I meant to go away long ago. At no time," smiling grimly, " in the annals of our history have I stayed so long with my uncle as I have n8 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. stayed this time. And though yesterday, when I parted from you, I certainly intended to stay a day or two longer, yet," hesitating and bungling, "he has made it impossible." " What has he done ? " she asks slowly, after a minute's silence; and only by her quick and uneven breathing, by the pallor of her face, can he guess how heavily the blow has fallen. " You know," he answers, laughing a little nervously, and avoiding her eyes, " that we are never the best of friends. The relations between us can only by the broadest stretch of imagination be considered even amicable. He tolerates me because, I suppose, I am the only kith and kin he has left in the world. I put up with him because—well!—because he is my bread and butter. To quarrel with him is to cut my own throat—and yet," with a long-drawn breath, as if he finds in the thought some relief, " I very often think it will come to that some day. In fact," with a grim smile, " it very nearly came to it last night." She looks up quickly. " You quarrelled last night ? " " Well," laughing a little, " at any rate we got so near to it that our only chance of not doing it outright is to remain for a little while apart. I said a few things to him," smiling with evident pleasure at the recollection, "which, though they relieved my mind at the time, were not altogether prudent. But," reassuringly, "he will be certain to get over it in a little while. I shall not see him again to-day—I have already sent on my things to the station—but in a week or two he will be ready to make it up, if only for the sake of having someone to quarrel with again." There is a minute's silence—then she looks at him steadily. t! Will you tell me," she asks, flushing a little, "whether 1 Pad anything to do with your quarrel ? " He flashes too. " It can hardly be said that you had any- thing to do with it, because, so far as I can understand, he does not even know of your existence ; but " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 119 " But," she interrupts excitedly, " it was because he saw you —in the afternoon ? " "No doubt," he answers, driven into the admission, "it began with that." " You mean," she continues, still with that same sharp ring of suspicion in her voice, " that he said things—of me—that made you angry ? " " He said things of—of the person I was talking to (I must ask you again to remember that it was not of you—that he does not even know your name) that," with a sudden furious look, " made me more than angry !" There is a pause; then she gathers up all her courage. " If," she says hesitatingly, and with a flush that reaches to the soft loose curls upon her broad white forehead,—" if you were to tell him all about it, would he not think less badly of me ? Is there," earnestly and anxiously, " any good reason why you should not ? " " The best of all," he answers with a good deal of vehemence. "To do it would be to give up our last chance. Do not you understand—no, I do not suppose you could understand,"— with venomous emphasis, " the malign nature of a selfish old tyrant, who having outlived all his pleasures is determined, at least, that no one else shall enjoy themselves. If," with an unmirthful laugh, " he could understand that I had set my heart on one woman more than another he would probably make it a condition in his will that I should not marry her. If, on the other hand, he thought that I hated one woman more than another he would probably leave her to me with the money." For a moment she does not answer. She is full of a sudden, half-uneasy, wholly undefined fear. He, for his part, cannot in a moment rid himself of the heat and annoyance which an affectionate retrospect of his uncle's many amiable qualities usually produces in him. " Are you sure," she says suddenly, fixing her wide eyes on 120 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. him with a most earnest scrutiny,—" are you quite sure that there is no reason—no good reason—why he should object to me?" He would give a great deal to be able to avoid her eyes, but he is compelled to meet them. " My darling ! " he says, smiling uneasily, and horribly con- scious that some of the colour which has deserted her face is coming to his—" is there likely to be any reason that you would not know of? He might certainly," catching eagerly at the idea, " object that as we have neither of us, so far as I know, a penny in the world, we were a little imprudent to think of marrying. Possibly," smiling ironically, " if we were to represent to him that our best and only chance lay in his death, he might not see it in quite the same light that we do." " That is true," she says simply and earnestly, not answer- ing these last words of his, for indeed she has scarcely heard them, being altogether occupied with those that came before. "What reason could there be that I should not know of ? It is true that we are poor—that father has quarrelled, so far as I can understand, with most of our neighbours and with all our relations, but," with a broad smile of relief, " these are ob- jections that are patent to everyone, and," simply, " everyone likes Dolly—why should not they like me ? " " Why not, indeed ? " he cries laughing, unfeignedly glad to turn the subject. " For my part I think, on the contrary, there are a good many reasons why they should. At any rate it is a comfort, is it not," he goes on jestingly, "to think we know the worst of each other? You," looking at her fondly and more soberly, " know that I am only a pauper—that I had no right in the world to ask you to marry me while my only chance of being able to do it is that poor, mean one over which I have wasted the best years of my life—the chance of stepping into a dead man's shoes. But," with a growing earnestness, " now that you know it all—know that you will have to wait for me, to believe in me, that I shall UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD 121 have to be a great deal away from you, that I can't even write to you lest I bring suspicion upon you—can you bear it ? Tell me, Psyche—tell me quickly?" " I can bear anything," she says in a low voice, and with a passionate tenderness she is too innocent to conceal, " so long as you love me." And in the moment's silence that follows her words, the church clock down in the valley, that has so often told the hours of their meetings and partings, strikes one. He starts to his feet. " I must go," he says hurriedly, drawing her up to him, and holding her in his arms. " My sweet—my little sweetheart— we must say good-bye ! " He sees that her face has grown very pale—deadly pale— and her lips are trembling. His heart almost fails him. "Swear to me," he cries passionately, "that you will wait for me—that you will let no other man have your love until I come to claim it—that no one—no one in all the world shall make you give me up ? " Her white lips move faintly with a sort of smile. She knows that not all the oaths that man has invented since God made the world, could bind her more firmly to him than her own inclinations. And then he takes the lovely face, which all the pretty colour has so absolutely deserted, and holds it gently between his hands; and as he does it he hears the click of the gate which leads into the little wood. " Someone is coming !" he says, hurriedly and passionately —" Kiss me, dear." And when she has kissed him.—" Give me your rose," he whispers eagerly. " All the morning long I have been jealous of it for lying so near your sweet white throat. It shall lie there no longer. I shall keep it with me ; and on the day we are married, when I have you instead, I will give it back to you." 122 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. She tries to unfasten it, but her fingers are white and trembling, and have altogether lost their deftness; and he at last is compelled to come to her aid and to take it himself. There is not another word exchanged between them. He looks at her mutely—such a look as stirs her heart with a passionate pain she cannot comprehend—and in the space of a second or so she is standing alone, clinging with trembling hands to the rough old stile where she has so often sat with him, looking after him with eyes that are so dim with love and pain she scarce can see him. It is but a moment as measured by the clock—an age as measured by the pain and trouble in her heart—when she hears a footstep on the soft green path behind her, and turning sharply, finds herself face to face with Sir John Heathcote. She has no time, and is too little skilled as yet in those small deceptions which the intricacies of life make necessary to most women, to assume on an instant an ordinary and every-day composure—indeed, no power in the world would compel the colour to come back to her poor pale cheeks. The emotions of the past hour have written themselves so plainly on her face that a man would be blind indeed who failed to see them. And Sir John is by no means blind. His keen grey eyes glance sharply from her to the figure disappearing in the distance, whose outlines appear to him vaguely familiar. " Psyche !"—he says, holding out his hand to her and regarding her very searchingly—" I never thought of finding you here ! Do you—often come here alone ? " She takes the best course that remains open to her. She tells the truth. " I was not alone," she falters, glancing up at him with soft, pained eyes that seem to appeal to his forbearance. "I was saying good-bye—to a friend who is—going to London by the next train." UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. 123 The words mean so much to her that the very saying of them is difficult, and there is a sound in her voice that is not far from tears. For a moment he is silent. Finding her here, under these circumstances, seems to confirm the suspicions of her which he had formed on first meeting her, and for whose injustice and hastiness he had afterwards so gravely condemned him- self. He is on the point of giving her a lecture—or at any rate a warning that would approach very nearly to a lecture— but the pain in her lovely eyes touches and softens him. He remembers the intention with which he came to seek her out this very morning—his honest desire to be a friend to her who so greatly needs one. After all, to scold her again will not be the best way to set about it. " Are you going home ? " he asks kindly, after that moment's hesitation, during which he has averted his eyes and given her time to regain the composure she was so nearly losing. " If you are, I will walk a little way with you and," with a grave smile, " take care of you." "Will you?" she says brightly, infinitely grateful to him for asking no more questions. " That is good of you! " For a minute or two they walk along in silence. Her heart is still throbbing too quickly and painfully to the remembered touch of her lover's hands, the remembered sound of her lover's words, for conversation to come easy to her. He, being a man to whom the word duty is not altogether without mean- ing—who indeed finds in it as strong a motive-power as a good many other men find in their inclinations—is greatly in doubt what he ought to do. The fact that he has found her meeting some man without the knowledge of her father or sister seems to him one so pregnant with danger to her that it can hardly be right to let it pass unnoticed. In chancing on the knowledge accidentally he seems almost to have made himself her accomplice. 124 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. And yet in her pallor and trouble she has approached a good deal nearer to the old place in his affections. Her dead- white face, her strained and heavy eyes, weighed down with unshed tears, seem to him far lovelier than the audacious brilliance of her beauty had seemed two days ago. " I came over to-day almost on purpose to see you," he says presently, looking down at her with eyes that, though they can be hard and cold enough on occasion, are at this moment both soft and kind. " I have been thinking—I have been remembering," smiling gravely, " what friends we used to be, and how you used to come to me with all your little troubles and confidences. I am afraid," more slowly, " that I have grown a sour, grim, unsociable sort of fellow since then. I am apt to look on the worst side of people. I have been so grossly deceived," he goes on with a sudden confidence in her that he would not have believed possible ten minutes ago, "that I find it difficult not to see deception everywhere. Yet,"—turning round on her with the old look which had made her think when she was a child that no face could be so kind and good as his—" if you will trust me, if you will believe in me, if you will let me be your friend once more as I used to be, I will promise that to you at least I will never be either sour or grim." Her heart is so soft at this present moment that she could not have refused an overture from her worst enemy—much less from him. " With all my heart! " she says warmly. " Do you know," laughing, with a suspicion of tears in her eyes, " that next to Dolly I used to be fonder of you than of anyone else in the world." " Then you will promise," he says, with an urgency that is greater than the occasion seems to warrant, " that if ever you need a friend—if ever you are in trouble and have no one else to help you—and," gravely, " there are such times in all our lives—you will come to me?" UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 125 " I promise." She answers soberly, with a sudden bright light in her eyes, born not of the thought of him, but of one who seems to her so far to outpass all other friends that, having him, she can never in all her life need another. And having made their compact they go quietly and sedately, side by side, in silence. It is he who speaks first. " I wish," he says suddenly and rather hesitatingly, as if he were half afraid of what he has to say, " that you would not go out too much alone. It seems to me," with a depreca- tory smile, " that you are a great deal too pretty to wander about by yourself. Why," with some impatience, " does not Dorothy come out with you ? " His words, carefully as he has considered them, seem to convey to her a sort of reproach which she is quick to resent. " If I waited for Dolly," she answers & little coldly, " I might stay at home always. You forget that she has plenty of things to do without following me about. And," with a sort of challenge, " who is to harm me if I do go out alone ? " He does not accept the challenge—perhaps he does not even hear it. A sudden remembrance has occurred to him. "After all," he says, thinking aloud, "it cannot much matter. It cannot be for long. Do you know," turning to her, " that Dolly has some news for you ? " " News ! " incredulously. "What news are likely to come to us ? It appears to me," with some scorn, " that we are about as far off from news as if we were stranded on a desert island." But the words have scarcely passed her lips when a sudden thought flashes across her. After all, is it so impossible? Has Sir Adrian found her out ? Has he " Tell me !" she cries breathlessly, excitedly, a sudden rich red colour chasing the pallor off her cheeks—" tell me quickly," stopping still, and placing herself in front of him, " what do you mean ? " 126 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. "I mean," he answers, with a deliberation that exasperates her, " that you will have no more chance of wandering about alone. I do not know," hesitatingly, " that I have any right to anticipate Dorothy—that I ought not to leave her to tell you herself—but having gone so far," smiling tantalisingly,' " I suppose you will not be content unless I go on. What would you think," looking at her curiously, " if I were to tell you that you are going to London ? " " To London !" she repeats slowly, calming suddenly; " that is impossible. You must have made a mistake. We do not know a soul there." " At any rate," with an ironical smile, " you know some- body. In fact," still with the same provoking deliberation, " I think I may confidently assure you that it is all arranged that you are to go to London to stay with your grandmother, Lady Conynghame, to be introduced," satirically, " into the best society, and make your appearance as a fashionable young lady." He is hardly prepared for the effect of his words. Before, she had been sure that he was only joking; now, for the first time, she understands that he is in earnest. In a moment she is transported from sadness and gloom into an almost un- realisable gladness. "You can't mean it!" she cries between laughing and cry- ing, her face absolutely transfigured. " It is too good to be true ! Is it—is it possible that it can be true ? " He looks at her gravely. He finds in her gladness an offence, whose cause he cannot altogether fathom. " Are you so glad ? " he says coldly. Then, after a pause : " It is unfortunate that what is sport to some of us is death to others. If," with some reproach, " you had seen Dolly as I saw her just now, you would understand that she is not so glad as you are to think that you are leaving her so soon after coming home." If he had meant to sober her, he at any rate succeeds, UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 127 Her face changes suddenly into a gravity that is all that he can desire. " Poor Dolly !" she says, regretfully and tenderly, remem- bering with a good deal of self-reproach how little she has thought of her during the last twenty-four hours. "I am sorry for her—I am very sorry. But indeed," lifting to him her lovely eyes with childish pleading, " if you could understand how unhappy I have been since I came home—how lonely, how miserable—you would not think it so strange that I should be glad to go away—you would not," stretching out her hands to him appealingly, " be so hard on me." They have by this time reached the little gate that divides the wood from the garden, where Psyche had watched him and Dolly. " Am I hard on you ?" he says, with a sudden, quick breath, moved by the look in her lovely eyes, and the touch of her small, soft hands, to an emotion that is stronger than he can at all comprehend. " God knows, I never 'meant to be!" And as he speaks he looks with a good deal of tenderness on the slim white hands that are still lying on his rough sleeve. "You have hurt your hand !" he says suddenly, pointing to a little speck of blood—a tiny wound in the soft flesh of one of them. " It must have been my rose," she says, holding it closer to examine it. "I think there is a thorn in it." His eyes glance at one or two withered leaves that alone mark the place where her rose has been. " You have no rose now." " I—I must have lost it," she says, with some embarrass ment. " Or," regarding her keenly and gravely, " did someone steal it from you? At any rate," with some attempt at jest, "he has left the thorn with you." "Cannot you take it out? "she asks, looking rather con- 128 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. cernedly at her hand, and then stretching it out to him. " If they are left in they fester, do they not ? " He just glances at it, but he does not touch it. "I am afraid it has gone too deep," he says quietly. "You will have to do it yourself." There is a moment's silence, and then he, in his turn, holds out his hand. "I must say good-bye to you now," he says, a little abruptly. " I have already been to the house," flushing a little as he remembers what so nearly happened there, " and I have no time to come back." Then, seeing or fancying that she looks a little hurt, his heart smites him that, in the first hour of his proffered friend- ship, he should have begun so badly with doubts, suspicions, and coldness. " Who knows," he goes on quickly, his manner changing and softening, " that I may not see you soon again ? I often go to London—I shall no doubt have some business there," making this explanation to himself rather than to her, "and I will come and see you, if you will let me." " Will you ? " she cries, brightening and laughing, for indeed she is so full of absolute, unbounded joyousness at thought of this unexpected, unhoped-for change in her fortunes that she is ready to bubble over into happy laughter at the smallest excuse. " Be sure you do ! I shall be hurt if you do not. I shall," with a flattering outspokenness, that is but a result of that glad content which includes in her unbounded goodwill not only him, but every living thing on the face of the earth, " look forward all the time to seeing you." But he understands her. " I do not want to throw cold water on you again," he says, with the old grave smile she knows and likes so well, " but it is just possible—barely possible—that you may not find everything quite so rose-coloured as you expect, and in that case," smiling again, " you may be glad to see me," UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 129 "Whether I am ill or well, happy or unhappy, I shall always be glad—most glad—to see you!" she answers with resolute cordiality. Aud so they part. He watches her for a moment, when the gate has closed behind her. At first she walks sedately enough—then when she thinks herself unseen, her steps quicken to a run. He understands that she is in too great a hurry to make sure that his tidings are true to go more slowly. He turns away then with something like a sigh, and with hands thrust in his pockets, with slow and thoughtful pace, retraces his steps through the little wood. And as he so walks there comes into his head—he scarce knows why, unless his own words have recalled it—a song that he heard long ago from the lips he then thought the sweetest and purest the world contained. Over and over again— monotonously—persistently—the old words, so long unheard, so nearly forgotten, ring in his ears— " Wi' lightsome heart I pull'd a rose Fu' sweet upon its thorny tree; But my fause lover stole the rose, And ah ! he left the thorn with me." I UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. PART II. " How can ye sing, ye little birds, When I'm so weary, full o' care ? Ye'll break my heart, ye little birds, That wanton through the flow'ring thorn ; Ye mind me of departed joys, Departed, never to return." CHAPTER I. And so it comes to pass that five days later Psyche finds her- self outside the door of a very small house not a hundred yards away from Park Lane. It is a very tiny house, "and being, with a few others of the same size, wedged in among a great many portly and imposing neighbours, gives the impression of being squeezed and flattened into its present modest dimensions. Indeed this house of Lady Conynghame's looks as if it might be taken bodily and put through one of the big and shining windows or the ample doorway of a marble-pillared mansion not a great many paces off from it. The vehicle that has conveyed Psyche to this—the limit of her journey—is a dusty and battered four-wheeler, on whose roof are two ancient and dilapidated boxes, which, though they contain all of Psyche's and a good deal of Dolly's wardrobe, are so modest in size that they would discredit a fashionable housemaid. The tiny door is adorned with big brass knockers of mediaeval design, and her cabman's loud knock is promptly answered by a big footman in flesh-coloured silk stockings and powdered hair. He is so very big, in proportion to the house, that he UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 131 appears to Psyche to fill up the door-way, and to need the whole of the miniature hall for his own accommodation. When the door is closed against the bright June sunshine, she'finds herself, a good deal to her surprise, in utter darkness, arid has to grope her way up the little staircase, only guided on her journey by the powdered head and the silken legs, which seem the only pole-stars in the all-pervading gloom. Such scanty light • as neighbouring houses and stables, encroaching on each and every side, have left to the house has been, indeed, ingeniously destroyed by walls of a dark Pompeian red with sage-green dado, which reflect no ray of brightness, and a little fernery with little ferns and a little naked Parian boy spouting little streams of water out of his little mouth, which is built in the staircase window. Outside the drawing-room door, where the footman comes to a standstill, there is a thick and heavy portiere, of what material it would be hard to guess in the general darkness. It is dingy and sagey—that is all that Psyche can see. When it is drawn aside she hears her own name promptly announced, arid finds herself in a room that is quite as small as the rest of the house—with the door shut behind her—but still in darkness. It is a very bewildering little room—that is her first impres- sion—a room that is so crowded from floor to ceiling with china and nicknacks, with perilous little chairs and still more perilous little tables, that she does not, for a moment, dare to take a step. Of all its details, she in this moment discerns none; she only receives a vague and confused impression of velvet and lace, very dirty lace it looks to her ignorant eyes, of rugs on the floor and china on the walls, china on the tables, china round the door, china round the glasses—china everywhere. Her eyes, dazed and dim by the sudden transition from bright sunlight to a gloom that approaches very nearly to darkness, are fixed speculatively on a figure, whose back is, at this moment of her entrance, turned to her. 132 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. It is a young back—the waist is small and trim as a young girl's—the head is round and golden and curly; the dress, of a fashion that she has never beheld before, is coquettish and stylish—light and airy as befits this summer's day. Whatever doubt she may have of the figure, of the dress she has none— it is most certainly a young woman's dress. When the wearer of it, having carefully deposited a little china figure that she had been holding in her hand on the already crowded mantel- piece, turns her face round, there is nothing, at first sight, to dispel the impression her back has made. Her hair is piled in a little nest of fuzzy yellow curls on the top of her head; her cheeks and her lips are red—very red; and her skin is white. " I—I beg your pardon," says Psyche, hotly confused, con- vinced that she has made some terrible blunder, and come to the wrong house. " I expected my grandmother—Lady Conynghame." The red lips, set in an unmistakably hard line, part in a gracious smile which displays two rows of terribly-even teeth. Of all the loving and tender speeches which Psyche, in the innocence of her heart, has been rehearsing during her long journey, none could have served her half so well as this mistake of hers. " I am Lady Conynghame," she says, coming forward and laying two much-jewelled hands on the girl's arms. " And you "—holding her at arms'-length and looking at her—" you are Psyche!" Face to face with her—in spite of the dim light, and though Lady Conynghame keeps her back well turned to the window so that not even the darkened rays that penetrate through the closed blinds can fall on her—she sees, in a moment, her mistake. It is not a young woman at all—it is a ghastly and horrible parody of one ! The red and white coating on her poor old face cannot, at a nearer approach, conceal the deep and pitiful furrows that UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 133 lie around her mouth and eyes; the eyebrows are palpably false, and under the thick yellow wig a little patch of white hairs reveals itself on either side close to her ears. Regarded at a couple of yards' distance in a dim light, she might possibly be taken by eyes less unsophisticated than Psyche's for a well- preserved woman of forty or thereabouts. Regarded more closely, if her face did not betray her, her neck and hands would. There comes a period in the history of all women, when make up their faces as they will, persuade themselves as they will, with the aid of dim eyes, a thick veil, and a flattering looking-glass, that they, thus far, successfully counterfeit the youth they so pitifully ape, yet throat and hands present in- superable difficulties with which all their ingenuity cannot contend. Lady Conynghame, being an exceptionally clever woman, has understood this, and a high ruffle of cream lace hides, as far as is possible, her wrinkled and withered neck. Yet it cannot entirely conceal it. It is apt to fall aside and reveal the deep yellow furrows tinted with nature's own colouring, in ghastly juxtaposition to the roseate and youthful cheeks. The figure, which the fashionable dress so perfectly fits, is (what- ever it may be made of) a young woman's figure; but the hands that protrude from the tight sleeves are an old woman's hands—a very old woman's—Psyche thinks. She can hardly repress a shudder when she feels them lying on her arm—they are so bony, so withered. When she recalls the many pictures she has mentally formed of her unknown grandmother—pictures in which she has mostly figured with snow-white hair and a black satin dress, with a respectable cap on her decent head and a handsome lace kerchief on her decent shoulders—and perhaps a substan- tial gold-headed stick to support her venerable limbs—and contrasts the Grannie of her imagination with this Grannie— this modern and fashionable improvement on the old-fashioned 134 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. recognised type of grandmother—she finds it not a little diffi- cult to refrain from hysterical laughter. " You—you cannot be Grannie! " she says at last, in a voice in which incredulity and disgust, surprise and dismay, contend for the mastery, and are all, in fact, but ill-concealed. But Lady Conynghame is not quick to catch the tone of a voice, or the look on a face. Both her eyes and her ears are indeed a good deal duller than she is at all willing to allow. She only finds in the speech a natural and appropriate ac- knowledgment of her youthful appearance. " It does seem strange—does it not ? " she says with a smile and a simper that would not misbecome a young and pretty woman. " In fact, when I told my friends that I had a grand- daughter old enough to bring out they would hardly believe me—they said," with a smile more complacent than the last, " that it seemed impossible She drops her hands as she speaks—and the action is an immense relief to Psyche. So long as she held her she had been divided by a fear that her grandmother was going to kiss her, and an idea—equally strong—equally repugnant—that it might be expected that she would kiss her grandmother. She has until this moment been anxiously examining her, trying to make up her mind as to the spot where she can do it with least distaste to herself—least damage to Lady Conynghame. " It seemed so dark when I came in," she begins, faltering and bungling—foolishly trying to explain her mistake. " No doubt if I had seen " But whatever she is going to say, Lady Conynghame, for- tunately, will never know. The big footman does her, uncon- sciously, a good turn, and saves her from retracing the one step she has made in her grandmother's good graces, by appearing suddenly and quietly in the doorway. " The cabman is waiting to be paid, my lady," he says, with the slow and measured utterance peculiar to his class. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 135 " He says that his fare is three-and-six, and that if he takes up the boxes it will be another shilling." Lady Conynghame looks at Psyche. "I had forgotten," she says nervously, feeling for the small purse, which Dolly, guessing perhaps the demands that might be made upon it, has pinched and striven to fill from her own poor store—" How stupid of me !" It does not strike her that there is anything strange in the footman coming to her for the money. She knows too.little of the manners and customs of well-regulated households to be able to gauge correctly the customs of this one. It is not, indeed, until some little time afterwards that she understands that the man is—with one exception—like the rest of the ser- vants, the carriages, the horses, and all the grandeur of Lady Conynghame's establishment—hired for the season, to be dismissed at the end of it; and that he is far-too well ac- quainted with the long-standing nature of Lady Conynghame's small debts to advance even a cab-fare on such poor security. When he has gone and the cabman is heard labouring up the narrow stairs with the boxes, Lady Conynghame turns to her with some little hesitation. " If you will not mind finding your own room, perhaps you could just see where he goes. I dare not ask Somers—my maid—to go with you. " You see," explanatorily, " she has lived with me a great many years, and though she is a good creature, I am obliged to give her a great deal of her own way. I hope," turning round with a good deal of sharpness, breaking through the affectation of manner, "that you are accustomed to wait on yourself. If -you are not," with a shrug of her padded * shoulders, " I do not know what will become of you, for I am certain that Somers will do nothing - for you. In fact," sinking with an air of weariness into a lace- trimmed chair, " she took it very badly when she heard you were coming. It cannot be denied that it has put us all out a great deal." 136 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. For a moment the girl stands silent—it is all so different from what she has expected—the grandmother that she had figured to herself had a heart somewhere under her black satin gown; this one evidently has none. "I am very sorry for that," she says, with a sudden swelling of her throat that makes speech difficult to her. "But indeed," more eagerly, " I shall not need anyone to do any- thing for me. You know," she goes on, doubtful as to whether Lady Conynghame does know or not, " that I have but lately come from school, and there," with a little smile, " they did not keep maids to wait on us." " Then," says Lady Conynghame, with an air of dismissing the subject, "you had better go and take off that hat and — " with a little emphatic pause and something that is akin to a shudder—" those boots. When you have got rid of them you will no doubt be glad of a cup of tea. Perhaps," coldly, taking up a book, " you will be good enough to ring the bell before you go and Marshall will bring it." Up to the present moment Psyche has been fairly contented with both hat and boots. The hat indeed, a big grey felt one, she has been accustomed to consider as her best and most becoming one; and though the boots are of country manu- facture, and leave something to be desired, she had consoled herself with the idea that they might be a good deal worse. But she consoles herself no longer. Under Lady Conynghame's withering glance and more withering accents her self-complacency vanishes into thin air, and the startling deficiencies of each article of her attire become miserably plain to her. Judging by Lady Conynghame's standard, there can be no doubt that she falls terribly short. It would be difficult to imagine a more complete contrast than she in her homely, grey travelling-gown presents to this fashionable dressmaker's doll. She rings the bell and leaves the room without another Unspotted from the world. r37 word. She cannot, in fact, trust herself to speak. She is so tired and so dispirited that she feels that tears are too perilously near. She goes up the dark little stairs where the odorous London cabman has already gone before—having been guided, in his turn, by a smutty middle-aged servant of the charwoman species who represents the invisible machinery that keeps the small house going, doing all the work that Lady Conynghame's servants are far too fine to lay a finger to, and whose one paramount and all-important duty in life is to keep herself out of sight. She performs this duty now. She and the cabman have both disappeared, and Psyche is left to find her room for herself. On the floor above the drawing-room there are two bed- rooms—both empty—both with doors wide open. One of these, a bower of rose-coloured satin and cheap white lace, with a great deal of gilt on the walls and a glittering heap of china and jewellery on the dressed-up toilet- table, is without doubt Lady Conynghame's. Evidently sestheticism, as represented by sage-green walls and dingy draperies, has ascended no higher than the drawing-room, and Lady Conynghame's native taste reigns here, unhampered by fashion. The other room, less gorgeous but quite as comfort- able, proves by a black silk gown and a fashionable bonnet lying on the bed to be already occupied, and without doubt belongs to the maid. She must go yet higher, up a flight of stairs still narrower, and—as she distastefully perceives—dirtier than the last. On the next and top floor there are three rooms. One of them—empty but for her boxes, but neither conspicuously swept nor garnished—is evidently her own. She closes the door and looks around her. Certainly, if Lady Conynghame has put herself out a great deal to provide for her accommodation there are few signs 138 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. of it here. She has been accustomed to think her own room at home poor and shabby enough; but by comparison with this it seems, to her memory, almost handsome. At least, there was room to turn round in it, there was air to breathe in it, it was a room that even in its old age was eminently respectable. This has never at its best been anything but a poor little mean London attic. And it is by no means at its best. Walls and ceiling and door are calling out for paint and paper. The dimity hangings on the little bed have long been strangers to the wash-tub—the wash-stand of common painted deal has -lost a great deal of its paint and gained in place of it a good deal of dirt. There is, it is true, a hasty arrangement of pink calico and muslin on the dressing-table, and a glass that is so far superior to the rest of the furniture that it is evidently borrowed for the occasion ; but Psyche is compelled to throw up the two little grimy windows to their fullest extent to dissipate the close and stifling atmosphere before she can even glance at her own dusty and dejected face in it. When she has accomplished such improvements as are possible to her—which go little beyond a clean face, clean hands and smoother hair—and descends the little stairs, she is more willing to acknowledge that beauty unadorned is of little value; more distinctly conscious of all the weak points in her harness than ever she has been before in her life. It is hardly a consolation to her at that moment to remember that her face admits of being washed, which fashionable faces evidently do not. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 139 CHAPTER II. She finds Lady Conynghame seated in the darkest corner of the drawing-room, with a fragile table of plush and lace in front of her, on which is a small tea-service of old Dresden china. "You must be hungry," she says hospitably. "Will you have some tea ? Help yourself to bread and butter." The cups are scarce bigger than dolls' cups, and on the little costly plate are four slices of bread and butter, so thin and delicate that it is difficult to take them up without dropping them to fragments. Psyche is hungry—so hungry that she feels as if she could almost eat Lady Conynghame herself if she were a more tempting morsel, and her heart sinks at sight of this unsub- stantial fare; but she is not brave enough to protest, and she eats her two wafery slices in silence, feeling more hungry when she has done than when she began. When she moves across the room to replace her empty cup, . Lady Conynghame watches her with eyes of keen and critical appraisal. It is impossible for Psyche to flatter herself that the gaze is one either of admiration or affection—it more nearly resembles the unveiled and rather impertinent scrutiny she might bestow on a newly-hired servant. "Let me have a good look at you," she says, suddenly rising and placing her hands on the girl's shoulders—" It was impossible to guess what you were like in that hat. What on earth," in parenthesis, " induced you to wear such an atrocious thing ?—felt and beaver and plush in winter—nothing heavier than straw or silk in summer—those are the first principles of art. Turn your face round to the light!" suiting the action to the word and twisting her round. It is a figure of speech to call it light at all, but nevertheless Psyche obediently turns her face to the windows and allows 140 UNSPOTTED FROM 1 HE WORLD. Lady Conynghame, with the aid of a pair of gold eye-glasses perched on her high-bridged nose, to have as good a look at her as she may desire. It is, after all, some consolation to be only nineteen and to be able to bear being looked at. These eye-glasses of Lady Conynghame's take the place of the more honest and homely spectacles with which most women, who have reached the age which she has, presumably, arrived at, do not disdain to aid their failing sight. It is probable that her eyes are no clearer, are perhaps a great deal dimmer, than the eyes of other women of her age—for she has gone through more wear and tear, more ups and downs of fate and fortune, more undaunted struggles to keep her head above the surface, than would have sufficed to kill a dozen ordinary women, and that without the aid of those strong lenses, though she may, through the long practice of a life-time, guess the fashion of a gown, the shape of a hat, she can form but a dim idea of a face. Anyhow, it is certain that she now sees Psyche clearly, for the first time. Her hands drop from the girl's shoulders, and she staggers back a pace or two and clutches nervously at the mantelpiece —and though but a moment before one would have said that her face could not change, yet now it changes palpably. " Did—did no one ever tell you how like you are to your mother ? " she says, trembling visibly. " It—it has given me quite a shock! It is almost," shuddering and looking at her with a sort of terror, " like the dead come back to life ! " It is the first sign of genuine human feeling that Psyche has perceived in her. She feels that she can forgive her her paint, forgive her her affectation, forgive her even her cold and ungen- erous welcome of herself—if only she has a heart somewhere. She looks at her wistfully, with suddenly moistened eyes. But if she imagines that her grandmother is going to fall on her neck weeping, and take her, literally or metaphorically to those UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 141 poor battered remnants of a heart that once perhaps beat with some real womanly love for her dead mother, she is disap- pointed. Her very next words effectually dispel any such illusion. "You ought to have prepared me," she says, with feeble, irrational anger, in a shrill and high pitched voice that having forgot its affectation of tone has become suddenly and undis- guisedly an old woman's voice. " If—if I had not always been good to your mother—if I had not always done my best for her—and no one—no one," with a quaver, " can say that I did not, I declare that—that I could not bear the sight of you ! " Then she appears to recollect herself. Perhaps the surprise and dismay on the girl's face reminds her how very nearly she has forgotten her every-day self, and it is almost pitiful to see the brave struggle she makes to resume her ordinary mask of unemotional calm. "Your face is certainly very like," she says, readjusting her glasses and trying to assume her former air of cold and cautious criticism, though Psyche notices that both voice and hands still tremble a little— " most extraordinarily like—but your figure—well!" with a laugh that is not entirely successful, " it would be difficult to tell what sort of figure you have in that gown ! Good heavens ! " sinking gracefully into a chair of whose support, perhaps, she stands in need, "what can your father be thinking of to let his daughters go about in such gowns as that !" " I think " says Psyche, with a small fine smile, resuming her seat also since she is no longer wanted for inspection, " that you cannot know much of father, if you suppose he troubles himself about his daughters' gowns." " I expect," answers the old woman sharply, " that I know a good deal more of him than you do. At any rate" with an ironical laugh, " I had the pleasure of his acquaintance before you were born. When he married your mother he was the I42 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. best-dressed man in town, and the handsomest, and, though you may not believe it, there was no keener critic of a woman's dress. He would not have looked at a woman in such a gown as that! " " For the matter of that," says Psyche, stung into reprisals by this caustic criticism of her attire, " I think it may safely be said that he does not look at her now. At any rate," smiling bitterly, '' he does not look at me, if that is what you mean. I am told— Dolly tells me," she goes on hurriedly, "that the resemblance you see to my mother he also sees in me, and it has the same effect which you seemed to think possible—he cannot bear the sight of me ! " But to this Lady Conynghame says nothing. " I confess it appears strange to me "—the girl goes on with a wistful look into the painted immovable face. " I think—it seems to me that if I had loved anyone very much, I should like to be reminded of her. Should not you ? " "That depends," drily. For a moment the girl regards her attentively, but there is evidently no more to be got out of her, good or bad, and— not without an effort—she abandons the subject which is so sore an one to her, a little ashamed of the emotion she has dis- played about it. "As to the dress," she says, throwing herself back in her chair and trying to speak lightly, "we have always done our best—Dolly and I—and if our best has been very bad, that is the fault of our poverty rather than our taste—we have had so little money to spend on it. You know—I suppose you cannot fail to know that father is very poor." " Your father is a fool! " says Lady Conynghame trenchantly. " When he married your mother, though he was not a rich man as men go in these days, when so much money is made in trade, and tradesmen take their place in society and vie with the old landed gentry—yet he was exceedingly well off. It is incredible," hotly, " how he can have managed to get rid of UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 143 his money. Of course," she goes on retrospectively, speaking to herself, and forgetting, perhaps, who is her listener, " I always knew that he was a fool, but I thought in those days that a fool was more easily managed than a wise man. Well! " with a short laugh, " that is one of the notions that I have outlived. There is no one in the world more obstinate than a fool. When he once takes an idea into his head, he sticks to it. They tell me," with a laugh that more nearly approaches to genuine humour than any that Psyche has as yet heard from her, " that he has taken to writing poetry, and publishes his poems on parchment paper with white satin bindings, at his own expense. It seems to me," witheringly, " that he would do better to spend the money on his daughters' dress !" Perhaps Psyche shares this opinion, but she is not of a mind to tell her so. " After all," says the other after a little pause, spent, perhaps, in contemptuous contemplation of the egregious folly of her son-in-law, or on the unaccountable inequality of a fate which bestows money on those who know so little how to spend it— " it concerns me very little what he has done with it. It is certain," with bitter emphasis, " that if he had kept it, I should never have been any the better for it. I have neither seen nor heard of him since your mother died, and I suppose," Avith a scornful laugh, "that I should have neither seen nor heard of him to the end of the chapter, if it had not occurred to him that he could make use of me." And to all this Psyche answers nothing. What indeed is there that she can say? She only listens Avith a disgust that grows and deepens with every word. So keen is the repulsion with which this old Avoman inspires her that she could almost find it in her heart to Avish herself back in Combe-Avon again. " But all that concerns us is, what is the best that can be done for you ? " says Lady Conynghame, cutting short her reflections on Mr. Dalrymple's merits, and bringing that sound 144 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. common-sense, which has carried her more or less successfully through so many of the battles of life, to bear on the subject. " I do not pretend to you that it is not a great burden to me at my time of life to bring out a young girl, but, having under- taken it, I shall try to do it as I hope I do everything,"-*with modest self-complacency, " pretty well, and the first thing— the very first thing—is to get you decently clothed. I do not suppose," she goes on consideringly, "that it would be pos- sible for Fridoline to manage it under a week, and during that week you must not let anyone set eyes on you. I will take you to her in the brougham with a thick veil on, and we will get her to promise the things as soon as possible." "Surely," says Psyche in a small and doubtful voice, greatly dismayed at the prospect of a week's invisibility, " she could make a gown in less time than that." " A gown !" cries Lady Conynghame, breaking into a shrill peal of laughter that so disturbs and distorts her face that Psyche regards her with frightened expectation. " Good heavens, child ! Where were you brought up ? A gown !— a dozen gowns at least; and have you forgotten all the other things—the boots, the gloves, the hats, the bonnets, the para- sols, the underclothing? I do not mind predicting, from what I have seen of your clothes, that you have not one of all these things that could bear to show its face in London. I think indeed you might save yourself the trouble of unpacking your boxes, and leave them as they are, in case you might ever go back to Combe-Avon." " In case I go back ! " repeats Psyche with suddenly rising alarm. " Surely—no doubt—I hope " stammering and bungling between the necessity to leave no doubt in the matter and her desire not to be discourteous—" that father has made it clear that I can only stay with you—a short time. He cannot," with growing fear, " have led you to believe that I was going to stay always ? Indeed," most earnestly, " much Unspotted from the world. 143 as 1 should no doubt like it in—in some ways, yet I could not bear to leave Dolly for very long !" " Do not be alarmed," says the old woman drily. " I can assure you that my hopes have not been unduly raised. Indeed, it is possible," with a chuckle of amusement, "that the prospect would have no more charms for me than it appears to have for you. But all the same, if I were you," with emphasis, " I confess that I should not altogether look forward with pleasure to returning home, and," more slowly, " I think—with good management—there may be no occasion for you to do so." Then as the girl answers nothing—not indeed entirely grasping her meaning— " There is no good denying that you start with grave draw- backs," she goes on discursively. " In the first place— though, Heaven knows, there is little distinction in being pre- sented at Court in these days, when one meets one's butcher and baker and candlestick-maker there, and jogs elbows with one's tailor and carriage-maker—yet there will be plenty of people to notice and comment on the omission. I dare say," reflectively, " in a little while—when these sort of people—the Manchester and Birmingham people—have quite got the upper hand, and have pushed us out of all the old places, it will be considered bad style to go to Court—but it has not come to that yet." "And"—asks Psyche, with a sudden colour flaming in her cheeks, and a sudden spirit firing her voice—" if other people go—why should not I ? Goodness knows," parenthetically, " that I do not want to—that I had never thought of it until now; but if it is a necessary part of one's duty, what is to prevent it ? " "Perhaps," says Lady Conynghame caustically, "you had better ask your father that. It appears to me," with cold dis- approval, " that you have a greater talent for asking questions than I have for answering them." K 146 unspotted from the world. " And," says Psyche, after a moment's pause during which her temper, galled beyond endurance, has been getting the upper hand of her—and leads her altogether to disregard this last plain hint—" what are the other drawbacks ? Do not you think that I may as well hear them all while I am about it ? " But Lady Conynghame, though possessed of a fine temper of her own, is by no means disposed to make allowance for other people's. " They seem to me so apparent that they hardly need pointing out," she says with marked coldness, rising as she speaks. " If," slowly, " there were no others—it cannot be denied that a girl without money has not much chance in these days when the married women are all to the fore—and men are not such fools as they try to appear. All our beauties," shaking out her skirts and arranging the little nest of golden curls at a neighbouring glass, "are married women, and they are most of them," with a little laugh, "not unapproachable. Men can amuse themselves without paying too heavy a price for it. But," consolingly, "I do not despair. With good luck—and good luck only means being cleverer than one's fellows—I have no doubt we may succeed." For a moment the girl is speechless—dumb with disgust and dismay. Yet such is the power of the old woman's dominant manner that it almost seems to her that unless she lifts up her voice in protest then and there, she will be taken and married before she knows where she is. "Stop, Grannie !" she cries, hurriedly putting out a hand to detain her as she moves away. "I cannot start under false pretences. I—you must understand—that—that—I do not want to be married." But the words almost die on her lips under the withering contempt of the look that is turned upon her. It requires all her courage to give them even such faint and halting utterance. "Do—not—want—to—be—married!" she repeats, with a mocking disdain that passes expression. " For heaven's sake UNSPOTTED EE OA/ THE WORLD. 147 ~-if we are to get on with each other at all—let us drop such poor affectations. For my own part I never could see the good of being a humbug when there was nothing to be gained by it. Every woman "—with absolute decision—" wants to be married—and what is desirable in most cases is necessary in yours." There she gathers up her skirts and moves to the door—and though tight boots and rheumatic limbs have a good deal impaired the grace of her movements, they are not without dignity and stateliness. At the door she turns. "I am horribly tired," she says, with a yawn which she strangles at its birth—being dangerous to the nature of her complexion. "Your father timed your arrival, as he does everything, so badly that I was compelled to give up my drive, and there is nothing," with a threatening of another yawn, " so wearying as staying at home on a warm afternoon. If I do not have half-an-hour's rest before I dress for dinner, I shall not be fit to be seen—and I have a couple of balls at which I must show myself afterwards. You see we are in the thick of it just now." Then as she opens the door—" I have told them to get you something to eat at eight o'clock, and," vaguely, " you will find plenty of books and things about somewhere to amuse you. Ta-ta ! " And with a nod of her old head and a wave of her hand, she is gone. And Psyche is alone. She falls back into her chair, and for full five minutes meditates on her grandmother. Indeed she is of so unexpected a nature, so altogether out of the ordinary run of grandmothers, that she presents an almost endless field for speculation. After five minutes' vain attempt to fathom her, she abandons her as a bad job, and looks about her with a vague and idle curiosity, examining the little drawing-room with an attention which she has not until now been able to bestow upon it. j48 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. She might, if she could so undertand it, find a clue in it to Lady Conynghame's nature, for, like a great many other rooms, it strongly resembles its owner. The velvet and lace and fringe on the chairs and tables, cover old and worn-out frames; little heaps of dust and dirt linger behind the curtains, brushed just out of sight, and about them there hangs a heavy and uncleanly smell, that is but half-disguised by a strong superfi- cial odour that was certainly bought at the perfumer's, and was not born of wholesome habits—of fresh air and soap and water. The china, of whose value she can form but an indefinite guess, has evidently, like Lady Conynghame, once been good to look at, but is now—also like Lady Conynghame— a great deal the worse for wear. It is chipped and cracked, and has been broken and joined up again, but it is liberally displayed on a great deal of cotton-backed velvet, with its cracks to the wall and its best side outwards. Everything turns its best side outwards, and the other side is an unsavoury and un- sightly one. The little back-room is worse than the front, being less liable to criticism and observation. It is a room to receive in—a room to show off in—but not—most certainly, most em- phatically—not a room to live in. The only sign of occupation that Psyche can discover lies in an open book, thrown face downwards on the couch, and being fond of novels, and horribly short of something to do, she takes it up and begins to read at the page where it lies open. She has lived too far out of the gossip of the world to learn from the name that it is a book which, having been condemned by the critics and those who might reasonably be supposed to know something about it, as unwholesome and improper read- ing, and unfit for modest women's eyes, has found its way to all libraries and most homes, and achieved a greater success than any novel of the day. To some indeed it goes furtively UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 149 —is hidden under pillows, and read under the rose. But Lady Conynghame, though she is at a good deal of pains to conceal the cracks in her china, the shortcomings of the appointments of her household, is not so particular as to any small blemishes on her morals. Here it lies conspicuously open, with its pale blue cover apparent to all eyes, and its unlovely pages waiting to be read. But Psyche has not read half-a-dozen of them before she flings it away from her, with a little red flush on her pretty white cheeks, and a vague sense of shame and indiscretion a£ having read even so much. Whatever it may become undae Lady Conynghame's tuition, her taste is not yet sufficiently educated to appreciate the full flavour of this fashionable novel. She looks at it as it lies discarded on the rug, with a shudder of disgust and aversion, and feels almost as if in touching it she has received some ineradicable taint. Indeed, the whole atmosphere of the room, moral and physical, oppresses and sickens her. There are none, so the wise men tell us, so liable to the deadly influence of miasma as they who come to it, fresh from purer air. And she has come straight from a country life— spent almost entirely out of doors—to this little unwholesome London house. Straight from Dorothy to Lady Conynghame. She tries to shake off the weight that seems to be pressing so heavily upon her. The craving for freer light, for purer air, leads her to the window, and she furtively draws up the heavy blinds—not without some lurking fear that Lady Conynghame may come in and discover her in the act. Outside the sun is shining with tempered brightness, the lovely June day is dying. The carriages are rolling home from the park. She looks at them wistfully. There are open barouches, with pretty and well-dressed girls, and almost equally pretty and well-dressed mothers ; showy victorias, with showy horses, 15° UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. and showy women in them ; and now and then a showy child, dressed in worthy imitation of its mother. Psyche regards them with a genuine admiration, and a lurking mistrust which might make them smile, if they could understand it. " Is it possible," she asks herself, sickening and doubting, ''that they ate so fair outside — so black inside?" — that those mothers are like the mothers in the book she has just read, and whose plot she has dimly fathomed? So heavy—so deadly is the taint that is creeping over her, that almost she is inclined to believe it, when suddenly there comes to her—straight from God's own heaven—a remem- brance of one who is altogether different from these—a woman with pure brow, with modest eyes and untainted heart, and who, although she bears her part in life, as they must whom God has put into it, is absolutely and entirely " unspotted from the world." And the thought of Dolly saves her. The deadly unbelief in all things good and all things pure, which is perhaps the surest forerunner of the loss of all goodness and purity, is dispelled as unwholesome mists are dispelled by health-giving sunlight. The world that contains Dolly could not contain so foul a woman as that whose picture she has just read. It is all a lie—a sickening and deadly lie—but it deceives her no longer. She looks out with eyes a little dim with tears, born of the sudden tender remembrance of Dolly, and yet with delight and admiration, no longer darkened by doubt and mistrust. It seems such a wonderful scene, and all the women are, from this point of view, so good to look at. She has never thought very much of herself, but she has never felt so small, or stood so low in her own opinion, as she stands at this minute, looking out from her hidden corner, in her old grey gown, at these fashionably-dressed people. It has always seemed strange and wonderful enough that Darrell should have admired and loved her, but it seems doubly strange now. Indeed it requires all her faith in him, UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD, all her tender memories of his most earnest assurances of that love, to be able to credit it. And yet—so strong is its power—stronger even than the vanity, the ambition, the desire to show off, and be at the summit of fashion, which appear sometimes to have become the master-passions which make the world go round—that to be in the same city with her lover, to know herself nearer to him, to be sure that some day, sooner or later, she must come face to face with him, she can endure all the hardships that surround her, the discomfort of the mean little bed-room, the stifling confinement of this showy little gim-crack drawing- room, the hunger, the loneliness—and yes, she can endure even Lady Conynghame herself! CHAPTER III. The week of probation is over, and the first night of Psyche's entry into the world of pleasure and fashion has arrived. Which of us who have taken, some may-be but a few, some a great many paces along life's rough highway cannot recall some first night or day, when, with a light heart and a fearless spirit, believing neither in ills nor disappointments, we took the broad irretraceable step which divides boyhood from man- hood, girlhood from womanhood ? The path that lay ahead of us seemed all strewn with rose leaves then—goodly to the sight, sweet to the smell—and though mayhap they have grown scentless and withered, and have turned to dead ashes beneath the heavy tread 01 years—should we have believed it though an angel .iom heaven had prophesied it to us then—or believing, have cared? It is the prerogative of youth to live only for the present. When we are very young the past has no place in our memories, the future no hold on our anxieties. 152 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. Psyche, for her part, has for this one night in her life at least, no thought for the morrow. All her heart is concentrated in the one most passionate desire to meet her lover. By frequent dwelling on—by constant mental reiteration, his words and looks, nay, his very kisses have become weak and unreal as things that have happened in a dream. She is longing—as they only who have suffered absolute silence and separation can long—for some visible and tangible proof of her lover's reality, of her lover's love. She is, moreover, possessed by a not unnatural desire to show him how well it is possible for her to look. For the Psyche who ascends the stairs of a certain fashion- able London house on this night of the 15th of June, 18—, in Lady Conynghame's wake, is a very different Psyche from the one who arrived travel-stained and weary, in her ill- fashioned gown, a week ago. London dressmakers, hairdressers, bootmakers, and all their lesser satellites have done their best or their worst for her, and it may fairly be admitted that up to the present point they have rather improved her than spoilt her. The dressmaker, being a clever woman, has had the sense to let well alone, and to use her art rather to aid nature than to hide it. Her gown, of thick ivory-white satin, hanging in straight, heavy folds that fit so subtly to her lovely figure that they reveal where they pretend to conceal, has no ornament but a border of braided pearls at the hem and round the neck, and is the perfection of audacious simplicity. A less beautiful or a less youthful woman could not dar£ to wear it, but Psyche's round young neck and arms, soft-tinted as a cream rose-leaf, Psyche's small bronze head and deep glowing eyes, in which the fire of suppressed excitement has lit so bright a light, come triumphantly out of the ordeal. It would be difficult indeed to tell where the gown ends and UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 153 the neck begins, but for the tucker of old yellow lace, which at the last moment she has sewn in with her own fingers, despite all Lady Conynghame's remonstrances and sneering assurances that she would not find it over low when she'got into the room and saw the other women's. But whether it be due to her gown, or her dress, or her novelty—perhaps a little to all three, and mostly to the last— it is certain that she is not allowed to ascend even the stair- case without experiencing with a good deal of surprise what broad and unveiled stares men and women—presumably well- bred—will permit themselves in society. There is not, it is true, that difficulty in getting up which may be experienced on a great many staircases in the height of the season, for the house which Lady Conynghame had chosen for the first introduction of her grand-daughter is an exceptionally good one regarded from a ball-giving point of view. It may indeed be surmised that the very best houses, regarded from another and more critical point of view, are no longer open to her, and that those who are inclined to pride themselves on a certain moral exclusiveness and who in spite of usage and fashion stick to their own ideas of what a woman ought to be, and do not consider that sixty or seventy odd years are of themselves sufficient to wash out the follies and scandals of youth, have long ago turned the cold shoulder on her, and figuratively, if not literally, shut their doors in her face. But it is certain that these are the exceptions, and that in most houses she is an accepted, if not an honoured guest. She is in truth very near being what she considers herself—an important and almost indispensable adjunct of the London season. A woman who is seen everywhere, known everywhere, and almost by everyone. And from the long list of fashionable and not over-exclusive houses—which, after all, form the large majority—she has chosen one of the best. 154 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. The hostess, Mrs. Tremenheere Lawson, possesses all the most necessary qualifications for her part—a big and well- appointed house, unlimited wealth, a face and figure that are presentable without being too good-looking, a taking manner, and a husband who is all that can be desired in a fashionable woman's husband, having an infinite capacity for making money and for effacing himself. Her rooms, her flowers, her suppers, her musicians, her floor, are all the very best of their kind, and the only qualifications necessary to her guests are that they should be neither unattrac- tive nor unamusing—or at all events, not both unattractive and unamusing. These being facts that society had long ago discovered, her balls were among the most popular in London; and though they could not be said to possess the exclusiveness of some more aristocratic houses, neither could they be accused of that deadly flavour of dulness which pervades some most fashion- able entertainments. But though the rooms are large—so large that it is not only possible to see and be seen in them—but also, which is a good deal rarer, to be able to dance in them, there is always a certain contingent in every London ball-room, who hang about the doorways, and block up the entrances. And of these Psyche, like all the rest, has to run the gauntlet. She is not allowed to pass unnoticed, and indeed her face is lovely enough in its first freshness and youth to make its mark anywhere. " Look at that girl coming up the stairs," says a little sharp- eyed woman, who forms one of a group who are standing chat- ting at the chief entrance into the ball-room, with that fine disregard for other people's convenience which characterises English crowds. " What a strange gown ! Does not she look like Iphigenia going to the sacrifice ? " " A very pretty Iphigenia," says the man whom she addresses, UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 155 —"Who in the world can she be? I am sure," with some animation, " that I have never seen her before." " She is with Lady Co.nynghame—look ! she is speaking to her," says another. " That horrible old woman !—One sees her dreadful painted face everywhere. For my part," with a shudder, " I cannot bear the sight of her. She is like a death's- head at a feast, a sort of memento mori, to remind one of what one may come to ! I cannot imagine why people ask her." " Because," says a man with a quiet, cynical face, and who is a good deal older than these others, " though she has out- lived her beauty, she has kept her tongue, which is almost as effective. I am not sure," with a little smile, " that I would not as soon take her in to dinner as take in the prettiest woman in London. She is very wicked, I am afraid; but," with another smile, " she is very amusing." "Very scandalous, you mean," says the other, sharply, " which I suppose comes to the same thing. I hear she kills more reputations in a day than any other woman in a lifetime. I expect," shrewdly, " that is why they all ask her; they are afraid if they do not she will say something against them." " It 'must be Lady Conynghame's grand-daughter," says the woman who spoke first, still regarding Psyche with a fixed stare—" the one she has been talking so much about—do not you know ? She is," with a sneer, " to cut out all our beauties. There has never been anything seen like her since Lady Conynghame's time ! " " Lady Conynghame's grand-daughter ! " says the other, with a laugh of real humour. " Do you mean that you credit that old woman with having had a child ! Imagine her," bub- bling over into irrepressible mirth, " dandling a baby in her arms." " Nevertheless, she did have a child," says the man who spoke before ; " and though you may not believe it, she was one of the most beautiful women I ever saw in my life. She," with a sigh, " was the first Iphigenia. She was offered up as a i56 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. sacrifice on the altar of her mother's debts—and her mother's diplomacy." "Was not there some story about her?" says an older woman, who has been standing quietly in the background, listening and looking. " Did not her husband ill-treat her, or did not she run away, or something ? " " H—ush ! " The hush is due to the fact that Lady Conynghame and her grand-daughter are at this very moment passing through the doorway where they are standing. If indeed the one of them had not been really deaf—or so conveniently deaf that she would never permit herself to hear anything that might tend to her own disadvantage—and the other in that state of concentrated excitement which very nearly approaches to " stage-fright," they could scarcely have failed to catch the last words. Once launched in the ball-room, Psyche's success no longer remains a matter of doubt. For though beauty is in itself no assured guarantee of success in a ball-room, and the very prettiest women are often left to look on while others—better known or more popular—dance, yet in this instance Lady Conynghame, of whom her worst enemies would not deny that she is a clever woman, has so paved the way for her grand- daughter's appearance, that failure is hardly possible to her. And though maybe there are handsomer women in the room, women better qualified to hold their own in the long run; women, who having beauty have by no means desired to hide it under a bushel; women, who having none have yet so loudly and persistently laid claim to it that people have at last almost taken them at their own valuation—yet they all lack the one most potent charm which Psyche possesses. With their looks and their attitudes, their words and their doings, all they who can look into shop-windows or read society-journals, are already most drearily familiar. Whatever they may be, good or bad, beautiful or unbeauti- t/MS POTTED FROM THE WORLD. 137 ful, they are not new. Everyone already knows everything about them—they have taken care of that. But Psyche is new. For this one night, at least, she enjoys a triumph which a good many women might find it in their hearts to envy her— but for which some of them, if they could understand how dearly it is likely to be bought, might with all their hearts pity her. Before she well knows where she is her card is nearly full, and it is only by the exercise of the most transparent arti- fices that she is able to save two of her dances. For she has not parted with the hope that Darrell may yet come. Has not Lady Conynghame told her that all the best men in London were to be met at Mrs. Tremenheere Law- son's ?—and is she not sure that he is, not only one of the best, but the very best of all. For the first two dances she is mainly occupied by the desire not to disgrace herself, for dancing in a London draw- ing-room, however large, is a very different thing, as she discovers to her cost, to doing one's steps in an half-empty school-room, with a girl for one's partner. Her first two partners are, as chance will have it, both young, both active, and both inveterate dancers; and being neither of them disposed to lose so good an occasion of show- ing themselves with so pretty a girl, they give her very little breathing-space, only filling up the pauses between the dances with those broad and full-flavoured compliments which they have been accustomed to find acceptable. The third is very different to these others. At a first glance Psyche imagines him to be very young and very foolish, at her second very old and very quizzical. He is, in fact, neither the one nor the other, but has a way of using an eye-glass, and assuming at his pleasure a fatuous or a cynical expression, which has bewildered a good many people more experienced than she is. He is an unhappy young man, who, not from any personal 158 UNSPO TTED PR OM THE WORLD. attractions of his own, but simply because fate made him tlie heir to a very old name and a very large fortune, has been so hunted and worried by ambitious mothers and still more ambitious daughters, that he has been driven into assuming a misogynistic character which is by no means natural to him. He is, by nature, as well inclined to admire pretty girls, and to be friends with them all, as any man in the world, but the danger of paying any one of them any particular attentions has driven him into bestowing them on less legitimate objects. He has thereby obtained a reputation which has rather increased his value in some women's eyes. And the fact of his dancing at all, still more of his dancing with a young and unmarried woman, is sufficient of itself to attract a good deal of attention and excite a good deal of surprise. But Psyche is quite unaware of her own good fortune. It is indeed one of those pieces of good fortune which require some superior information to enable one to appreciate them at their due value. After the first turn, during which she gets more bumps and bruises than during the whole of the previous dances, he stops abruptly. "Do you like dancing?" he says, when he has arranged himself and his eye-glass and taken a good look at her. "Ye—s," dubiously,—" I think I do." A minute ago she would have answered with much more determination. Now her opinion is a good deal modified by the fact that there are two distinct scratches on her pretty white arms. "Well," with emphasis, "I hate it. In fact I am a good deal of the opinion that life would be tolerable but for its diversions. Perhaps," he goes on with candour, "it is iBi It is a low seat—just big enough to contain them—wedged into a little recess at the farthest corner of the back drawing' room. It is nearest to an open window—it is farthest from Lady Conynghame of any seat in the room—and it is difficult to say which they consider the greatest advantage. To those that are looking on it appears that Captain Darrell has monopolised this position an unwarrantably long time. Indeed, a good deal of that discretion which he displayed on Psyche's first arrival in London has of late conspicuously deserted him. Whether it may be that he relies too much on his own powers of keeping Lady Conynghame in the dark, or that he is in reality too genuinely and deeply in love to com- placently see others usurping what he has some right to consider as his own possession, it is certain that he has, by degrees, abandoned some of that prudence which he had at first endeavoured to teach her. She has no longer any reason to complain of his want of warmth—on the contrary, it is she who has sometimes to exercise a restraint upon him. It is probable that a man never values those good things which fate or chance has bestowed upon him so highly as when he finds that others endorse his opinion, and are inclined to rival him in their possession. Down in the country, where no one had disputed his right to her, he had thought her a very pretty girl—he had even, in his own way, fallen very much in love with her. Up here in London, where others admire her as much as he had done— where he finds himself in danger of losing her—his passion has received the strong incentive power of rivalry and jealousy. But what he has lost in prudence she has gained. Four weeks of Lady Conynghame's tuition have not been altogether thrown away upon her. It is she who reminds him now that their comparative isolation from the rest of the company has been unduly pro- longed. iS2 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. " Do not you think," she says nervously, glancing around her and dropping her voice very low, for they are so hemmed in on every side that it is difficult to speak without being overheard— " that you had better go and talk to someone else ? Grannie does not seem to be looking at us. She has turned the other way, but I am certain," laughing, "that she has eyes in the back of her head. She will be down upon us in a moment." " Not a bit of it," he answers coolly. " I do not believe she can see an inch off her nose. No doubt," smiling, "she thinks you are quite safe with Brooke. By-the-bye, is that why you want to get rid of me ? Are you anxious to give him his turn?" Her face changes. Whatever else she has lost during these last few weeks—and one who loved her might fancy that she had lost a good deal—she has not altogether parted with her honesty. "On the contrary, I wish," she answers fervently, "that I might never see him again. I do not think we are dealing fairly with him—we ought to tell him the truth. We are making use of him to serve our own ends, and it is not right—say what you will, it is not right! " " Do not trouble yourself," he says quietly; " it will do him a great deal of good. He has been so run after all these years that it will be the making of him when he finds that one woman in the world has really the courage .to say ' no7 to him." " I wish that it was anyone else/' she says, slowly and regret- fully. " He has been good to me—always good—and I like him. I cannot bear to do him so ill a turn." " No doubt he has been good to us—without meaning it," he replies with the same coolness—heartlessness she might call it in anyone else. " If Lady Conynghame were not so sure of him she would not have been so complacent all these weeks. I suppose when she finds out her mistake—and mind, you must not let it come to that yet—there will be the deuce to pay !" " We are living on the verge of an explosion," she says UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD 183 feverishly, pushing back the soft, loose curls from her white forehead with a gesture of oppression. "I feel it every day. I can scarcely sleep or breathe. And when it comes " " When it comes," he goes on, taking up her words, "there will be a row—no doubt of that. You will be sent back to the country in disgrace, and I shall come there and see you." She does not answer. Perhaps she is not able to regard the prospect with the same equanimity as he does—perhaps she understands something of what "going back to the country in disgrace" may mean for her; and not even the hope of his coming there to see her can make it palatable to her. Her look is noLaltogether hard to read. " My darling," he says tenderly, dropping his voice still lower, and furtively touching her hand under cover of her fan, "it will be hard for you, terribly hard; but I will make it up to you some day—I swear that I will! No doubt," he goes on presently, still in the same low tone, " you would do a great deal better if you were to accept Brooke and his riches, and throw me over altogether—any other girl but you would do it. He is not a bad little fellow, and I dare say he would make a good husband. Perhaps," jealously, "in a little while you would forget all about me and be quite happy." " Do you think so?" she answers, looking at him—and he finds in her look such a stedfast and loving faithfulness as not only perfectly reassures him, but, what is more, gives him a pang of compunction. For he has not as yet altogether rid himself of that uneasy burthen which we call conscience. "Well!" he says presently, laughing a little uneasily—"since we cannot alter matters, we must make the best of them. Let us be philosophical and take the goods the gods provide, and enjoy ourselves while we can. The end cannot be far off. A week or two will see the London season over. We shall be more than foolish if we do not make the most of what remains to us." " Are not we making the most of it ? " she asks, not without 184 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD, some shame as she remembers all the little stratagems and deceptions of which she has been guilty in order to see her lover. "It seems to me we have done our best." "I was thinking about the future, not about the past. Listen !" he whispers hurriedly—" we may be interrupted in a moment. I have arranged with Mrs. Aylmer. She has promised to come on Sunday; and I have got Carruthers to make a fourth. We shall go by an early train—have the whole day on the river—dine at Skindle's—and Mrs. Aylmer will see you home." The girl's face flushes. The prospect of a whole unbroken day with her lover seems too good to be true. "Grannie will never let me go," she says despondingly. " There is not a hope of it." "Yes, she will!" he answers vehemently. "I have managed that. Mrs. Aylmer will arrange it with her. Leave all that to me. Only promise that you will come !" " I confess it seems strange to me," she answers slowly, and with a little anxious pucker in her forehead, "that Mrs. Aylmer should put herself out of the way to serve us. I have always —rightly or wrongly—had a notion that she does not like me, or rather," flushing hotly, " that she has divined that you like me and is jealous of me ! Are you sure—are you quite sure —that you do well to trust her ? " " I have not trusted her any more than is necessary," he answers, flushing a little too. "She knows that I admire you, and that I think it will be pleasant to have a day on the river with you. On the other hand, she likes Carruthers, and he admires her—so," with a laugh, "we shall all be happy." But she is not satisfied. There are intuitions that baffle the finest diplomacy. Her intuition tells her that it is not Carruthers that Mrs. Aylmer likes, but Darrell himself, and warns her, most strongly, to trust nothing to her kindness. But, on the other hand, the thought of a day on the river— away from Lady Conynghame, away from all those trivial and UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. I85 wearisome surroundings of which during these last weeks she has grown so thoroughly tired—and with her lover—presents an inducement so strong that she has neither the courage nor the wisdom to refuse it. " You know best," she says, hesitatingly. " And if you are sure " But she says no more. There is a movement in the crowd immediately in front of her, and a man, of a presence suffi- ciently striking to make itself observed even among this well- dressed, well-looking London assembly, makes his way towards her. "Sir John !" she cries, starting to her feet, and holding out her hand with a look of unmistakable gladness. " How in the world did you come here ? " " I have come to see you twice before—did not they tell you?" he answers, with his grave smile—"but I did not find you at home. So seeing the lights in your windows I ventured to come in, and Lady Conynghame was so good as to tell me where I should find you." As he speaks he looks at Darrell, who has risen too, and they exchange nods—not of the warmest kind. "You must come and sit here," says Psyche nervously, taking him to the seat which Darrell so lately occupied. " I want to hear everything—about home." " And I," says Darrell, accepting the situation with as good a grace as is possible to him, "will go and talk to Lady Conynghame about Sunday." There is a moment's silence when he has gone. " When did you come ? " asks Psyche. " How long have you been here ? Tell me all about it." There is in her manner a conspicuous absence of that well trained ease which she has, under Lady Conynghame's tuition, so nearly acquired. There is something in this man's very presence that seems to make her, in some strange, indefinable way, sud- denly and ashamedly conscious of her own short-comings. i86 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. " This is the second time that I have been in town since you came here," he answers her. " The first time I called twice. Dolly was so anxious to hear of you from someone who had seen you. She seemed to find your letters not altogether satisfying—but I failed to see you. This time, you see," smiling at her, "1 have been more successful." "Dolly?" she says slowly. "Dolly?—I had almost for- gotten her. She seems," with a long and heavy breath, " so apart from the world in which I am living now." " And yet," he says quietly, " she has not forgotten you. On the contrary, she is always thinking about you—always looking forward to the time when you will come back to her." " And at first," she goes on, still in the same dreamy way— speaking to herself rather than to him—"I was always think- ing of going back to her. But now, do you know, I think I could hardly bear it." "No doubt," he replies, with a short laugh, "you would find it hard to go back to so quiet a life. I suppose," with some of that cynicism of which, even in his better moments, he finds it hard to rid himself, " I must congratulate you. I hear that you have become a fashionable beauty—a very fashionable beauty ! They tell me that your portraits are in the shop- windows—your name in everyone's mouth. Certainly you and Dolly are far enough apart! " In his manner, whether he means it or not, there is a dis- tinct reproach—or so she takes it. "You are wrong!" she says, flushing hotly, "altogether wrong. Whoever told you that my portraits are in the shop- windows told you what is not true. Even Grannie," with a bitter smile, "would not let me come to that! I believe that someone did make a sketch of me and put it in some paper. It was not my fault—I could not help it; but," falteringly, " you have always been hard on me—always—since the very first." " Have I?" he asks, a great deal more gently. " Well! at UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 187 any rate I did not mean it. On the contrary, I may acknow ledge to you, since you accuse me of unkindness, that I came to town with the sole and express purpose of serving you, if I could. It has worried me as it has worried Dolly, to think that you should be alone here among strangers with no one to take any care of you." "Is that true?" she asks, turning to him with so sudden, so radiant a smile, that it very nearly gets the better of his sober good sense. " Is that really true ? " But before he can answer her someone interrupts them. Those who have held aloof from her while Darrell was with her, understanding perhaps that she did not desire to be dis- turbed, have no such compunction with regard to this middle- aged, almost unknown1 man. One and another come up to her and exchange words and greetings with her. Is not she the principal attraction of this dull little party? And having once come they are by no means disposed to go. She is surrounded by a little group of eager and interested men, among whom is Mr. Brooke, who has with some ingenuity escaped from his corner—and Sir John has no more chance of exchanging a word with her that will not be overheard by them all. And yet those who are watching him and wondering who he *s, notice that he shows no intention of giving up his place. The evening is on the wane. People are beginning to go, and the rooms are already a good deal emptied when Darrell again makes his way to the little seat in the corner. " I have come to say ' good-bye,'" he says bending over Psyche and speaking low, yet not so low that Sir John cannot overhear him. "I have arranged it all with Lady Conyng hame. Mrs. Aylmer is to call for you on Sunday. Remember —a quarter to eleven, sharp ! " And with that he goes. Other people begin to go too. The room is getting almost 188 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. empty, and once more, and for the last time, Sir John and Psyche are left alone together. "Well! " he says slowly, and, as it seems, almost regret- fully, " I suppose I must go. After all, I have not seen much of you—have I ? What message am I to take to Dolly? Am I," turning and looking at her, "to tell her that I found you very happy ? " " Happy?" she answers, colouring a little under his sted- fast look. "Yes!—I suppose so. But, indeed, that is a question that I hardly ask myself. • It seems to me sometimes that I am living in a dream—it is all so unreal. I suppose," laughing, "I shall wake up, like Cinderella, to find myself back in my rags and my obscurity very soon. But Cinderella enjoyed herself while she was at the ball—why should not I?" " Why not indeed ! Enjoy yourself as much as you will—■ only," he says earnestly, " take care of yourself. It seoms to me there is no one else to take any care of you." There is a moment's silence—then he says quickly : " Will you tell me—I am afraid I have no right to ask—but do you mind telling me where you are going on Sunday—with Captain Darrell ? " There is a slight hesitation before these three last words, and she notices it. "I am going with Mrs. Aylmer on the river," she says, laying some emphasis on the name, and speaking with some coldness, as if indeed she considers it no particular business of his. "Captain Darrell and Mr. Carruthers are to be of the party." "And," he asks quickly, " has Lady Conynghame consented to this arrangement ? " " I believe so—Captain Darrell says so." There is another silence—a longer one than the last. "Psyche!" he says suddenly, addressing her, as she observes, for the first time by her name, " I wish that you would do me a favour. I am afraid that it will be a very UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. difficult one for you to grant, and that you will think I have no right to ask it; yet I want you—for Dolly's sake—to give up this party." " Why should I give it up ? What have you to say against it ? " she replies, with a good deal of warmth. " Surely if Grannie consents that is all that is necessary." "I am afraid," he answers quietly, "that Lady Conynghame is not so careful of you as she ought to be. I know very little of Mrs. Aylmer, it is true, but that little convinces me that she is neither so old nor so steady as to be a fit chaperone for you on such an occasion. Believe me," he goes on earnestly and very kindly, " trust to me, who am so much older and know so much more of the world than you do, you will do better to give it up." " I cannot. It is all arranged," she says doggedly. " And indeed," warmly, " I do not see that you have given me any good reason why I should." " Then," he answers coldly, rising as he speaks, " there is no more to be said, except good-bye." " If you were in my place," she says, looking at him appealingly as she takes his offered hand, " you would under- stand how glad I am to get away from Grannie—from all this " looking around her with a comprehensive glance that includes all her tawdry surroundings, " even for one day. You would not be hard on me." " And some day you will perhaps understand that I never meant to be hard upon you, and that you might have done better to take my advice." And with that he goes. There is in his manner something of the hurt and offended dignity of a man who, giving counsel but seldom, yet hardly expects when he does give it to find it rejected. She looks after him regretfully. She could almost find it in her heart to call him back, and promise to do as he had wished—almost—not quite. igo UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. "And he could not understand why I knew there was no harm in it, and I could not tell him," she thinks to herself, looking after him with eyes full of smarting tears. Every day—every hour—the secret of her engagement to Darrell becomes heavier and harder to bear. " Upon my word—a very presentable man," says Lady Conynghame, speaking of Sir John, when she and her grand- daughter are left alone in the little disordered room, so lately crammed with guests. " There is something of an old- fashioned air about him, but I am by no means sure that it does not contrast favourably with the free-and-easy manners of the present day. By-the-bye," turning to her sharply, "how was it you never told me anything about him ? " "Did I not?" Psyche asks weariedly and indifferently— " I do not know that there was anything to tell." "At all events," with a little laugh, "he has thought it worth while to come here twice after you. The Heathcotes," she goes on musingly, " are a very old family, and this man has been very lucky. He has come into the title and the pro- perty long before he could reasonably have expected it. His father and his brother died in one year, if I remember rightly." " What luck !" says the girl, with a bitter laugh, "to lose one's father and one's brother in one year, and be left all alone in the world ! " Lady Conynghame regards her for a moment with cold surprise, and then turning away to a neighbouring mirror, begins anxiously to examine the havoc the heat and the wear and tear of the evening have made in her appearance. " Captain Darrell has been trying to get me to promise that you should go to Maidenhead on Sunday," she says, presently turning away, apparently satisfied with her inspection. " I do not know that I am wise to let you go, but it appears to be the right thing to do now-a-days, and if Mrs. Aylmer chooses to chaperone you, X suppose there cannot be much harm in it. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 191 For my part," with a shudder, " I hate these boating-parties, and I shall be only too glad to get a day's rest." There is a pause. If she has expected that Psyche will express any great pleasure or eagerness at the prospect, she finds herself mistaken. In any case she would probably have had the sense to disguise her gladness; but, as it happens, there is no need for disguise. Her heart and her spirits have sunk so low that there is no room for gladness. Sir John's kindliness, his ill-accepted advice and warning, have touched her very nearly. For once—if only for once— in her unreal and feverish life, she looks ahead at the future, and its possibilities nearly make her sick with fear. If only he had known the truth about her; if he could have understood how she was deceiving everyone — even Dolly—what would he have thought of her ? " The fact is," Lady Conynghame goes on, dropping her voice a little so that she may not be overheard, " the chief reason that has induced me to consent to this party, which is probably of Captain Darrell's arrangement, is that he seems to me, of late, to be very much in earnest about you. 1 confess I did not give him credit for it. I imagined him to be a confirmed flirt, who would never range himself; but if he is really in love with you, I do not know that you could do better than fall back on him—that is, of course, if Mr. Brooke means nothing. His expectations are not altogether so assured as one could wish, but certainly if his uncle does leave him everything he will be a very rich man." But she has gone too far. The indelicate outspokenness of this speech proves the last straw that breaks down the girl's endurance. In any other mood she might have borne it. She has indeed already borne as much—or more—but to- night all the excitements that she has endured reach their culminating point. " Does it never occur to you, Grannie," she asks, turning 192 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. round on her with flaming eyes and curling lips, " that / may have some heart, some feeling in the matter; that I may, by some chance, possess a preference, one way or another ? Am I only to be put up for sale, like a piece of furniture or one of your pretty china figures, and knocked down to the highest bidder ? " " It occurs to me," says Lady Conynghame, looking at her with undisguised contempt, " that you are a little fool! You always were—you always will be, I suppose." That delicate veneer of polish which society demands is apt to be knocked off from her speech and her manners at a rougher contact. Psyche has already learnt that. But to- night her excitement carries her beyond the fear even of her grandmother's displeasure. "To be sold by auction !" she says, making a mocking bow to her own lovely image reflected full length in a mirror. " Absolutely without reserve ! Must be disposed of at the end of the season—a young woman, warranted genuine. Her hair, her teeth, and her complexion do not come off, and she is sound of limb and of body. N.B. This is a very cheap lot! " "You are worse than a fool!" says Lady Conynghame, with uncontrolled anger—"you are mad ! From the very first moment I saw you," she goes on, speaking the truth in her passion, " I knew how it would be—and I repented of my bargain. Marry, or do not marry," she goes on vehemently, "just as you please—only remember at the end of the season, I wash my hands pf you. I have had enough of your whims and caprices. I must have been out of my mind when I accepted the charge of you. It is one comfort," with a bitter laugh, gathering up her skirts, and sweeping out of the room, " to think that you will have plenty of time to repent when you get back to the country !" And with this parting shot she goes. And Psyche is left standing among the tumbled chairs, the untidy rugs, the guttering candles, the fading flowers—alone. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. XQ3 CHAPTER VI. If fair weather may be taken as a warrantable prognostic of good-luck, then the day that dawns on the Sunday of the river-party leaves little room for fear. Yet Psyche, as she peeps through the blind of her open win- dow, finds in the brilliance of the sunshine no power to raise her spirits. For once in her life they are distinctly at low ebb. Whether it be that the warning of the man who has been her friend from the time that she was a little child still weighs upon her, or that she instinctively and unreasonably distrusts, and still more unreasonably dislikes, the woman who is to be her companion—she can hardly tell. She only knows, as she dresses herself in her simplest white gown, in her plainest and shadiest hat, that not even the pros- pect of a whole day with her lover can make her wholly glad. She has chosen her gown out of all the better and costlier ones that her wardrobe contains, with that natural good taste which is a heaven-born gift, and which cannot be acquired by all the art nor all the money in the world. Women with long purses may go to the best milliners, and be provided with the best trappings which art, when it is backed by wealth, can devise—and yet, if they have not the good sense which may teach them when and where they may appro- priately wear them, they may fail in their highest ambition—to seem well-dressed. It is the compensation of those who have not long purses, but have good taste, that they may thus beat them on their own ground. Psyche has the gift—not an altogether common one—of becoming her gowns, or making them become her, so that they seem not so much an addition to her beauty as an appropriate part of it; and it is a gift that is almost as effective, and as little to be acquired, as beauty itself. But at the present moment she knows that her face is over N 194 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. pale to suit the whiteness of her gown—that her eyes lack lustre, and that the glad shining of inward content which can make even dull eyes beautiful, is missing from them. For even those who have, not unnaturally, envied her for all those good gifts which nature has bestowed upon her, might at this time more justly pity her. Her little day—such a little one it has been—of gladness and triumph is very nearly over, and there is a heavy debt to pay for it. Not all her hopefulness—and she is naturally very hopeful —can make her regard the prospect lightly. She knows that when the time of reckoning with her grandmother comes—and it cannot be far off now—the burden of silence and secrecy which Darrell has laid upon her will become a burden almost too heavy to bear. There are moments of excitement, when it is possible to eat, drink, and be merry, even though we be perfectly conscious that to-morrow we die; but there are other moments—chiefly in the early morning—when the weight of the future lies too heavy for the enjoyment of the present. The sun has not reached his height; and though it is not difficult to predict how hot it will be, there is still some fresh- ness in the day when Mrs. Aylmer's little brougham drives up to the door. If Psyche is looking her worst, Mrs. Alymer, for her part, is certainly looking her best. Up to the present time the girl has always found her cold, and proud, and indifferent enough : and she, never having forgiven the speech that she had over- heard on the first evening they had met, nor the fact that Darrell was credited by rumour with having once entertained a very warm admiration for her, had paid her back coldness for coldness. She has, moreover, honestly wondered wherein lay her claims to that beauty with which all the world credited her. Well—now she wonders no more ! Before they have traversed UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 195 the short distance from Park Lane to Paddington she under- stands something of the personal fascination which has given Mrs. Aylmer all the advantages of beauty without the actual possession of it. It must be fairly admitted that a woman who, having no special qualifications for the part she means to play—being neither well-born, rich, nor, it must be confessed, very beautiful, yet manages to secure the advantages of all three—must be very clever. Indeed, some of those who have encountered Mrs. Aylmer, and treated her according to the foregone con- elusion—common to a good many clever men—that women who lay claim to beauty must necessarily be fools, have en- larged their experience, and learned their mistake with some bitterness. At any rate, she is clever enough to please where she means to please; and having evidently, for some motive of her own, determined to undo the unfavourable impression she has made upon Psyche, she has well nigh succeeded before they reach the station, where Captain Darrell and Mr. Carruthers are waiting for them. It is against her will that Psyche allows herself to be either flattered or amused—and yet, in spite of herself, she is both flattered and amused—and when she follows Mrs. Aylmer out of the carriage, she has gained some colour and brightness. It is not difficult to decide which is the most beautiful of the two women. The young girl in the white gown, with the fair, pure skin, just now delicately flushed as a wild rose, has in the broad daylight altogether the advantage of the other, who has lived a good many years in the wear and tear of the world. Late hours, and fashionable—i.e., unhealthy—living, must inevitably leave their marks on the best-preserved face after a little while, and not even the aid of art, so delicately used as to be imper- ceptible to men's eyes, can give her back the freshness of un- sullied youth. 196 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. But on the other hand, Mrs. Aylmer has the far greater advantage of a ready wit and a readier tongue, a perfect know- ledge of men's moods and manners, and an absolute absence of shyness. It is she who keeps them amused and alert through the journey by rail which is perhaps the most trying part of such excursions—it is she, indeed, who is the life and soul of the party throughout the day. And, after all, though men like to look at a beautiful face, they like still better to be amused. If it were her desire to rival Psyche and put her in the shade, she most certainly succeeds. But it is not apparent that it is her desire. On the contrary, she manifests towards her throughout the day such a perfect and unreticent friendliness as very nearly gets the better of Psyche's preconceived dislike —very nearly convinces her that she must have judged her harshly and unfairly. She is perhaps helped to this conclusion by the fact that Mrs. Aylmer exhibits no special partiality for Darrell. On the contrary, her sweetest smiles, her most telling glances, are be- stowed on Carruthers, who appears to appreciate them to the utmost. He is an exceedingly good-looking man, on whom nature has bestowed more strength of muscles than of brains, but has added into the bargain such a wonderful good temper and good nature as to make him the very man of all others for a river party or a picnic. There always must be one to do the hard work on these occasions, and he does it ungrudgingly—ungrumblingly. He pulls them all up the river, when Darrell, vowing it is too hot to work, throws himself into the bottom of the boat and contents himself with looking up into Psyche's eyes, per- mitting himself at the same time to be lazily amused with Mrs. Aylmer's lively conversation—and he does not turn a hair in the process. He neither gets hot, nor wild, nor dishevelled— nor has he thought it necessary to get himself up for the occa- UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 197 sion like Robinson Crusoe or a settler in the backwoods. He is, on the contrary, exceedingly pleasant to look at in his white flannels and Zingari cap, with his well-bronzed muscular arms pulling strongly at the sculls, and the hot July sun shining down on his handsome good-natured face. When they pull up into a little quiet nook in a back-water, unknown to most river-frequenters, to eat a light little lunch and drink the champagne-cup, which the heat has made so desirable, it is he who does all the hard work—washing the plates, mixing the salad, laying the cloth—while Darrell seizes the opportunity that he has all the while been longing for, to speak to Psyche. They have been very happy all the morning, but they have been happy in company. There has not, until now, been a chance of exchanging a word with each other which the others would not overhear. " My darling," he whispers very low, glancing under his eyes to make sure that Mrs. Aylmer's attention is engaged upon her plate. "Are you sure you are enjoying yourself? You do not seem like yourself; you are so quiet." "I am quite happy," she answers just as softly, and answers truly. Is not she always happy when she is with him ? " And if I am quiet it is because she," with a little bend of her head in Mrs. Aylmer's direction, " talks so much better than I could." " I wish to heaven," he answers fervently, though still in the same low voice, " that I had you all to myself. If they would only take a walk in the woods after lunch, and leave us to ourselves." But apparently they have no such intention. When the lunch is over, they dabble or drift lazily about the river—who would not be lazy on such a day as this ?—but they do not part company. The discreetest chaperone in the world could not more zealously guard her charge than Mrs. Aylmer guards Psyche. 198 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. Even Sir John, with all his fears, could find no fault with her in this particular. They stop at a little river-side inn for their afternoon tea, and then they go quietly and lazily back again, down the river. It is crowded now—too crowded to be altogether pleasant. The fashion of spending the day of rest (from toil or pleas- ure) on the water has become of late years—probably from the necessity to breathe at least on one day out of the seven a purer and less vitiated air—a fashion so prevalent as to run the chance of losing its pleasure. And on this the hottest and the brightest day of all this bright summer, all the world and his wife—or maybe all the world and someone else's wife—are apparently disporting themselves on the river. Boats of all sorts and sizes—steam launches, gondolas, wherries of the ricketiest and craziest sort, trim little canoes and outriggers jostle each other in the locks; and this well- appointed boat, with its good-looking occupants, are exposed to the free stares, and not unfrequently to the audible criticisms, of their fellow-prisoners. Mrs. Aylmer, for her part, has plenty to say of them, only she waits until she is out of the lock, and can say it without danger of being overheard. " Do you see that woman in the crimson gown and bonnet of steel glittering like a life-guardsman's- helmet ? " she says, indicating a passing boat. "Good heavens !—what can pos- sess her to get herself up like that for the river ? " " She has probably an ambition to set the Thames on fire," says Darrell laughing. " And look at that other one—there!" directing their atten- tion to a girl who is reclining with a paper Japanese parasol behind her fuzzy head—in a gown that seems covered with a pattern of peacocks'-eyes and puffs as big as half-quartern loaves on her shoulders. " Is not she like a bit of a dado? UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 199 Is not it," with a grimace, "a hideous get-up? Why, oh, why is there not a law to make women dress themselves becomingly?" " Public supervisors of dress—just as there are school and sanitary inspectors," suggests Darrell. " By Jove! What a time they would have of it at some of the women's hands, more especially the sesthetic ones." " It seems to me," says Carruthers in his slow and easy way, " that it is only the ugly ones who wear these grotesque costumes. I suppose it is their object to attract attention at any price. Most of the pretty women dress quietly. Look at Mrs. Daltqn, for instance ; she is nearly always in black." "Black !" says Mrs. Aylmer, curling up her pretty-little nose. " That is so like a man. Ask them their idea of the perfection of a gown, and nine out of ten will tell you black of some sort or another. As if the world were not gloomy enough as it is without our all going about like black-beetles! I suppose —poor souls," with a pitying disdain—" that their women-folk have so offended their eyes by horrible combinations of colours, that they fall back on black as their only safeguard." But to this neither Darrell nor Carruthers says anything. They have both perhaps a sneaking partiality for a black gown, but they are not prepared to do combat for their opinions in the face of such an undoubted authority as Mrs. Aylmer. They have passed that little bend which lies between Cook- ham lock and Cliveden, and are now drifting along in the very prettiest part of the river. The glorious mass of trees that rise so high and grow so thickly one above another, bending and intermingling with such a variety of tint and foliage as have been at once the glory and the despair of some of the greatest living artists, are throwing their dark shadows all athwart the gleaming water. The dying sun lingers yet a little on some of the topmost boughs, as though he loved best those that grow nearest to him, and they are blushing redly under his last hot kisses. 200 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. But underneath the darkness and the stillness are already growing. The boats are fewer here, and the swift-running stream carries them along with little help from Carruthers' strong arms. For Darrell has again abandoned, without much persuasion, all pretence of helping him, and is lying on a soft Persian rug at the feet of the two pretty women, smoking, with their consent, a little cigarette, and conscious of a luxurious sense of most enjoyable repose. He is indeed at this moment so much in love that it is a pleasure to be able, furtively, even to touch the hem of his little sweetheart's gown. And she, for her part, has not been so happy all day as she is at this moment. " It is lovely," she says, looking up into the dark solemn mass of trees and then down again into her lover's face. " I should like it to be always twilight on the river. I," with a long breath, " could stay here for ever." " Could you ? " says Mrs. Aylmer, laughing shortly. " Well, I, for my part, should prefer to have some dinner. It is certainly pretty," casting a glance—which is not nearly so attentive or so interested as those she has bestowed on each passing dress —on the scene around her, " but I have seen it so often. Ah ! " suddenly becoming a great deal more alert as she per- ceives in an open space where the light still lingers, a little group sitting by the water's side, "there is the duchess ! What a handsome woman she still is. It always does me good," she goes on with real enthusiasm, " when I see a woman a great deal older than myself who is so well-preserved. It gives one some hope for that terrible future which lies ahead of one ! " " I suppose," says Darrell, smiling a trifle scornfully, "that you are of the opinion of Madame du Barri, who said she would rather be dead than ugly. But all the same I do not see why you need be afraid. A handsome woman may be almost equally charming in every stage of her career, if she will only leave her- self as nature made her." Unspotted from the world. 201 11 There is nothing so pretty," says Carruthers, resting on his sculls a moment to join in the conversation, "as a pretty old woman." "Only unfortunately," rejoins Darrell, "there are no old women now-a-days. They are all " He halts abruptly. " Like Grannie," says Psyche, finishing the sentence for him, and understanding why he has pulled up. " Do not be afraid of hurting my feelings. I do not think I have any feelings where she is concerned. I hope," smiling softly, " the fifth command- ment does not apply to grandmothers, for certainly it would be difficult to honour Grannie." But to this he makes no answer. Assent would not perhaps be altogether polite, but certainly dissent is not possible. " Sometimes," she goes on, dropping her voice still lower, "she tells me that I am just like she was at my age. Accord- ing to all the laws of probability, I shall therefore be exactly like what she is at her age. It is not altogether a pleasing prospect—is it ? " " As if you could possibly be like her," he answers with a fer- vour which under the circumstances is not altogether discreet. " Do not you think," says Mrs. Aylmer in such well-accen- tuated and audible tones as seem to rebuke them for their low voices, " that we might be pushing on a little ? I do not know what you may feel, but I am getting horribly hungry." Carruthers, having no better wish than to obey her, pushes on with a will; and Darrell, being made to understand in a moment that he has committed a blunder, does his best to repair it. There is one more lock to get through—one more tedious waiting in not altogether pleasant company—for some of the other boat-loads have grown with the waning of the day more festive than agreeable—and then they skim swiftly over the small stretch of water that intervenes between them and their hotel. 202 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. " Land at last! " cries Mrs. Aylmer, jumping with a good deal of agility out of the boat. " I have almost forgotten the use of my legs." CHAPTER VII. The dinner is a success. Though it is certain that neither the food nor the wines are any better, nor perhaps so good as ordinarily well-to-do people are accustomed to partake of in their own homes, yet the fact of dining under unaccustomed circumstances and in pleasant company gives to both a 2est and a piquancy which they do not usually possess. They are all young, all gifted with good spirits and inclined to be well-pleased with each other; and there can be no more desirable ingredients for a little dinner- party than these. If the small jokes and witticisms that pass between them are not so profound as to bear re-telling—and indeed few jokes are—they are at least good enough to keep them all laughing. It is so easy to laugh under such circumstances ; and that, after all, is all that is needed. Even Psyche forgets her fears, forgets her shyness, and ex- pands into a gaiety that if it is not so pronounced as Mrs. Aylmer's is at any rate as agreeable. After dinner they stroll out into the garden, to find, a little to their disgust but not much to their surprise, that all those who have dined with them, or before them, have apparently done so also. Indeed, no one under seventy could think of staying within doors on such a night as this. It is as dark as it ever is on a fair summer's evening, but a young half-moon is shining through floating cloudlets, and casting a stream of silver light on the moving water, so that it it cannot rightly be called dark- ness at all. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 203 All the benches which the small garden contains and all the available chairs are apparently already occupied. Some, indeed, so young that they can afford to laugh at rheumatism, or so much inclined to each other's company that they are ready to defy all possible consequences, are sitting on the dew:soaked grass under the trees. Evidently there is neither privacy nor freedom to be expected here. Mrs. Aylmer goes straight down to the water's edge—the others following her lead as they have done all day. " Only a quarter to nine ! " she says gaily, " and a full hour before we need start to the station. Why should not we go once more on the water ?—and this time we will not go in one boat but in two. Four are no company at all." There is not one of them who has the prudence to gainsay her. The proposal probably chimes in too well with the in- clination of each. And if any scruples suggest themselves to either of the three, Psyche, for her part, lacks the courage, and the two men the wisdom or the self-denial to give them voice. On the contrary, they show a remarkable activity in carry- ing out the idea. They give Mrs. Aylmer no time to repent or to change her mind. They lay forcible hands on two small boats that have just come in, knowing nothing and caring less of Who their owners may be, or whether they may by any chance require them again; and in less time than one could imagine possible, they have, with the aid of a boatman, got them ready for use. Even Darrell shows almost as much energy on this occasion as Carruthers himself. Mrs. Aylmer is the first to get in. She does net jump this time. She is too well aware of the precarious nature 01 small boats, and too honestly averse to an unpremeditated bath to show any undue haste. When she has seated herself, she leans forward. 204 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. "Who is coming with me? " she asks, with an enchanting smile. Though the words are addressed to both of them yet her eyes are fixed—with a look that combines invitation and entreaty—straight on Darrell. She has never, perhaps, looked more beautiful than she looks at this moment with the moon- light—which is so much more flattering than the hard, un- blenching sunlight—shining full on her upturned face. And Darrell sees it—cannot fail to see it. A man is not blind to other women's charms even though he be in love, or at any rate, not so blind as the woman who loves him would fain believe him. Yet he draws back. " I suppose I must not deprive Carruthers of that pleasure," he says, with a short and uneasy laugh. " I know he is dying to go." " Carruthers needs no second invitation. He seizes on the opportunity with an avidity which leaves no time for discus- sion, and pushes off from the bank. Mrs. Aylmer does not say another word. She is a great deal too wise to use reproaches when she knows them to be altogether useless. She does not indeed even look at Darrell again. She only settles herself in her seat with an air of ostentatious contentment, and bestows on Carruthers a glance that expresses such unqualified satisfaction with the present arrangement that he is convinced he must have been alto- gether mistaken about that other look which he thought he had intercepted on its way to Darrell. And Darrell, seeing and understanding, smiles to himself. He is, for his part, perfectly satisfied with the way in which he has—as he imagines—so cleverly managed a rather difficult matter. " If we should miss each other on the water," he calls after them as they go, '' remember we must meet here at twenty minutes to ten. We must not lose the train ! " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 205 tl Now," he says, when he has settled Psyche and himsqlf and carefully adjusted the rudder-lines, " when I have pushed out a few yards draw sharp round to your left. We will not follow them; we will go down river, and meet them here when the time is up." For a few moments she is engaged in following his direc- tions. Not until they are in the middle of the stream and floating quietly downwards does she find time to speak. " I am afraid you have made her angry," she says nervously, looking in the direction in which their companions are disap- pearing. "I am sure that she wanted you to go with her." " Not a bit of it! " he answers cheerfully, if not altogether veraciously. " Why should she ? Carruthers is a much better-looking fellow than I am, and it can make no difference to her which of us she has with her—whereas to me," laughing, " it makes all the difference." But Psyche is not altogether assured. "I am afraid she will be vexed with me," she pursues regretfully; " and I fancy—do not think I am hard on her— but I fancy she could be very disagreeable to anyone who came in her way." "What does it matter?" he replies, with an indifference, which if it is not real is very well-assumed. "Do not let us waste our time in talking about her. What harm can she do us?" For though he knows, or ought to know, that a good deal of harm lies within the power of any woman, it is in his nature to run all risks in the future for the pleasure of the moment. " After all, though I am very willing to please her—have not I tried my best all day ?—I am still more willing," he goes on with some honesty, "to please myself andjyou. We have not had a chance of being alone together until now. Could you expect me to give it up ? " 206 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. There is so much tenderness in his look and his manner that she would not be a woman—she would not at any rate be a woman so natural and loving as she is—if she could any longer allow herself to regret what he has done. She casts all her fears to the winds, and smiles on him with a brightness which altogether reassures him. "Now you look more like yourself," he says cheerfully. " Let me tell you, sadness and silence do not suit you at all. When I saw you first," he goes on, looking into her lovely moonlit face, " you seemed to me the brightest living thing I had ever seen. To hold you in one's arms was like embracing a ray of sunshine." She laughs outright—she cannot help it; it is so seldom he allows himself to lapse into a poetical vein, and it is so unlike his ordinary matter-of-fact, man-of-the-world manner. " When you saw me first," she says with some of her old spirit, " you did not embrace me at all. Even you would hardly have had the audacity to do that; and when you did," recalling their first love-scene, " I am afraid I was more showery than sunshiny." "Tell me," he says presently, drawing the sculls into the boat, and leaning forward so that he can touch her hands— (it is only the untrustworthy' and top-heavy nature of little boats that prevents him from coming over to her side altogether)— " have you been quite happy all day ? Upon my word—upon my soul," appealing in his warmth to a property that he is not sure he is possessed of, " my chief desire in arranging this party was that you should have one day at least of real en- joyment; and all the while I have been fancying that some- thing—I could not tell what—has been troubling you." Then, as she does not immediately answer him : " Has anything gone wrong ?" he asks with real anxiety. "Has Lady Conynghame been bothering you? It often worries me terribly to think of you all alone in her hands. You poor little child ! What chance have you against her ? " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 207 They are much the same words that had been used, not long ago, by an altogether different person—but he does not know that. His solicitude touches her with a sense of gratitude that is almost pathetic, could he so understand it. "No, indeed," she answers quickly, anxious to reassure him. " She has been wonderfully complacent to me of late. I suppose," puckering her pretty brows, " it is because I have such a rooted distrust of her that I am almost more afraid of her kindness than of her unkindness. I feel that it is only because she makes so sure of my obedience in the long run, that she thinks she can afford to let me have my own way about little things. Well," with a sigh, "she will soon be undeceived." "Then, if it is not that," he persists, "what is it that is troubling you ? I know you well enough by this time to be sure that there is something." For a moment she is silent—then she lifts her face and looks at him. She has never before seemed to him—will never again seem to him—so lovely, so lovable. The moonlight, falling full on her face, makes it seem fairer and whiter than usual, and casts deep shadows around her dark glowing eyes. "Do you believe in presentiments?" she asks slowly. " They are foolish things, are they not ?—and yet, all day I have had a presentiment that, for this little pleasure of ours, we shall have somehow, some way—I cannot tell how—to pay very dearly." "Nonsense!" he says, laughing lightly, a good deal relieved to find that her trouble has no more substantial foundation. " You must be over-wrought—over-worried, my darling, to take such silly fancies into your head." "Yes; they are silly—I know that," she answers, a little aggrieved at the way in which he has received her confidence. "I suppose," she goes on, anxious to justify herself, "it was 208 unspotted from the world. because I was so strongly advised not to come; and warnings, even if one disregards them, are apt to leave some im- pression." " And," he asks shortly, " who had the impertinence to interfere with you ? Was it," jumping suddenly and intuitively to a conclusion, " that old fellow who took possession of you the other night ? " " If you call him an old fellow—yes ! But," smiling, "I do not think even his worst enemies could accuse him of more than forty years or so." " Meddling old fool! " he mutters under his breath, too angry to pick his words. "Tell him next time he interferes with you to mind his own business." "Perhaps, as he has known me since I was a baby," said Psyche a little drily, " he thought it was his business." " Does not he suppose—do not you suppose," he continues hotly, " that I know how to take care of you ? I should think, under the circumstances, it is a good deal more my affair than his." " But you see," she says quietly, " he does not know that." There is a moment's silence—perhaps in that moment even he, reckless as he is, realises something of the falseness of the position in which he has placed himself. There is no one, so far as the world knows, who has less right to interfere with her, or to call other men to book for their interference with her, than he himself; and yet he has, or thinks he has, the best of all rights. " Do not let us talk about him any more," says Psyche gently, too fond of him to bear to see him vexed when he had looked forward to being happy. " We are wasting our time, and it is going so quickly—so terribly quickly. In a little while we shall all be penned up together in a railway-carriage, wishing each other a hundred miles away, and trying our best to be amusing and talk nonsense, as we have done all day." "Speak for yourself," he answers laughing, and trying to UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 209 cast aside his momentary vexation. " I, for my part, flattered myself that I had been both amusing and sensible !" And after that Sir John and presentiments are both for- gotten, to be remembered perhaps at a later date. The smooth, swift current of the river bears them quickly and almost imperceptibly along. The many things which they have to say to each other—for it is not often they find themselves so absolutely alone—makes the time pass quickly and almost imperceptibly too. It is to Psyche that it first occurs that it is going over quickly. "Do not you think that we have gone far enough?" she asks, looking with some dismay at the long stretch of water that intervenes between them and their hotel. " It will take us much longer to get back—and I am afraid it must be getting late." " Plenty of time," says Darrell; but all the same he takes out his watch, and tries by the light of the moon to see how far the hands have travelled. "By Jove!" he says more quickly, putting it back; "it is later than I thought. We must get home as fast as we can. We shall do it, but we must lose no time; keep close to the bank—out of the current." He has no mind to lose the train. Reckless though he may be, he is not so reckless as willingly to get her into trouble. He pulls with all his power—and he is strong enough when he chooses to exert himself. Except a few admonitions as to her steering he scarcely speaks. He bends all his energies—all his will to his task; and she, understanding him, tries with all her power to do nothing to distract him—to do all she can to help him. It is not much. She can only watch, painfully and silently, the efforts he is making, and do her best to guide the little boat as near to the bank, without falling foul of boughs and shallows, as her small experience will permit her. There is not a sound but the long, regular swish of the sculls through o UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. the water, broken now and then by the few terse directions he gives her. When at last they approach the brightly-lighted hotel, it is evident enough that he has taxed his strength to the utmost. "We have done it!"he cries triumphantly; "we are not more than three minutes late at the outside." They look anxiously hither and thither—but Mrs. Aylmer and Carruthers are nowhere to be seen. The bank is so crowded with boats that the boatmen have not yet had time to house that some little time is lost in making their way up to it; and when at last Darrell manages to land and to hand Psyche out there is not a boatman to be seen. " Go on to the lawn and look for Mrs. Aylmer—she must be there," he says hurriedly. "Tell them to get a fly. I will join you in half a minute, when I have got rid of the boat." She obeys him without a word; and as she goes hears him shouting and scolding by turns. There are still some people lingering in the garden—people who are going to stay the night at the hotel, or going home by the last train; and by this uncertain light men and women have a way of looking so much alike that it is only by going close to each group, and staring hard at them, while they on their part do not forget to stare at her, that she convinces herself that those for whom she is seeking are not amongst them. In a few minutes Darreil joins her. " Where are they ? " he asks, anxiously. " Have not you found them?" She shakes her head—she cannot speak. She can see that even he is growing terribly nervous. " They must be here," he says, vehemently. But they are not. Two or three minutes more are lost in a search that proves that they are neither in the garden nor in the hotel. They have just abandoned it, When an over-worked, much- worried waiter turns up with a message that the lady had driven UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 21I Oil to the station some time ago, and had left word that Captain Darrell and the other lady were to follow her. " Good God !" cries Darrell fiercely, almost beside himself, " why could not you tell us that before ? " The man has neither the time nor the opportunity to con- vince them that he has not seen them before. Before he can, indeed, open his mouth they are out of the hotel, looking for a fly. More precious minutes are again lost in this task. Most of them are already on their way to the station, or are engaged for the later train by those who have had the prudence not to leave such arrangements until the last moment. They have no choice—they are compelled to take the only one whose driver appears either ready or willing to start. "Drive as hard as you can!" shouts Darrell, "and I will pay you double your fare." Under this strong inducement the man urges his worn-out' horse to his best pace. - But only a few yards convinces them that his best is very bad- indeed. There is another stoppage at the turnpike; and the two or three moments thus lost seem to Psyche the longest she has ever known. She needs no words now to tell her that every- thing depends on their speed. Darrell's face, Darrell's manner, so unlikQ his ordinary easy-going composure, convinces her of that—but they have not got more than a hundred yards past the turnpike, and upon the long road that intervenes between them and the station, before it becomes evident, beyond a doubt, that the poor worn-out horse, his first small spurt over, is incapable of further effort. He is lagging helplessly—hope- lessly. Psyche looks at Darrell with mute interrogation and entreaty. He starts to his feet. "Drive faster!" he shouts co the man. "Whip up your horse, or I will come and drive myself! Are you going to sleep?" He is not going to sleep, but he is, what is worse, half-tipsy 2x2 unspotted from the world. —not wholly tipsy. He has only reached that stage when neither threats nor bribes can stir him up to much-continued effort; neither can whip nor voice induce the poor brute, who has been to and fro on the road all day, to go a step faster. After a few more useless adjurations—not altogether gently- worded—Darrell sinks back into his seat. " We may do it yet," he says, trying to console her—" the trains are often late. But we have lost full ten minutes in looking for them, and it is a near thing." She does not speak. She knows that neither reproaches nor lamentations are of any avail. But he sees, as he looks at her, that she is shivering. "You are cold—you have no wrap!" he says quickly. " Good heavens!—what could have possessed them to play us such a trick ! We were not more than three minutes late." "I am not cold," she answers, conscious all the time that her voice is shaking. "But I am afraid," tremblingly, "that Mrs. Aylmer has done it on purpose—that she means to go home without me—and what, oh ! what will Grannie say ? " " It is impossible ! " he says vehemently, answering his own doubts rather than hers. " She could not do such a thing ! If she finds that we do not come in time, she will wait until the next train." But to this she says nothing—she only shakes her head. And they sit for a long time in absolute silence, watching in breathless suspense the feeble efforts of the worn-out horse. If only by the power of their wills they could put some strength and spirit in him then indeed he would go a good deal faster! Once or twice Darrell pulls out his watch and looks at it j but Psyche has not the courage to ask him how the time is going. His silence tells her. Now and then he endeavours to reassure her and cheer her up; but it is so evident that he himself has almost lost hope, and is, indeed, more worried and UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 213 nervous than the occasion even seems to warrant that his well-meant efforts have little success. " Do not you think," she asks excitedly, as they get nearer their journey's end, " that we could run faster than the horse is going ? I am sure that I could—let us get out and try." He shakes his head. "You could not do it," he says despondingly; "/might, but you could not—you would be dead-beat in two minutes. VVe seem to be going slowly enough, Heaven knows, but we are going faster than you could run, my poor little darling ! " Once more, and for the last time, he urges the man to make an effort, and the poor horse, inspirited, perhaps, by the fact that he has reached the end of the road he has so often and patiently traversed, does make a spurt. They jump out before he has well stopped, and run head- long into the station—just in time to see a heavily-crowded train slowly leaving the platform, and a good many people, who had arrived a great deal earlier than themselves, pushed back from the over-full carriages and left behind. But Mrs. Aylmer and Carruthers are not among them. CHAPTER VIII. For a moment they look blankly and mutely in each other's face. Then Darrell breaks out. " Done !" he cries, with a most passionate anger, his face white with rage. " By heavens ! I would not have believed any woman capable of it! I will swear that she has done it on purpose—out of -some petty spite or jealousy. If they had waited but three minutes, and not left us to search for them, yvQ should all have been in ample time for the train," 214 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. But at this critical juncture, Psyche preserves a better cour- age than might have been expected of her. "Perhaps—is it not possible," she suggests falteringly— though her face, seen in the flickering of the gas-lamps, looks white as his, "that she may wait for me on the other side? She may have thought it better to go on." "Is it likely?" he breaks in, still in the same passionate tone. " Is she the sort of woman to wait about at a miserable station when she can be so much more comfortable at home ? More likely," with a bitter laugh, " she-will be quietly sipping her iced lemonade, or eating a nice little supper, with Car- ruthers to keep her company. And to-morrow she will go all over the town, and tell all her pet friends that she could not find us anywhere—and was obliged to come home without us. Do not I know her? " His temper—never at any time very good—has for the moment got the better of him. He says it in a fit of uncon- trollable anger—but he has no sooner said it than he would give the world to recall his words. It can do her no good— it can only make ber a great deal more -miserable than, she is already, to know that the danger of Lady Conynghame's anger, when she hears that she has been left to come to town alone with him, is not the only danger she has to fear. And in fact, at this speech, the girl's sorely-tried endurance comes to an end. " If you knew her so well," she says, turning on him with bitter reproach—as every two people who have got into a diffi- culty together have, since the days of Adam and Eve, been apt to turn on each other—" if you knew her to be capable of treating me like that I wonder you trusted me with her." But he receives this reproach with a meekness that disarms her. "Blame me as much as you will," he says, despondingly— "you cannot blame me more than I blame myself. It is all my fault—I ought never to have trusted her out of my sight. But UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 2i5 I did not suppose for a moment she would leave you in the lurch—nor did I mean to give her a chance of doing it." After that there is no more to be said. They pace up and down a few minutes in dull silence. The first irritation and anger, natural to everyone who loses a train—more natural still under these circumstances—being over, they lapse into dreariness and depression. By-and-by Darrell leaves her on a seat while he goes to interview a guard. He comes back with something of renewed energy and hopefulness. "They have put on some extra trains!" he says, a good deal more brightly, taking his place beside her. " One starts in half-an-hour, and it is sure to be a quick one. After all, we shall not be so very late, and there is no reason why Lady Conynghame should ever know you did not come home with Mrs. Aylmer. She will, in all probability, be gone to bed, and will not see you come in." " But if she asks me ? " He finds in the innocency of this question something dis- tinctly irritating. " Are there not a dozen ways in which women can evade each other's questions ? " he asks with an uneasy laugh. " I am afraid, when you have lived a little longer in the world, you will find that there are a good many occasions when it not only is not necessary, but is altogether impossible, to tell the whole unvarnished truth." " I will do my best," she says meekly 3 " but,' rather de- spondently, " I never was good at telling stories. I always get red, and—what is worse—I am always found out." Her words and her look vex him. Though a man may, by long acquaintance with the ways of the world, have con- vinced himself of the absolute necessity of an occasional un- truthfulness, he hardly cares to be the first to teach the woman whom he means to make his wife such a lesson. For though 216 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. one may expect and forgive untruthfulness in an acquaintance or a friend—or indeed in most conditions of life—it is not altogether a desirable quality in a wife. They are very silent after this. The minutes go by most laggingly. To both of them it seems the very longest half hour they ever spent in all their lives. To both of them it seems hardly credible that they, who have always so counted on the few minutes they have been able to steal away together, so treasured and made the best of them, regarding them as the most precious of all minutes, should find this half-hour not only wearisome but almost unbearable. Of all the many things that they have always found to say to each other they cannot now find one. Three times Psyche asks him if he is quite sure the clock has not stopped. Two or three times he makes a creditable, though not at all successful, effort to start some fresh topic of conversation; but it always goes back to the old one—what Mrs. Aylmer will do—what Lady Coriynghame will say—how soon they may reasonably hope to reach the little house—and the chances of getting in unobserved. After going over the same ground a dozen times, they lapse again into silence—miserable, dispirited silence. She is tired and cold—even summer nights turn chilly—and very misera- ble; and though he is neither tired nor cold, he is almost as miserable, understanding, perhaps, better than she does the scrape he has got her into. When at last the train comes they hail it with almost as much delight as that with which the shipwrecked mariner welcomes a sail. " Sit back in the corner, and do not let anyone see you more than you can help," whispers Darrell as they take their places. " We shall be all right now." She does as he tells her, and sits back in her corner, as silent and as far out of observation as possible. The carriage is full, and they have very little change of exchanging any UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 217 words that will not be overheard by their fellow-passengers. Some are gay, some are tired and quiet, but all have their eyes wide open, and know quite well by sight the pretty girl in the corner, who has been talked of as one of the beauties of the season. When the train draws up at Paddington, Darrell does not waste much time in looking for Mrs. Aylmer. He has in fact never hoped that she would be there. He hails a hansom and tells the man to drive fast to Street. It is but a short distance, and most of the time he occu- pies in cheering her up as best he can, and impressing on her the absolute necessity to keep her own counsel. "Lady Conynghame will never know if you do not tell her, and it will be absolutely useless—worse than useless—to let her know. Why should you bear the blame because that woman chose to leave you in the lurch ? " " But," she says at last, rather falteringly, for her courage has by this time well-nigh deserted her, and the vision of her grandmother—an angry, raving, terrible grandmother—stand- ing on the top of the stairs to receive her, is beginning to grow distinctly in her mind's eye, " I thought you said that Mrs. Aylmer would be sure to go all over the town and tell every one. If that is so, would it not be better to tell the truth at once ? " " Leave her to me," he says in an altogether different voice, and with a look which shows her how angry it is possible for him to be. " I will manage her." But there is a difficulty lying ahead of them which they have neither of them dreamt of, and to which that other little diffb culty of coming home unchaperoned is—in comparison—a very small one. When they arrive at the house they find it dark except for a glimmer of gas in the hall, and tightly shuttered up. Lady Conynghame has gone to bed; it is evidently ail right. f< Marshall was to sit up for nje," whispers Psyche, as if she 213 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. were afraid her voice might penetrate through Lady Conyng- hame's closed windows. " Do not knock—the bell rings downstairs, and he will hear it." He rings softly—he rings again and again—three times, four times—and no answer. They look mutely in each other's faces. " Knock ! " says Psyche at last. He knocks and rings by turns—louder and still louder—his fear of Lady Conynghame dying in a still greater fear. But still there is no answer. "Good God!" he cries, turning to her—"are they all dead? " " Grannie and Somers sleep upstairs. You might knock for ever and they would not hear," she answers, with sick, trem- bling lips. " There is only Marshall, and—he cannot be there ! Try again—try again ! " He tries again. He knocks and rings till he wakens echoes through the silent street, but it is all absolutely useless. They might, indeed, as well knock at the gate of a grave for all the answer they get. They stand perhaps a quarter of an hour in all—and no one who has not tried it can possibly imagine how long a quarter of an hour can seem under such circumstances. One or two men strolling quietly homewards, smoking their cigars this lovely summer night, pause and look curiously at them. A little group begins to collect, and then—far worst of all—a hansom drives up to the next house, and the fashion- able doctor who lives there, and who is perfectly acquainted with Lady Conynghame and Lady Conynghame's pretty grand- daughter—gets out, and after feeling for his latch-key, comes over to them, and very politely—if not kindly—asks them what is the matter. It is the last straw that breaks down Dan-ell's patience. He explains more, curtly than courteously, and then turns his back upon him. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 219 " We must give it up," he says, looking with a terrible com- passion into the girl's white face. " Come, there is only one more chance; Mrs. Aylmer must take you in! She shall I I will make her! " At any other time she would resist'. She feels even now that she would rather pace the street all night, or sit on the door- step till morning than throw herself on the compassion of the woman who has led her into this strait. But she is so broken down, so miserable that she gives in after a very faint resist- ance, and lets him lead her back and put her into the cab. It is a very short distance from Lady Conynghame's house to Mrs. Aylmer's, and during the few minutes that it takes them to get there they do not speak a word. They have arrived at a pass in which words are no longer possible. There is a light in the hall, and he jumps out, leaving her this time in the cab. There is not much delay in the opening of the door, but there is a long parley before he is admitted; and then at last it closes behind him, and she is left alone to wait the result. Five minutes, ten minutes—she cannot tell how long it is— but it seems to her an eternity that she stays there, divided between these two terrible alternatives—of being thrown on Mrs. Aylmer's unwilling hospitality, or left homeless and houseless till morning, when the door opens and closes sharply, and Darrell comes out. He had looked white enough before, but it had been the pallor of emotion and fear. Now his face is blazing with an anger that almost frightens her. " Drive back to Street," he calls out to the man, and then takes his place beside her. For a moment he does not speak—perhaps cannot speak. It is she who breaks the silence. ''Would not she—have me?" she asks, in a trembling voice. " She is a fiend! —a devil in woman's shape ! " he answers 220 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. with a concentrated anger that seems to find no possibility of expressing itself adequately in mere words. " So long as I live I will never speak to her again ! I am amazed at myself that I could ever have believed in her. She almost told me to my face that she was glad—yes ! glad—that she had paid you off. When I told her that you might be left in the streets till morning, she laughed, and told me it was no business of hers I think," with a terrible smile, "that if you were dying you need expect no mercy from her." And after that they say nothing. They make their short journey in absolute silence—the one being too despairing, the other too angry, to speak. Once more the cab stops outside the little fast-closed house. Once more they get out and stand on the steps, and Darrell knocks and rings with an energy which might awaken the seven sleepers. They have scarcely waited three minutes when they hear steps inside and the sound of a moving bolt, and then—Psyche's calmness, which she has up to this moment preserved fairly well, absolutely deserts her, and she falls to laughing, and from laughter to hysterical weeping. " My darling! my darling! " cries Darrell, putting his arm round her and drawing her to him. " It is all right; keep up but a minute longer; for God's sake keep up ! " She hears him dimly, and makes a brave effort to check her sobs; but in truth all the emotions of the night have been too much for her; and when the door is at last flung open, and Marshall—half-dressed, half-sleepy, and a good deal more than half-tipsy—appears in the doorway, her chest is still heaving, the tears are still rolling down her cheeks, so that in any other condition he could scarcely fail to perceive them. " What do you mean by such behaviour!" cries Darrell, with a terrible word that makes her shiver. " Do you know that Miss Dalrymple has been waiting outside this door for half-an-hour ! Where have you been ? What have you been Unspotted from the world. 221 doing? I will let Lady Conynghame hear of it—I promise you! You shall pay for it! " The man, having arrived at a stage when inequalities of position are wholly forgotten, mutters something that is not altogether complimentary to Lady Conynghame, and adds to it a reflection on ladies who stop out to this time of night. Darrell's face blazes. For a moment he is divided between an overwhelming desire to knock him down—not a very diffi- cult task in his present condition—and a still more powerful conviction of the impolicy of such a proceeding. His policy, or rather his desire to shield Psyche, gets the best of it. He puts his hand in his pocket and produces the most potent argument he can bring to bear on such a man. " Hold your tongue, or it will be the worse for you," he says, shortly; he cannot bring himself to say more. Then he turns to Psyche. " My dear," he says, closely pressing her hands in his, " do not fret. It is all right now. Keep your own counsel, and there is no harm done. God knows how I blame myself for this; do not blame me more than you can help ! " And with that he goes. And she is left alone to grope her way up into her little room in the dark. And this is the end of her day's pleasure. CHAPTER IX. Two days later, about four o'clock of the afternoon, Psyche is waiting, ready dressed for driving, in Lady Conynghame's little drawing-room. It is usually her fate to be kept waiting on these occasions. The task of daily transforming an old woman into a young one is probably not an altogether easy one. Indeed, some of the 222 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. contempt which is usually bestowed on such efforts might very well be tempered with admiration. The talent and ingenuity expended on them might under more favourable development have produced some lasting work. As it is, they have at least the merit of perseverance, being compelled, like Penelope, daily to undo, only that they may do up again. But Psyche has on this particular day no patience. . She paces up and down the narrow limits of her little china-decked cage writh a feverish restlessness. She is longing with a most miserable longing to see Darrell —to see Mrs. Aylmer—anyone—and know how things are going. Up to the present time she has escaped any serious evil from her Sunday night's adventure. Lady Conynghame's questions had not been so searching that she had not been able to evade them without committing herself to any direct untruthfulness. She had indeed confessed that they had missed the train by which they had intended to return ; but her grandmofhePhad taken for granted that the "they" included the whole party, and she had learned her lesson too well, and been too greatly in fear of her, to explain the whole truth. Yet she knows—cannot fail to know—that there is a drawn sword hanging over her head, ready at any moment to fall. If her own distrust of Mrs. Aylmer were not sufficient to convince her of that, her lover's words, spoken in the heat of anger, in the truthfulness of unrestrained passion, would leave little doubt of it. She knows that her own reputation—for good or for evil— lies in the hands of a woman who has never liked her—whom her instinct tells her, has always disliked her, and that there is little to be hoped for from her. There remains a chance that to the end of the season Lady Conynghame may be kept from the knowledge of her unfortunate misadventure; but it is a very poor one, and not in any way to be counted on. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 223 She who had so looked forward to this short time in town, in her lover's company, hoping she scarce knows what from it, reckons up the days that remain of it with feverish impatience, longing to be safely back in the dull quietude of her country life, in the safety of Dolly's protection, with a longing that she had never until now believed possible. Even her father's coldness and unkindpess seem but small evils compared to those that now surround her. As she paces restlessly to and fro, she comes face to face with heir own image, reflected full length in one of the many mirrors, and pausing, takes a long and steadfast look at herself. She has changed—changed greatly during these few weeks —even she can see that. To one who admired her more than loved her, the change might seem altogether to her advantage. She has gained an air of fashion and a grace of carriage that makes her beauty far more appreciable to those who cannot admire Nature's best handiwork unless it be placed in a good setting; but, on the other hand, she has lost much of that freshness and spontaneous gaiety which had given her in Darrell's eyes so irresistible a charm—and they are things that being lost can never be regained. She is pale—over-pale, perhaps, to please those who might love her well enough to feel anxious for her; but it is not an unbecoming pallor. It rather enhances the loveliness of her dark eyes and rich- coloured hair. On the whole, the reflection that she sees in the glass is not one with which any woman could reasonably be discontented. She knows that, and she has arrived at a stage when she finds it necessary to appraise her own good looks, knowing that much depends on them. She has hardly finished her inspection of herself when the door opens and shuts again, and turning quickly round and facing Lady Conynghame, she knows without hearing or speak- ing a word that the worst, the very worst that she has dreaded has come. 324 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. She was pale before ; but now she turns deadly white. Yet she preserves a certain courage. " Are you ready, Grannie ? " she asks, as steadily as she can. " Shall we go? " " Stay a moment," Lady Conynghame answers, in a voice that is terrible through its very repression. " There is some- thing I have to say to you before we go." And though one would have said that cheeks that carried so much colour could not turn pale, yet there is a certain ghastliness which will protrude itself through the most artificial bloom ; and it is apparent on her face now. " There is something that Somers has been telling me," she goes on, with lips that tremble with anger. " Can you guess what it is ? " Always, since the day when she first knew her grandmother, Psyche has understood that it might be possible for her to be terribly angry; now she realises it. There are natures that always possess a certain power, whether for good or evil, which other natures lack. There are women who, failing all other claims to respect, can yet manage to their latest day to make others afraid of them; and Lady Conynghame is one of these. Though the girl knows she has done no particular wrong, she trembles and sickens under her look. Yet she tries hard not to betray it. "I know," she says, with as good a courage as she can maintain, though she is conscious that her voice falters, " that if Somers could find nothing bad to say against me, she would invent it. She has always hated me—I cannot tell why." " Unfortunately," says the old woman, with bitter emphasis, " I am afraid her truth is more to be relied on than yours. But," her voice rising, " I can indeed find it hard to believe what she tells me now. She says that Marshall has told her that you did not come home on Sunday night until half-past twelve—long after the last train came in—and that you came Unspotted from the world. 225 alone with Captain Darrell, and had returned, she believes, alone to town with him." There is a moment's pause, then she comes a step nearer. "Is it true?" she asks in a shrill and terrible voice. " Answer me ! " There is another pause—a terrible one ; then the girl bows her head in mute assent. She cannot speak. " True !" cries the old woman, her lips quivering with irrestrainable anger; " and you can dare to stand there and tell me so ? Do you know what it means ? Do you understand that you have disgraced me ?—that you are probably by this time the talk of the town ? " But at these words the girl lifts her head, and though her face is white enough still, it regains both courage and pride. " Stay a moment! " she says, with something that almost approaches to dignity; " I will not hear you speak to me like that. I have disgraced no one. I have done nothing—no, nothing that I can be justly blamed for. Since Somers has told you part of the truth, she would have done better to tell you all." Her voice falters a little ; then she bravely controls it. " It is true," she goes on hurriedly, yet in tones so clear and distinct that not one word fails to reach Lady Conynghame, " that we were so unfortunate as to miss the train—Captain Darrell and I. Mrs. Aylmer and Mr. Carruthers had gone on in front, and we lost some time in looking for them. Our horse was a bad one, and we got to the station just in time to see the train go. We came by the next, and I do not think anyone saw us. No harm would have been done; but when we arrived here Marshall was out—he must have been out. We knocked and knocked and got no answer. I cannot tell you how long we stayed at the door before we gave it up." " And then ? " " And then," she continues, faltering for the first time, for indeed she understands that this is the worst part of her story, p 226 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. " Captain Darrell persuaded me that there was only one thing to be done. I could not stay in the streets or on the doorstep all night. He made me drive with him to Mrs. Aylmer's to ask her to take me in." "And—she refused?" asks Lady Conynghame, her voice rising almost to a scream. " She refused," answers the girl, slowly and reluctantly ; " I do not know how or why. Captain Darrell went in to her, and I remained outside; but she refused. After that we came back again, and Marshall was at home. I do not know where he had been, but I am sure that he had been drinking ; and," vehemently, " it was all his fault—not mine." But the last part of her tale has been told to deaf ears. Lady Conynghame has sunk into a chair in an attitude of de- spair too genuine to be affected. " Do you know what you have done ? " she asks, in a voice that is no longer raised nor angry, but is as despairing as her look. "You have ruined yourself, and not only yourself— you have ruined me. Two days ago there was not a girl in London who had a better chance of marrying well than you had; and as for me—for me," wringing her hands, " who have all my life, in spite of all disadvantages, managed to hold up my head so that no one has dared to turn their backs upon me, there will be nowhere that I can go that I shall not hear the story of your folly and disgrace." " Disgrace / " repeats the girl, with a most passionate anger. " Is there any disgrace in missing a train, or being shut out by a drunken footman ? " "Are you a fool or a baby," cries the old woman, jumping up, her anger breaking through all restraint, " that you do not understand what you have done? The folly of losing the train was nothing compared to the folly of letting that woman know that you had been shut out, and giving her the chance of refusing to take you in. Do not you see—cannot you under- stand," her voice rising with every word, "how she will go UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 227 about to everyone, telling them that yoit and Darrell missed the train on purpose; that she could find you nowhere, and was compelled to go without you; that you arrived so late that I shut you out; that he tried to induce her to take you in; and that she was obliged—very reluctantly," with a bitter sneering mimicry of Mrs. Aylmer's tones, "for her own sake to refuse to have anything to do with so foolish an esca- pade ? " " No ; I do not see it," she answers, in a voice that begins, in spite of all her efforts, to tremble and go near to -breaking. " I cannot understand why she should wish to do me an injury. What harm have I ever done her ? " " You have done her the harm of being prettier than she is," says Lady Conynghame, with bitter emphasis, " and of letting Captain Darrell think so. She is a woman who would rather sacrifice her soul—or her diamonds—which are perhaps of more value to her—than miss the chance of repeating a scandal. Do you think she is likely to spare you—and him ? " " Let her do her worst!" cries Psyche, with passionate spirit, driven to bay. " Let her say what she pleases. I, too, have a voice as well as she; and I can tell the truth." " The truth!" says Lady Conynghame, turning and facing her j " and what is the truth ? That you and Captain Darrell were wandering about alone late at night, and by an accident got shut out. Is not that the best that can be said of it ? With any other man for your companion it would have been even in the most lenient eyes, an unfortunate accident—to say the least of it—but with him—do you suppose he is the sort of man with whom anyone who thought of marrying you, as Mr. Brooke most certainly did think two days ago, would care to hear his future wife's name bandied about in clubs and draw- ing-rooms ? " She says it with a sternness and calmness that carry a far more crushing conviction than her most passionate anger. The natural spirit,,the sense of injustice which have up to 228 UNSPOTTED FROM THE VTORLd. this juncture preserved the girl from breaking down go near to failing her. " It matters very little what Mr. Brooke or anyone else may think of me so long as I am innocent," she says, with some poor remnant of pride, though her voice is choked and dull with the effort to restrain her rising sobs ; "and I am innocent —innocent even of intentional folly. It was not my fault that I missed the train—not my fault that I was shut out. It was all an accident—a miserable accident from beginning to end." And so saying, she turns away, and pushing back the blind, looks out, that she may conceal from her grandmother the bitter and smarting tears that in spite of all her efforts will come. " It is a very good thing to be innocent," says Lady Conynghame, with a sneer that is horribly cruel, " but it is still better to appear so." And after that there is silence. Psyche, for her part, is for the moment too overwhelmed by the bitter reproaches that have been heaped upon her— by the sense of her own impotence to break through the web of slander and misconstruction that seems to be closing around her—to find speech possible. And Lady Conynghame having exhausted the first heat of her anger, is already turning over in her clever old head the small chances that remain in their favour. After the first crushing sense of defeat, her spirit, always strong, is rising to the encounter. If diplomacy could get the better of untoward circumstances, then indeed she might hope to overcome them. " If only you had had the common sense—the common honesty to tell me the truth at once," she says at last, speaking out her thoughts, " then we might have got the better of that woman. As it is, she has had two whole days to the good— two whole days to tell her tale without the chance of being contradicted; and let me tell you such tales do not lose in the repetition. You would probably be considerably as- UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 229 tonished if you could hear to what dimensions the story of your innocent adventure has grown by this time." But the girl answers nothing to this taunt. She has arrived at a pass when it is no longer easy to answer. "Did anyone see you while you were standing at the door?" asks the old woman sharply after another minute spent in thought, " anyone who would be likely to recognise you ? Answer me ! Cannot you speak ? " And at this command Psyche turns round. " No one that I know of—no one that I can remember," she answers slowly, for speech is still difficult to her, " except the doctor next door. I do not know his name. He came and asked if he could help us." " Dr. Margrave !" cries her grandmother, with a sort of scream. " Do you mean that he saw you ? Then indeed we are done for I Do not you know that he is a fashionable ladies' doctor, and the greatest gossip in London ? You unfortunate child ! At any rate, no one can say that when you wanted to ruin yourself you did not do it effectually !" But she has gone too far. At this crisis the girl's endurance breaks utterly down. She has borne as much as she could fairly be expected to bear; but at the last she gives way. " Grannie!" she cries, stretching out her hands with a pitiful gesture; " do not reproach me—do not blame me any more—I cannot bear it. Indeed, indeed," bursting into tears, " I cannot bear it! I am most unhappy—God knows I am most unhappy. All my life—everything that I have done—has seemed to be wrong. But I do not want to bring trouble on you. Let me go away, let me go home; and in a little while—a very little while—they will forget that I ever existed—they will not," sobbing outright, "think it worth their while to injure a poor girl who never injured them." But this appeal, which must have touched the heart of any woman who was possessed of one, only hardens Lady Conyng- hame into a more bitter contempt; and it is a cgntempt that 230 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. is not assumed. It is genuine. She, who has all her life faced the world and weathered its storms with a courage which under better circumstances must have commanded some admiration, cannot even understand, much less sympathise with the weakness which gives way at the first approach of danger. "Are you going to cry ?" she says, recoiling from the out- stretched hands and looking at her with an expression of such unfeigned disgust as very nearly succeeds in its intention. " Stop ! stop this instant! Good heavens ! You are a greater baby than I thought you! Do not you understand that if people see that you have been crying it will convince them of the truth of the story as nothing else will ? " " No one is likely to see me," answers Psyche, sinking into a chair with an air of such utter despondency, of such hope- less "giving up" as is sufficient of itself to exasperate a woman so energetic as Lady Conynghame into absolute frenzy. " Do you suppose, that after such ja. scene as this I am going out?" "You are not only going out," answers the other, standing over her with a manner so authoritative that she has no chance but to yield to it, " but you are going to laugh and to talk, and do your best to give the lie to this story. There is no time to be lost—we have lost too much already. For heaven's sake ! " with uncontrolled irritation, " try to look less like an Ophelia or that kind of ridiculous person, and more like an ordinary Christian !" It is only a figure of speech; but it is a figure that the girl, stung to desperation, seizes upon. " A Christian !" she cries, springing to her feet and laugh- ing as those who care for her would be sorry to hear her laugh. " A Christian would love those that hate her, and do well to those that use her unjustly; but I—I hate them. I would, if I had the power, do them all the harm that they have, you say, done me; but I have no power—none at all! " UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 231 "Now you look more like yourself," says her grandmother, regarding with a critical approval the returning flush on her cheeks, the new light in her eyes, and not caring at all from what source they have sprung, so long as they are there. " Go up stairs and bathe your face, and arrange your hair, and put a little rouge on your cheeks, if you have such a thing. I will give you five minutes—no longer." She gets her way, as people of determined will do ordinarily get their way. In five minutes the girl takes her place by her grandmother's side in the showy little Victoria; and though she has not obeyed her as to the colour on her cheeks—though they are, in fact, still so white that Lady Conyinghame glances at them with a good deal of disapproval, there are no perceptible signs of disorder or distress in her appearance. They drive along in silence, but that is nothing new. They are mostly very silent when they are alone together, for they have not much in common—these two. But Psyche perceives, with a good deal of wonder and some admiration, that Lady Conynghame's face, so lately distorted with anger and passion, has already wreathed itself in that markedly pleasant smile, which she usually puts on with her rouge and other cosmetics to encounter the world. She sits well forward, glancing to right and to left, ready to perceive any passing acquaintance ; and if there is more sharpness than usual in her look that is probably not apparent to the casual observer. Only her companion knows and understands it. She, for her part, shrinks back as much as possible under the shade of her large parasol, feeling as if every glance that falls upon her may carry a hidden stab. At the corner of the street they are arrested by a block of carriages, and she encounters the looks that are bestowed upon her with a timidity she has never felt before. Some of those who are drawn up on the pavement to watch the passers-by gaze at the pretty girl in her costly 232 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. dress with an admiration to which she is by this time well- accustomed. "If they could only know," she thinks to herself, as so many women have with even better cause thought before her, " there is not one of them who would change places with me. I am more unhappy than the unhappiest of them.' They have not taken more than one turn in the drive— which is already crowded—before it is apparent to both of them that their very worst fears have not overstepped the mark. Lady Conynghame's bows and smiles, bestowed with unsparing cordiality on every passing acquaintance—are re- turned, for the most part, with a marked coldness and suspicion —in some cases are not returned at all; and though it might be possible under other circumstances to attribute these omissions to chance or to near sight, no doubt of the real truth any longer remains possible to them when, in the thick of the crowd, their carriage is drawn up almost alongside of an old-fashioned and handsome barouche, whose occupant, a middle-aged woman, well-known and well-respected in society, who has up to the present time bestowed a good deal of real kindness on Lady Conynghame's pretty granddaughter, turns her head aside, and keeps it turned aside for the whole long minute that they remain within sight of each other—with a gesture so marked that it is impossible to mistake it. " Cut! " says Lady Conynghame through her teeth. " Cut dead !" But even while she says it, she never for a moment changes or relaxes her set smile. There exist in the annals of history the records of an ordeal by fire, by which women, suspected of certain crimes, were mercilessly tried, and even in these days of fashion and plea- sure and easy-going luxuriance, they may pass through an ordeal not less terrible—not less merciless. Before they have gone the length of the drive and turned round by Knightsbridge Barracks, following the string of other UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 233 carriages, the iron has eaten into the souls of both of these women : and though they suffer in an altogether different way, yet each suffers—suffers terribly. To the girl, who finds herself accused of' an indiscretion which she has not committed, from which she has no chance of defending herself, it is a shameful and terrible experience for which not all the experiences of her life have prepared her. To the old woman, who has made the world of fashion her god, and sees that god lying shattered at her feet, more pity—if less sympathy—might well be accorded. She bears herself throughout with a heroism worthy of a better cause, and which Psyche finds it impossible to emulate. For the art of covering a miserable consciousness by a smiling exterior is one which can only be acquired after some practice. The corners of her mouth—the look in her eyes—tell a tale which they who see might find it not difficult to read. " Sit up," whispers Lady Conynghame, sotto voce. " Smile, cannot you ? For heaven's sake have the pluck to look as if you do not feel it." When they reach the other end of the drive, she orders the coachman to draw up under the trees. There is nothing new in this order. It is only a very ordi- nary part of the day's programme. They usually end or vary the monotony of their drive by drawing up by the rails to exchange greetings with their acquaintances, and they invaria- bly find themselves surrounded by a little crowd of young men —among whom Psyche's popularity as one of the prettiest girls of the season is an established fact. But though to-day there are many who come up to speak to them—one at least who has for the last fortnight never been missing is conspicuous by his absence. Mr. Brooke is not there. As the minutes go by—minutes that seem like hours to Psyche, being compelled to talk as gaily and lightly as she can while her heart is all the time heavy as lead—she finds herself 234 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. looking and waiting for him with a longing which she would not at other times have believed possible. It is not only that she knows—that she feels sure—that his appearance would set at rest the worst of Lady Conynghame's fears—but for her own part—for her own sake—she is pos- sessed by a great desire to see his good-natured, kindly face, and assure herself that he—who has always been good to her, always thought well of her—has not heard and believed this scandal. But he does not come. The minutes go by—the drive and the promenade are crowded — but neither Mr. Brooke nor Darrell appears. She has at first almost dreaded Darrell's coming, knowing or fearing that Lady Conynghame might nake him understand how greatly he was to blame for his •share in her trouble, but as it becomes apparent to her that he is taking no pains to seek her, her bitterness and her misery grow almost beyond bearing. She feels that one look in his face, one touch of his hand, one assurance that he was willing and ready to bear with her the consequences of their misad" venture would be an unspeakable relief to her. Her wandering attention, her wandering eyes, her incon- secutive answers, must indeed have been sufficiently apparent to those who surround her—but that Lady Conynghame does her best to hide them. She sustains the chief part of the conversation with a liveliness and a spirit which Psyche has never until now seen her display at their full power. For the first time in her life she almost feels grateful to her—she almost wishes that she could emulate her in her powers of dissimula- tion. It is not until the carriages and the promenaders are begin- ning to thin—not until all possible hope is over—that Lady Conynghame gives the order to drive home. There is a cer- tain sharp ring in her voice which might warn anyone who knew her well how nearly her patience is at an end—and she throws herself back in the carriage with an abandonment of UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 235 any further effort which tells its own tale to the girl sitting by her side. But she does not say a word. They make the short drive homeward—which, by reason of the carriages which still block the way, occupies a good time—in silence—absolute silence. It is probable that Psyche's trembling lips and changing colour warn Lady Conynghame to indulge in no reproaches until they have reached the safe shelter of the house. Once arrived there—though she ascends the stairs still in silence— when she sees that her granddaughter makes an attempt to pass higher up, she beckons her into the little drawing-room with an authoritative gesture, and then shuts the door—and once more they are alone together. CHAPTER X. For a moment they stand facing each other, and it is difficult to say which bears the most evident marks of the ordeal through which they have just passed. Lady Conynghame having dropped her conventional smile, assumed not so much from any real kindness towards her neighbours as from the idea that it is quite as easy arid a good deal more politic to look pleasantly at them, appears haggard and drawn under her artificial colour, and her eyes have the hunted look of a desperate woman. Psyche is white—whiter than she has been before, and her face, though it is composed enough, is set and strained in a way that makes it look a great many years older than it usually does. It is perfectly evident that her composure is only on the surface. It is Lady Conynghame who speaks first. " Do you understand now," she asks, in a voice that is quiet rather from despair than from the necessity any longer to restrain herself, " what you have done ? I suppose it is plain enough 236 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. to you now that I have not exaggerated the consequences of your folly." " I understand," answers the girl, in a voice that is strained and unnatural as her look, "that someone—Mrs. Aylmer, probably—has told some untruth about me, and that some people have believed it; but after all—though I do not deny —I cannot deny," with a momentary falter, " that it is hard enough to bear—can it matter so much to me? Those who care for me will hear the truth—and they will believe it." "Will they? " says the other, with a shrill and terrible laugh. "Do not you know that it takes a lifetime, and more than a lifetime, to make the world hear the truth ?—and that it takes but a day or an hour to spread a lie, and that once spread it can never be arrested ! You are ruined—absolutely ruined ! I wash my hands of you," she goes on, sinking into a chair and casting up her hands with a gesture of absolute despair. " I will have no more to do with you !" Her look and tone move her granddaughter to something nearer pity than anger. After all she is old—too old to bear these troubles. " Grannie," she says more softly, the tears rushing to her eyes ior the first time, " I am sorry—with all my heart I am sorry that I have brought these annoyances upon you. I will go away—I will do anything that you tell me " But her words are arrested. Though it might not be hard to guess what sort of answer they would receive—they never receive any. The sound of the door-bell, ringing loudly through the little house, makes Lady Conynghame start to her feet. "A visitor!" she cries, making a painful effort to resume some semblance of her ordinary look. " I cannot see anyone —it is impossible !" She goes to the window, and looks furtively through the blind; and in a moment, nay, in half a moment, her whole aspect undergoes a complete metamorphosis. " Mr. Brooke !" she cries excitedly. " We are saved—saved UNSPOTTED PROP! THE WORLD. 237 after all. He has come! He is here! Go upstairs," she goes on almost incoherently to her granddaughter, who has so far caught the infection of her excitement that she has followed her and is looking over her shoulder. " Make yourself fit to be seen. I will receive him—trust to me," with a laugh that is nearly hysterical—" it will be all right now." But though Psyche's eyes assure her that it is indeed Mr. Brooke's phaeton, and that he himself is driving it, and though there is little more to be seen of him from this point of view than the top of his hat, something in his attitude, in the fact that he never once glances towards the house, convinces her that Lady Conynghame's hopes have been unduly raised. " I am afraid," she says, slowly and reluctantly—for indeed she is sorry for her grandmother's disappointment, and would have been glad too for her own sake to think that her little friend had not allowed himself to listen to any slanders of her —" that I need not take any trouble about my appearance. I fear—I am almost sure—that he is not coming in." She turns out to be right. The groom hands some cards to Lady Conynghame's footman—springs up behind—Mr. Brooke touches with his whip the horses that are justly considered one of the handsomest pairs in London, and drives away without a backward glance. As Lady Conynghame drops the blind and turns away, Psyche perceives that her hands are trembling. But she does not speak—she is past that. She waits in absolute silence for the few seconds that intervene before Marshall brings up the cards. There are two cards, and two small notes, one of which he hands to Lady Conynghame and the other to Psyche. But on the corner of the cards the three letters "P.P.C." are written, and they are sufficient to tell their own tale. Indeed, Lady Conynghame's hopes, so suddenly and cruelly dashed to the ground, have hardly left her the power of opening or reading the letter. She fumbles at the envelope, and holds 238 UNSPOTTED PROM THE WORLD. up her glasses with hands that quiver and shake with uncontrollable agitation, and can with difficulty master the few words it contains. " Dear Lady Conynghame,—I have heard that my father is not so well, and would much like me to go and see him. I therefore leave town to-morrow, and shall not have time to come and wish you good-bye, and thank you for all your kindness and hospitality. " Yours sincerely, Reginald Brooke." That is all, but it is sufficient. " Most men would not have taken the trouble to write even that much," she says, dropping it from her fingers as if it contained some poison. " They would have gone without a word; but he is not like most men." Then she lifts her haggard and miserable eyes, and looks at her granddaughter—not, however, with any remaining hope. "I suppose that contains the same pleasant information," she says, pointing to the letter which Psyche, having quickly scanned, is holding crumpled up in her hand. " Very much the same," she answers, after a moment's hesi- tation. Something in her manner arrests Lady Conynghame's atten- tion} a gleam of light comes back to her face. " Show it to me," she says, quickly and authoritatively, stretching out her hand. But Psyche still hesitates. She knows that it was meant for her eyes alone, and that the reading of it can only eventually bring a more bitter disappointment upon her grandmother. She would refuse outright, only that she understands that in the long run she will be compelled to obey. 4' Show it to me ! " cries Lady Conynghame again, still more sharply, and this time she almost snatches it out of her hand. It is not a long letter, but it takes her some little time to read it. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 239 The few simple and straightforward words that it contains, coming so soon after the bitter humiliation she has suffered, have touched Psyche more nearly than she would have believed possible. " Dear Miss Dalrymple" (so it goes) " From something I was told last night I am compelled to abandon certain presumptuous hopes I had entertained with regard to you. I am led to believe that you have already given your preference to another. I shall therefore spare you the pain of saying 'No,' and myself of hearing it, by going away to-morrow; but I think it is right to make you this explanation of my abrupt departure. If I have leaped too quickly to a conclusion, one word, one line will bring me to you. I shall remain in town until to-morrow evening on the bare chance of hearing from you. " Always your friend, " Reginald Brooke." And when Lady Conynghame has read these words she does a terrible and unexpected thing. She bursts into tears. They are not beautiful tears, "wrung from the depths of some divine despair." They are only the pitiful and maudlin evi- dences of the weakness of a poor old woman, whose miserable pretence of juvenility has broken down beneath contending emotions. " Thank heaven !" she cries, with a shaking voice, dabbing her eyes, conscious of the imprudence of crying with such a complexion as hers. " Thank heaven !" It is the nearest approach to a prayer that she has made for a very long time, but the fervency of the ejaculation almost amounts to one. " I am afraid," she goes on, with a quavering voice, " that I have been a little hard on you; but I could not tell—how could I tell that it would come all right ? and I am not strong. All this has upset me—it has upset me terribly. But," trem- blingly, " do not lose any time—write at once, my dear, write 240 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. at once. I always knew," breaking into fresh tears, " that Reggie Brooke was a good little fellow—a dear little fellow. I declare," with an attempt at laughter that is more pitiful than her tears, " I—I am almost fond of him." Her words, her look, her manner, that almost for the first time betray the frailty and weakness of old age, give the girl a bitterer pang than all her reproaches had done. Her lips turn ashy. pale. She presses her hands tightly together against her heart; but she does not pretend to misunderstand her. " I cannot write to him," she says in a slow dull voice, that not all her efforts can make quite firm. " What would be the good of it ? " " The good of it!" echoes Lady Conynghame, dropping her handkerchief and lifting her face, down which the tears have made two dreadful furrows. "The good of it? Do not you understand that he wants to marry you ?—that he has heard this story, heard it probably with the addition put in by Mrs. Aylmer for his especial benefit, that you are in love with Captain Darrell, and that he conveys to you in the most deli- cate manner possible that it can make no difference to him, so long as that part of it is not true ? " " Yes; I understand," answers the girl quietly, and with a courage that is not natural to her, but is only born of despera- tion. " I understand that he is more generous than I have any right to have expected, and I wish—with all my heart I wish I could tell him how grateful I am to him—but all the same, I cannot marry him." And having said it, she knows that she has said her worst, and waits the result with what courage she can muster. Lady Conynghame springs to her feet—and as a matter of fact looks as if she could almost find it in her heart to strike her. It is presumable that fishwomen and ladies of title are by nature endowed with the same passions. The fishwoman's passion finds its natural outlet in a blow, which the decencies or conventionalities of society have not taught her to restrain UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 241 —the woman to whom chance has given rank and title is compelled to compass her passion within the limits of a look. But looks may strike almost as hardly as blows. For a moment Lady Conynghame hovers on the verge of a terrible outbreak. Then something in the girl's resolute aspect warns her, perhaps, that reason may have more power over her than passion. "You will not marry him, you say," she says, with a calm- ness which is belied by the trembling of her voice. " Have you well considered what such a determination means? You have, by a piece of good fortune which you could not have counted on, the chance of re-establishing yourself in the eyes of the world. To-day, there is no one who might not pity you or sneer at you ; to-morrow, if you so will it, there shall be no one that will not envy you. But, on the other hand, if you stick to your determination, I will no longer bear the burden of your follies. You will go home, and your father shall know why I have renounced the charge of you." But to these terrible and pitiless words the girl answers nothing. She stands mute, with her hands clasped tightly together, and on her face the look of a dumb and tortured animal. A more daring woman might, realising the exigencies of the occasion, break through her promise to her lover and confess the truth; but she is more faithful than daring. But in that short and pregnant silence a sudden light breaks in on Lady Conynghame, an idea that has, perhaps, been un- consciously conveyed to her by some new look in the girl's eyes. She comes a step or two nearer. " Is it possible," she says, in an altogether different voice, "is it barely possible that you have been a greater fool than I thought you—that, after all my warnings, you are in love with Captain Darrell ? " But to this question she gets no answer, unless the sudden Q 242 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. red flush which spreads all over the dead-white face opposite to her be taken as an answer. " Are not you ashamed of yourself," she continues, with a most bitter contempt, "to have fallen in love with a man who has only amused himself with you as he has amused him- self with a score of others ? Has he not made it pretty plain to you that, having helped to get you into a scrape, he cares very little how you get out of it ? " At this bitter taunt Psyche finds speech. " No, I am not ashamed," she answers, lifting her head and looking at her grandmother with flashing eyes; " I have no cause to be." The words reveal more perhaps than she has intended. The look and the tone with which she speaks them stagger Lady Conynghame. " Is it possible—is it credible," she asks, in a voice in which wonder and unbelief contend for the mastery, "that he is really in love with you?—that he has asked you to marry him? " The question is delivered so directly that it admits of no evasion, and it proves indeed the very crisis of the girl's torture. To admit the truth will be to betray her lover, to break his command of silence, and to lose, perhaps—as he has so often impressed on her—their last chance. To deny it— even if denial were possible—would be to bring upon herself a more bitter humiliation than any she has yet endured. The old woman comes yet a step nearer and peers more closely into her face—her eyes are, perhaps, dim and hazy with unaccustomed tears, and she can hardly trust them. " If it is true—if he really cares for you, and wishes to marry you," she says, in a voice of incredulous scorn, " why, in the name of goodness, could not you say so before ? Do not you see—do not you understand— that if you were engaged to him, and if everyone knew it, it would be the best answer in the world to the slander that woman has spread about you ? " Yes; she does see it. She has seen it all along, and seeing, UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 243 has wondered and grown sick of heart to think that her lover has not seen it too, and has not allowed her to break her bondage of silence. The temptation to speak out, to tell the truth and get anyone—even her grandmother—on her side, becomes a temptation that is almost more than she can endure. "Grannie," she cries, holding out her imploring hands, while sobs, no longer repressible, choke her voice. " Grannie dear, let me see him—let me see him only once, and I will answer you. I mast see him ! indeed, indeed I must see him!" There is a minute's silence, during which Lady Conyng- hame turns over in her clever old head all the reasons for and against such a concession. An ordinary woman would have refused it point-blank : but she is by ho means an ordinary woman. "Yes," she says, after that minute, very slowly : "you shall see him—you shall see him, because it is probable that no one in the world will convince you of the folly of believing him in earnest as he will. I do not mind predicting," she goes on with a cruel laugh, "that he himself will recommend you to marry Mr. Brooke." Then as her granddaughter answers nothing—what answei is indeed possible to such a speech ?—she goes on— " Write to him at once, and tell him to come to you at three o'clock. That will still leave you time to recall Mr. Brooke He does not go until the evening." But at these words Psyche's disgust and indignation burst through all restraint. " I will not see him under false pretences," she says proudly and excitedly. "You must understand that, whatever happens, it can make no difference so far as Mr. Brooke is concerned." " I understand," says the old woman, turning to go, " that you will probably have to choose between going home in disgrace, and marrying Mr, Brooke} and in that case," with a 244 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. laugh, "Mr. Brooke may not seem so disagreeable to you. Write your letter; only if you will take my advice you will not say too much. It is possible—just possible—that Captain Darrell may think discretion the better part of valour, and may not come at all, and you might live to wish that you had not committed yourself to paper." And having sped her last shaft she goes to repair the damage that has been done both to her complexion and her nerves. And Psyche is left to write her letter. It is not a long one—it contains indeed but few words, but they carry such an appeal, as a man, if he were on this side the grave, could scarcely fail to respond to. CHAPTER XL Once more and for the last time Psyche is sitting in Lady Conynghame's little drawing-room. And on a chair drawn up close to hers, so close that he could, if he would, touch the little hand that has so often lain pliantly and confidingly in his, or look into the tender and lovely eyes that have never failed to respond to his, sits Darrell. But he is not touching her, is not looking at her. His eyes are averted, and are fixed on the carpet, with the marked and ill-concealed annoyance of a man who finds himself in a disagreeable and distressing situation, and has neither the good sense nor the good temper to hide his annoyance. It is possible, indeed, that the situation is not an altogether new one to him. A man who has gone through life amusing himself, without much consideration where his amusements may lead him so long as he himself has escaped any serious harm, must before now have found himself exposed both tg reproaches and persuasions. Unspotted pkom the ivotld. 245 But it has one element which other and similar situations have lacked. For this one girl he has loved, as far as it is possible for a selfish man to love anything. The sight of her distress causes him a pang of self-reproach so keen, that he pities and blames himself sincerely for the folly that has brought it upon him. There is nothing he would not do—within the limits of reason—to make her once more the bright and happy child with whom, in the sweet spring-time, he had fallen so passion- ately in love. But what she asks of him is not within the limits of reason—or so he thinks. " It is impossible that you can understand the real truth," she says to him after a short pause, following on many hot and passionate words, and in a voice so harsh and strained that he would scarce know it for hers. " Perhaps—it may be that it does not seem to you such a very dreadful thing that I should be thought a foolish and wicked girl, and cut by those who once thought well of me and liked me, and though it seems hard enough to me, yet I could bear it \ I would bear it if I had anyone—anyone to stand by me." There is a moment's silence. Then as he still avoids her eyes, she goes on : " But I have no chance of braving it out. I have but one alternative—to tell the truth to Grannie—or to be sent home to my father who has never liked me, and who now," her voice rising, "will hate me. I dare not go home like that. I dare not, Cecil—Cecil, dear," turning to him and holding out quivering, imploring hands, while the tears roll down her white cheeks. " You could not have understood me—it could not have been plain to you how much I must suffer if you refuse to let me tell Grannie. You cannot refuse!—you cannot!" " You torture me!" he cries passionately, starting to his feet. " Good God ! Why will a woman never hear reason ? 246 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. To tell your grandmother is to tell everyone in London, and it is impossible, absolutely impossible ! Have I ever deceived you ? " he goes on, turning round and looking at her with eyes in which anger and mortification have almost obliterated love. " Have I not made it plain to you from the very first that our engagement depended on its secrecy? If my uncle heard of it I am as certain as I am that I live at this moment that he would leave me without a penny. And though I might be content to be a beggar myself, would it do you any good ? We should not, it appears to me," with a bitter laugh* " be any nearer being married then than we are now." There is another silence—a terrible silence. Then she rises too, and coming a step or two nearer, stands facing him. The tears are dried upon her cheeks now, but they are pale as the cheeks of one dead, and her hands are pressed tightly against her breast. "Tell me," she says, in a voice whose very repression con- veys the intensity of passion. " I asked you the question once before; I ask it you again now, and this time I will have an answer. Is there any reason—any good reason— why your uncle should be so certain to object to your marrying me?" There is a pause—a dreadful pause at least to one of them. She can count the ticking of Lady Conynghame's pretty little Dresden clock, the beating of her own heart almost, while she waits for his answer. And then at last he speaks : " There is a reason," he says, very slowly and very reluc- tantly, feeling that the words are dragged from him by the imperative necessity of the occasion, and yet hating himself for speaking them—" a very strong reason, or one that he considers so." " And—what is it ? " Her lips are parched and dry. She can scarce frame the words. Yet he hears them. " You must ask your grandmother that—or some of your UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 247 people," he says, turning away from the miserable eyes he has not the courage to face. "They may tell you—I cannot." She asks no more questions ; she stands mute, rigid—all her heart and soul struggling in the death-throes of love and hope. She knows, even then, that the end has come, and she has loved him so—has loved him so. And he is full of a passionate misery he has never experi- enced before. She has forced him into an avowal which was, he knows, little less than brutal; and he, who has always more or less believed in his own generosity and good nature, does not like even to himself to seem like a brute. As he sees her standing there in her wretchedness some of the old passion that he has called love returns to him. " My darling," he says, with sudden tenderness, going up to her and putting his arm round her—" do not you think it is quite as hard upon me as upon you ? I was mad when I asked you to marry me, and though it was a madness born of love of you, you cannot tell how I blame myself for it. We had small enough chance then, God knows. We have none now." A moment, during which she still lies passively in his arms, with her soft lovely face resting for the last time— the very last time—close against his. Then he goes on brokenly— " You must give me up, dear. We must say good-bye, and try to bear our lives as best we can without each other. I sup- pose," with a miserable laugh, " there are scores of people who have loved each other as much as we do, and have got over it. I have always been an unlucky beggar—always; but I should be worse than that—I should be a scoundrel—if I kept you hanging on to my ill-fortunes, and let you lose the best chance of happiness you may ever get in your life." And ashe speaks these words, not understanding, perhaps, the horrible cruelty of them, but imagining, in his egotism and MS UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. worldly-blindness, that they have in them much of unselfish- ness and generosity, she looses herself from his arms as quickly and sharply as though, while holding her there, he had stabbed her to the heart, and recoiling a few paces—looks at him. For all the years of his life he will never forget that look. The mute and incredulous agony of it will haunt him now and again to his dying day. " Do you mean," she says after awhile, in a voice that is cracked and strained like the voice of an old woman; " that —you—y'ou—advise—me—to—marry Mr. Brooke ? " The words come very slowly. They are simple and bare enough. Perhaps his own suggestion thus presented to him in all its nakedness, and robbed of the fine dress in which he has tried to clothe it, shames him. At any rate he turns away, and leaning his arm on Lady Conynghame's gimcrack little mantelpiece, hides his face from her. " It may as well be Brooke as anyone else as far as I am concerned," he says doggedly. " If I am to lose you, what does it matter to me who gains what I have lost ? " There is a minute's silence. Then she breaks out laughing, a horrible and discordant laugh that rings through the little room. " And to think that Grannie was right after all !" she says to herself rather than to him—" Grannie was right!'' And then she flings herself back into her chair, and throwing her arms out, buries her face in them, and bursts into bitter weeping. It is more than he can bear. He comes over to her, and kneeling down by her side, tries to draw away the hands that shield her face from him. " Dear, do not cry !—for God's sake do not cry and break my heart," he says hoarsely. " Look up, my darling ! Kiss me once—only once, and say that you forgive me," She does look up. She lifts her poor disfigured face; and unspotted prom the world. 249 with one last remnant of pride points with a passionate gesture to the door. "Go!—go away and leave me!" she says, with bitter vehemence. " That is all that you can do for me now." And so saying hides her face again from him. " I cannot go until you say that you forgive me," he cries passionately, frantically kissing her gown and the small portion of bare white arm which alone he can reach. " Say it—only say it once !" Once more and for the last time she lifts her head. "I do not forgive you ! " she says, with most concentrated passion. " I wish that I had never seen you ! I pray heaven that I may never see you again !" Then, indeed, he rises, and with a face white and distorted with bitter anger turns without a word and goes, as she has bidden him. At the door he turns once more and casts a look at her; but neither by word nor gesture does she do any thing to recall him. She hears it open and close again, and she is alone. A moment or two later she hears the slamming of the street-door, and then she knows that he is indeed gone—gone for ever. She staggers to her feet, and looks around her vacantly and bewilderedly at the little room which so lately contained all that she loved best in the world; and then with a great and bitter cry, she flings herself down on the ground, and stretch- ing out her arms over the tawdry, lace-covered chair, buries her head in them and lies motionless—not crying—tears are for those who even in their deepest griefs retain some hope either in the present or in the "future—but stricken by a dull dead agony which is broken by no ray of light. unspotted prom the world. CHAPTER XII. She does not know how long she stays there. Great griefs like great joys take no count of time. The effect of a heavy mental blow resembles indeed in many respects the effect of a physical one. After the first cruel shock of it, the senses are dulled and deadened, and even the very power of suffering greatly, lies abeyant. The acutest pain of it is the knowledge carried always, even through the first semi- consciousness that follows a great shock, that the awakening must come, and that with it will come the full sense of loss and misery. The strongest realised desire is to put off that awakening. She cannot tell how long or how short a time it is before the drawing-room door opens softly, and Lady Conynghame comes in. She knows it is she, though she has neither the power nor the will to look up. It seems to her that she treads gently like one who walks in a death-chamber, as she comes across the room. Perhaps, indeed, something in the girl's despairing attitude and absolute silence awes her. She sits down on the sofa close by her and lays a hand on her shoulder. " Has he gone? " she asks, in a sort of whisper. But Psyche is silent. "Has he gone?" she asks again, in a more urgent voice. "Tell me! Cannot you speak ? What has happened ? " Then indeed the girl lifts her head. Her face has so changed in this short time that Lady Conynghame, in spite of the strong assurance of her own wisdom and policy, shrinks from the first sight of it with a vague fear—a vaguer remorse. "Yes—he has gone," she says, quite calmly, though slowly, as if each word were an effort. " Do not ask me to tell you what he said—indeed I hardly remember. Be content to UNSPOTTED FkOM THE WORLD. 251 know that you were right—quite right, and I was wrong—most miserably wrong!" There is a minute's silence. Then Lady Conynghame's curiosity gets the better of her discretion. She knows that she would do better to " let sleeping dogs lie," to refrain from dragging the cause of the girl's grief into the strong light of day; yet not only curiosity, but a strong and not unjust indig- nation compel her to know the reason of it. "It was only what I expected of him," she says quickly; "but you—had you a right to expect something better? Had he ever asked you to marry him?" " Yes," the girl answers, slowly and dreamily, almost as though she were speaking without her own knowledge. " He asked me to marry him—long ago—before I came to town. But it was a secret—an absolute secret. I suppose," she goes on, looking at her grandmother vaguely and strangely, " I ought to have told you—that I have not behaved quite well in keeping it from you; but you s ee," with a sort of smile, " I cared for him so much then that I would have done anything —yes ! anything—that he told me." "And now?" asks Lady Conynghame, with a sharp ring in her voice, and a fierce light in her eyes. " Do you mean that he has broken it off ? " The words make the girl shiver. They seem to bring her back to her full senses with a sudden shock. Everything has been unreal to her until this moment, but in the space of a second it all becomes real—horribly real. She hears her own story told as the world, if it knew it, would tell it in five words, " He has broken it off." And she knows that the world has neither pity nor sympathy, but only some laughter and a good many sneers for those who have been jilted. "Yes," she says, after a moment, while a painful flush mounts from her pretty white throat to her forehead, chasing for a moment the dead pallor of her face; " I suppose that is 252 UNSPOTTED EROM THE WORLD, the " right way of putting it. He did it as kindly and as gently as he could, and he gave a great many excellent reasons for doing it; but all the same it came very much to that—he has broken it off. He had always said that we had not much chance," she goes on, with a sudden tremor breaking the un- natural calm of her voice. " He had always said that, but he said that now we had none at all; that he was unlucky— miserably unlucky; and that he should be a scoundrel—yes, that was the word—a scoundrel, if he stood in the way of the best chance I might ever have in my life." Then looking up with quivering lips, " There—there could not be much doubt about what he meant by that—could there ? " But to this question she neither waits for, nor desires an answer. She lets her miserable face drop once more into her hands, out of her grandmother's sight. And Lady Conynghame is for a moment silent. It is only what she had expected, but the fact that her cynical predictions should be so accurately realised, has given her nevertheless some surprise and a great deal of indignation. She has never loved her grand-daughter, but she has taken a sort of spurious pride in her beauty, and the admiration it has excited. " Do not cry," she says presently, laying her hand, with something that approaches to tenderness, on the girl's head. " Do not cry, my dear. He is not worth a tear. He is a sel- fish brute !" This one touch of unexpected sympathy does what nothing else has done. It breaks through the unnatural and frozen calm in which the girl's heart has been lying dulled and torpid, and she bursts into passionate and unrestrained weeping—such weeping as Lady Conynghame has seldom in her life witnessed before. But the possibility of such strong emotion, if she ever possessed it, lies so far away in the background of her memory, that the sight of it moves her to indignation rather than to sympathy. UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. .253 "Why could you not believe me ? Why did not you listen to me when I told you what sort of man he was ?" she asks bitterly, her ordinary coldness and harshness altogether getting the better of her momentary weakness. " There are hundreds like him—just as good-looking—just as agreeable—and just as selfish. They will make love to a girl so long as it is pleasant to them, but at the first approach of difficulty they will leave her without much regard for her feelings. There is not one of them," with a bitter smile, " who would give up his park-hack or any other of his little luxuries for such a poor thing as love I I have no doubt," she goes on with some eloquence—for indeed it is a subject on which she feels well qualified to speak—"that if you had plenty of money, and if he could have married you without losing his, he would have been just as fond of you as he would be of any other woman—for a little while—but believe me,"trenchantly, "if he had been fool enough to think the world well lost for love, there is no one, with the exception of himself,\ who would more bitterly have repented it than you would. You will live to thank heaven you never married him." " Do not abuse him just yet—not just yet, Grannie," Psyche answers, lifting her poor tearful face, while the sobs—so diffi- cult to restrain when once they have been given their way— still heave her bosom, and break her voice. " In a little while I may be able to think of him as harshly as you do; but not yet—not yet. You see," breaking into fresh tears, " I was so fond of him—so very fond of him." Her words and her look might move a heart of stone—so one would think — but they do not move Lady Conyng- hame's. " You ought to be ashamed of yourself," she says with un- bounded scorn, " to cry for a man who has shown you plainly enough how little he cares for you. If, when I was your age, I had been treated as you have been treated, my one desire, my one thought would have been to find the means to pay the 254 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. man back in his own coin, and let him see how little he had the power to injure me." Then after a moment's pause : " Luckily—most luckily—you have the means at your com- mand." "You mean," says Psyche, wearily lifting her heavy head, and wiping her drenched eyes, her passion and her strength both well-nigh exhausted, " that I might marry Mr. Brooke?" " I mean," answers Lady Conynghame, "that you not only might but will marry Mr. Brooke." And at this speech, which if determination could carry a point, might well succeed in its intention, the girl rises to her feet, staggering a little and looking weak and frail, being spent and broken by the emotions of the past hour. "I am afraid," she says slowly, laying her hands on the back of a chair to steady herself, "that I have but a poor spirit. Even if I were sure—quite sure—that it would wound and vex him that I should marry someone else; even," her voice quivering, " if I were quite sure that I wanted to wound him—would that do me any good or help me to bear my life with a man that I do not love ? " " Love! fiddlesticks !" says Lady Conynghame, with bitter- est derision. "Reggie Brooke is worth a dozen of Captain Darrell; and you will be one of the richest women in London —and the happiest." " Even if I could think so," she answers, still calmly, con- trolling herself by a strong effort, " do you wish me to make him so poor a return for all his goodness and kindness to me as to marry him? Would not he," her voice rising, "have the right to think me destitute even of common decency if I could throw myself straight from the arms of one man into the arms of another—in one day ? No, Grannie," sadly shaking her head; " do not ask me. I should be more wicked than I am yet—if I could do that." . " One cannot always pick and choose one's opportunities j UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. 255 one must take them as they come," says the old woman, with that wisdom which has served her well on a good many occa- sions. " This is a case of now or never. Write to Mr. Brooke, or let me write him one line that will detain him in town—or go home to-morrow morning. Take your choice." Then as the girl stands mute and trembling, not indeed being able to find words as she fully realises that this terrible alternative is finally presented to her, Lady Conynghame deals her last and hardest blow. "You know how much your father has always appreciated your company at home," she says, with a bitter sneer. "Judge for yourself how much more he is likely to approve of you when he knows that I have sent you home because you have brought such discredit on me that I cannot keep you any longer." It is a cruel speech, but if she desires any justification of it she probably finds it in the excuse which has borne the burden of many cruelties—that it is for her good. And as Psyche stands silent there comes back to her the remembrance of certain words that Darrell had spoken—words that had been obliterated—well-nigh forgotten, in the more terrible ones that followed them, but are suddenly recalled by this speech of Lady Conynghame's. "Grannie," she says slowly, with dilating eyes, " when I asked—Captain—Darrell," hesitating a little over the name as if it were painful to her, " if there was any good reason why his uncle should object to me more than anyone else, he admitted that there was one, and he told me that I must get you or some of my own people to tell me what it is. Well, now I ask you," her voice shaking with strong excitement; " tell me what it is !" Lady Conynghame glances at her sharply, and then avoids her look. " It appears to me," Psyche goes on in a voice that rises and grows in force, " that I have been kept in the dark too long. 256 UNSPOTTED FROM THE WORLD. It will not do to tell me now that my father hates me merely because I resemble my mother. I have always known there was something strange about my life," pushing the soft loose hair off her forehead with a gesture of oppression, " always. Now I will know what it is. Tell me !" But still Lady Conynghame hesitates. Perhaps even to her it seems that the girl has already borne as much as she is able to bear. " If—if I were to tell you," she says slowly;