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Suddenly, as Lady Level spoke the last word, she started, and began to creep away from the window, as if fearing to be seen.
"Arnold! Arnold! who do you think is out there?" she exclaimed in a timid whisper.
"Why, who?" in astonishment. "Not Lord Level?"
"It is Captain Cross," she said with a s.h.i.+ver. "I would rather meet the whole world than him. My behaviour to him was--was not right; and I have felt ashamed of myself ever since."
Mr. Ravensworth looked out from the window. Captain Cross, seated on the bench in the inn yard, was solacing himself with a cigar.
"I would not meet him for the world! I would not let him see me: he might make a scene. I shall stay in my rooms all day. Why does my husband leave me to such chances as these?"
That Captain Cross had not been well used was certain; but the fault lay with Major Carlen, not with Blanche. Mr. Ravensworth spoke.
"Take my advice, Lady Level. Do not place yourself in Captain Cross's way, but do not run from him. I believe him to be a gentleman; and, if so, he will not say or do anything to annoy you. I will take care he does not, as long as I remain here."
In the course of the morning Captain Cross and Arnold Ravensworth met.
"I find Lady Level's here!" the Captain abruptly exclaimed. "Are you staying with her?"
"I and my wife arrived here only last night, and were surprised to meet Lady Level."
"Where's _he_?" asked Captain Cross.
"In England."
"He in England and she here, and only six months married! Estranged, I suppose. Well, what else could she expect? People mostly reap what they sow."
Arnold Ravensworth laughed good-humouredly. _He_ was not going to give a hint of the state of affairs that he suspected himself.
"You are prejudiced, Cross. Miss Heriot was not to blame for what happened. She was a child: and they did with her as they pleased."
"A child! Old enough to engage herself to one man, and to marry another," retorted Captain Cross, in a burst of angry feeling. "And Level, of all people!"--with sarcastic scorn. "Why does he leave her in Germany whilst he stays gallivanting in England? What do you say?
Met with an accident, and _can't_ come for her? That's _his_ tale, I suppose. You may repeat it to the Marines, old boy; it won't do for me. _I_ know Level; knew him of old."
Lady Level was as good as her word: she did not stir out of her rooms all day. On the following morning when Mr. Ravensworth came out of his chamber, he saw, from the corridor window, a travelling-carriage in the yard, packed. By the coat-of-arms he knew it for Lord Level's.
Timms moved towards him in a flutter of delight.
"Oh, if you please, sir, breakfast is on the table, and my lady is waiting there, ready dressed. We are going to England, sir."
"Has Lord Level come?"
"No, sir: we are going with you. My lady gave orders, last night, to pack up for home. It is the happiest day I've known, sir, since I set foot in these barbarious countries."
Lady Level met him at the door of the breakfast-room; "ready dressed,"
as Timms expressed it, for travelling, even to her bonnet.
"Do you really mean to go with us?" he exclaimed.
"Yes," was her decisive reply. "That is, you must go with me. Stay here longer, I will not. I tell you, Arnold, I am sick to death of it.
If Lord Level is ill and unable to come for me, I am glad to embrace the opportunity of travelling under your protection: he can't grumble at that. Besides----"
"Besides what?" asked Mr. Ravensworth, for she suddenly stopped.
"I do not choose to remain at an inn in which Captain Cross has taken up his abode: neither would my husband wish me to do so. After you and Mrs. Ravensworth left me last night, I sat over the wood fire, thinking these things over, and made my mind up. If I have not sufficient money for the journey, and I don't think I have, I must apply to you, Arnold."
Whether Mr. Ravensworth approved or disapproved of the decision, he had no power to alter it. Or, rather, whether Lord Level would approve of it. After a hasty breakfast, they went down to the carriage, which had already its array of five horses harnessed to it; Sanders and Timms perched side-by-side in their seat aloft. The two ladies were helped in by Mr. Ravensworth. Captain Cross leaned against the outer wall of the _salle-a-manger_, watching the departure. He approached Mr. Ravensworth.
"Am I driving her ladys.h.i.+p off?"
"Lady Level is going to England with us, to join her husband. I told you he had met with an accident."
"A merry meeting to them!" was the sarcastic rejoinder. And, as the carriage drove out of the inn-yard, Captain Cross deliberately lifted his hat to Lady Level: but lifted it, she thought, in mockery.
CHAPTER VIII.
THE VINE-COVERED COTTAGE AT PISA.
That Archibald, Lord Level, had been a gay man, fond of pleasure, fond of talking nonsense to pretty women, the world knew well: and perhaps, world-fas.h.i.+on, admired him none the less for it. But his wife did not know it. When Blanche Heriot became Blanche Level she was little more than an innocent child, entirely unversed in the world's false ways.
She esteemed her husband; ay, and loved him, in a measure, and she was happy for a time.
It is true that while they were staying in Switzerland a longing for home came over her. They had halted in Paris for nearly a fortnight on their outward route. Some very nice people whom Lord Level knew were there; they were delighted with the fair young bride, and she was delighted with them. Blanche was taken about everywhere, no one being more anxious for her amus.e.m.e.nt than Lord Level himself. But one morning, in the very midst of numerous projected expeditions, he suddenly told Blanche that they must continue their journey that day.
"Oh, Archibald!" she had answered in a sort of dismay. "Why, it is this very afternoon that we were going to Fontainebleau!"
"My dear, you shall see Fontainebleau the next time we are in Paris,"
he said. "I have a reason for wis.h.i.+ng to go on at once."
And they went on. Blanche was far too good and dutiful a wife to oppose her own will to her husband's, or to grumble. They went straight on to Switzerland--travelling in their own carriage--but instead of settling himself in one of those pretty dwellings on the banks of Geneva's lake, as he had talked of to Blanche, Lord Level avoided Geneva altogether, and chose a fearfully dull little village as their place of abode. Very lovely as to scenery, it is true; but quite unfrequented by travellers. It was there that Blanche first began to long for home.
Next, they went on to Italy, posting straight to Pisa, and there Lord Level took a pretty villa for a month in the suburbs of the town. Pisa itself was deserted: it was hot weather; and Blanche did not think it had many attractions. Lord Level, however, seemed to find pleasure in it. He knew Pisa well, having stayed at it in days gone by. He made Blanche familiar with the neighbourhood; together they admired and wondered at the Leaning Tower, in its green plain, backed by distant mountains; but he also went out and about a good deal alone.
One English dame of fas.h.i.+on was sojourning in the place--a widow, Mrs. Page Reid. She occupied the next villa to theirs, and called upon them; and she and Lady Level grew tolerably intimate. She was a talkative, gay woman of thirty--and beside her Blanche seemed like a timid schoolgirl.
One evening, when dinner was over, Lord Level strolled out--as he often did--leaving his wife with Mrs. Page Reid, who had dined with them. The two ladies talked together, and sang a song or two; and so whiled away the time.
"Let us go out for a stroll, too!" exclaimed Mrs. Page Reid, speaking on a momentary impulse, when she found the time growing monotonous.
Blanche readily agreed. It was a most lovely night; the moon bright and silvery in the Italian sky. Putting on some fleecy shawls, the ladies went down the solitary road, and turned by-and-by into a narrow lane that looked like a grove of evergreens. Soon they came to a pretty dwelling-place on the left, half villa, half cottage. Vines grew up its trellised walls, flowers and shrubs crowded around it.
"A charming little spot!" cried Mrs. Page Reid, as they halted to peep through the hedge of myrtles that cl.u.s.tered on each side the low entrance-gate. "And two people are sitting there--lovers, I dare say,"
she added, "telling their vows under the moonbeams."
In front of the vine-wreathed window, on a bench overhung by the branches of the trailing shrubs, the laurels and the myrtles, sat two young people. The girl was tall, slender, graceful; her dark eyes had a flas.h.i.+ng fire even in the moonlight; her cheeks wore a rose-red flush.
"How pretty she is!" whispered Blanche. "Look at her long gold earrings! And he---- Oh!"