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"Well, my dear, and I say it is all for the best. If you can suggest a better plan I am willing to hear it."
Annabel sat silent, her head drooping.
"I may tell you this much, child: your father looked forward to it and approved it. Not that he would have allowed the marriage to take place just yet had he lived; I am sure of that; but he is not living, and circ.u.mstances alter cases."
"I am sure he liked me, Miss Brightman," I ventured to put in, as modestly as I could; "and I believe he would have consented to our marriage."
"Yes, he liked you very much; and so do I," she added, laughing. "I wish I could say as much for Mrs. Brightman. The opposition, I fancy, will come from her."
"You think she will oppose it?" I said--and, indeed, the doubt had lain in my own mind.
"I am afraid so. Of course there will be nothing for it but patience.
Annabel cannot marry without her consent."
How a word will turn the scales of our hopes and fears! That Mrs.
Brightman would oppose and wither our bright prospects came to me in that moment with the certainty of conviction.
"Come what come may, we will be true to each other," I whispered to Annabel the next afternoon. We were standing at the end of the pier, looking out upon the calm sea, flas.h.i.+ng in the suns.h.i.+ne, and I imprisoned her hand momentarily in mine. "If we have to exercise all the patience your Aunt Lucy spoke of, we will still hope on, and put our trust in Heaven."
"Even so, Charles." The evening was yet early when I reached London, and I walked home from the station. St. Mary's was striking half-past seven as I pa.s.sed it. At the self-same moment, an arm was inserted into mine. I turned quickly, wondering if anyone had designs upon my small hand-bag.
"All right, Charley! I'm not a burglar."
It was only Lake. "Why, Arthur! I thought you had gone to Oxford until Monday!"
"Got news last night that the fellow could not have me: had to go down somewhere or other," he answered, as we walked along arm-in-arm. "I say, I had a bit of a scare just now."
"In what way?"
"I thought I saw Tom pa.s.s. Tom Heriot," he added in a whisper.
"Oh, but that's impossible, you know, Lake," I said, though I felt my pulses quicken. "All your fancy."
"It was just under that gas-lamp at the corner of Wellington Street,"
Lake went on. "He was sauntering along as if he had nothing to do, m.u.f.fled in a coat that looked a mile too big for him, and a red comforter. He lifted his face in pa.s.sing, and stopped suddenly, as if he had recognised me, and were going to speak; then seemed to think better of it, turned on his heel and walked back the way he had been coming. Charley, if it was not Tom Heriot, I never saw such a likeness as that man bore to him."
My lips felt glued. "It could not have been Tom Heriot, Lake. You know Tom is at the antipodes. We will not talk of him, please. Are you coming home with me?"
"Yes. I was going on to Barlow's Chambers, but I'll come with you instead."
CHAPTER III.
AN EVENING VISITOR.
The spring flowers were showing themselves, and the may was budding in the hedges. I thought how charming it all looked, as I turned, this Monday afternoon, into Mrs. Brightman's grounds, where laburnums drooped their graceful blossoms, and lilacs filled the air with their perfume; how significantly it all spoke to the heart of renewed life after the gloom of winter, the death and decay of nature.
Mrs. Brightman was herself, enjoying the spring-tide. She sat, robed in c.r.a.pe, on a bench amidst the trees, on which the sun was s.h.i.+ning.
What a refined, proud, handsome face was hers! but pale and somewhat haggard now. No other trace of her recent illness was apparent, except a nervous trembling of the hands.
"This is a surprise," she said, holding out one of those hands to me quite cordially. "I thought you had been too busy of late to visit me in the day-time."
"Generally I am very busy, but I made time to come to-day. I have something of importance to say to you, Mrs. Brightman. Will you hear me?"
She paused to look at me--a searching, doubtful look. Did she fear that I was about to speak to her of her _failing_? The idea occurred to me.
"Certainly," she coldly replied. "Business must, of course, be attended to. Would you prefer to go indoors or to sit out here?"
"I would rather remain here. I am not often favoured with such a combination of velvet lawn and suns.h.i.+ne and sweet scents."
She made room for me beside her. And, with as little circ.u.mlocution as possible, I brought out what I wanted--Annabel. When the heart is truly engaged, a man at these moments can only be bashful, especially when he sees it will be an uphill fight; but if the heart has nothing to do with the matter, he can be as cool and suave as though he were merely telling an everyday story.
Mrs. Brightman, hearing me to the end, rose haughtily.
"Surely you do not know what you are saying!" she exclaimed. "Or is it that I fail to understand you? You cannot be asking for the hand of my daughter?"
"Indeed--pardon me--I am. Mrs. Brightman, we----"
"Pardon _me_," she interrupted, "but I must tell you that it is utterly preposterous. Say no more, Mr. Strange; not another word. My daughter cannot marry a professional man. _I_ did so, you may reply: yes, and have forfeited my proper place in the world ever since."
"Mr. Brightman would have given Annabel to me."
"Possibly so, though I think not. As Mr. Brightman is no longer here, we may let that supposition alone. And you must allow me to say this much, sir--that it is scarcely seemly to come to me on any such subject so soon after his death."
"But----" I stopped in embarra.s.sment, unable to give my reason for speaking so soon. How could I tell Mrs. Brightman that it was to afford Annabel a home and a protector: that this, her mother's home, was not fitting for a refined and sensitive girl?
But I pressed the suit. I told her I had Annabel's consent, and that I had recently been with her at Hastings. I should like to have added that I had Miss Brightman's, only that it might have done more harm than good. I spoke very slightly of Miss Brightman's projected departure from England, when her house would be shut up and Annabel must leave Hastings. And I added that I wanted to make a home for her by that time.
I am sure she caught my implied meaning, for she grew agitated and her hands shook as they lay on her c.r.a.pe dress. Her diamond rings, which she had not discarded, flashed in the sunlight. But she rallied her strength. All her pride rose up in rebellion.
"My daughter has her own home, sir; her home with me--what do you mean? During my illness, I have allowed her to remain with her aunt, but she will shortly return to me."
And when I would have urged further, and pleaded as for something dearer than life, she peremptorily stopped me.
"I will hear no more, Mr. Strange. My daughter is descended on my side from the n.o.bles of the land--you must forgive me for thus alluding to it--and it is impossible that I can forget that, or allow her to do so. Never, with my consent, will she marry out of that grade: a professional man is, in rank, beneath her. This is my decision, and it is unalterable. The subject is at an end, and I beg of you never again to enter upon it."
There was no chance of my pursuing it then, at any rate. Hatch came from the house, a folded cloak on her arm, and approached her mistress.
"The carriage is at the gate, ma'am."
Mrs. Brightman rose at once: she was going for a drive. After what had just pa.s.sed, I held out my arm to her with some hesitation. She put the tips of her fingers within it, with a stiff "Thank you," and we walked to the gate in silence. I handed her into the open carriage; Hatch disposed the cloak upon her knees, a.s.sisted by the footman. With a cold bow, Mrs. Brightman, who had already as coldly shaken hands with me, drove away.
Hatch, always ready for a gossip, stood within the little iron gate while she spoke to me.
"We be going away for a bit, sir," she began. "Did you know it?"