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"I know not," she replied, her eyes taking again their dreamy, far-off look. "Woe is me!--for I know it not."
"How do you do, Ludlow? Not here alone, are you?"
A good-looking young fellow, Hyde Stockhausen, had reined in his horse to ask the question: giving at the same time a keen glance to the gipsy woman and then a half-smile at me, as if he suspected I was having my fortune told.
"The rest are on the course somewhere. The Squire is driving old Jacobson about."
As Hyde nodded and rode on, I chanced to see Ketira's face. It was stretched out after him with the most eager gaze on it, a defiant look in her black eyes. I thought Stockhausen must have offended her.
"Do you know him?" I asked involuntarily.
"I never saw him before; but I don't like him," she answered, showing her white and gleaming teeth. "Who is he?"
"His name is Stockhausen."
"I don't like him," she repeated in a muttering tone. "He is an enemy.
I don't like his look."
Considering that he was a well-looking man, with a pleasant face and gay blue eyes, a face that no reasonable spirit could take umbrage at, I wondered to hear her say this.
"You must have a peculiar taste in looks, Ketira, to dislike his."
"You don't understand," she said abruptly: and, turning away, disappeared in the throng.
Only once more did I catch sight of Ketira that day. It was at the lower end of Pitchcroft, near the show. She was standing in front of a booth, staring at a group of hors.e.m.e.n who seemed to have met and halted there, one of whom was young Stockhausen. Again the notion crossed me that he must in some way have affronted her. It was on him her eyes were fixed: and in them lay the same curious, defiant expression of antagonism, mingled with fear.
Hyde Stockhausen was the step-son of old Ma.s.sock of South Crabb. The Stockhausens had a name in Worcestershire for dying off, as I have told the reader before. Hyde's father had proved no exception. After his death the widow married Ma.s.sock the brickmaker, putting up with the man's vulgarity for the sake of his riches. It took people by surprise: for she had been a lady always, as Miss Hyde and as Mrs. Stockhausen; one might have thought she would rather have put up with a clown from Persh.o.r.e fair than with Ma.s.sock the illiterate. Hyde Stockhausen was well educated: his uncle, Tom Hyde the parson, had taken care of that.
At twenty-one he came into some money, and at once began to do his best to spend it. He was to have been a parson, but could not get through at Oxford, and gave up trying for it. His uncle quarrelled with him then: he knew Hyde had not _tried_ to pa.s.s, and that he openly said n.o.body should make a parson of _him_. After the quarrel, Hyde went off to see what the Continent was like. He stayed so long that the world at home thought he was lost. For the past ten or eleven months he had been back at his mother's at South Crabb, knocking about, as Ma.s.sock phrased it to the Squire one day. Hyde said he was "looking-out" for something to do: but he was quite easy as to the future, feeling sure his old uncle would leave him well off. Parson Hyde had never married; and had plenty of money to bequeath to somebody. As to Hyde's own money, that had nearly come to an end.
Naturally old Ma.s.sock (an ill-conditioned kind of man) grew impatient over this state of things, reproaching Hyde with his idle habits, which were a bad example for his own sons. And only just before this very day that we were on Worcester racecourse, rumours reached Church d.y.k.ely that Stockhausen was coming over to settle there and superintend certain fields of brick-making, which Ma.s.sock had recently purchased and commenced working. As if Ma.s.sock could not have kept himself and his bricks at South Crabb! But it was hardly likely that Hyde, really a gentleman, would take to brick-making.
We did not know much of him. His connection with Ma.s.sock had kept people aloof. Many who would have been glad enough to make friends with Hyde would not do it as long as he had his home at Ma.s.sock's. His mother's strange and fatal marriage with the man (fatal as regarded her place in society) told upon Hyde, and there's no doubt he must have felt the smart.
The rumour proved to be correct. Hyde Stockhausen took up his abode at Church d.y.k.ely, as overseer, or clerk, or manager--whatever might be the right term for it--of the men employed in his step-father's brick operations. The pretty little house, called Virginia Cottage, owned by Henry Rimmer, which had the Virginia creeper trailing up its red walls, and flowers cl.u.s.tering in its productive garden, was furnished for him; and Hyde installed himself in it as thoroughly and completely as though he had entered on brick-making for life. Some people laughed. "But it's only while I am turning myself round," he said, one day, to the Squire.
Hyde soon got acquainted with Church d.y.k.ely, and would drop into people's houses of an evening, laughing over his occupation, and saying he should be able to make bricks himself in time. His chief work seemed to be in standing about the brick-yard watching the men, and in writing and book-keeping at home. Old Ma.s.sock made his appearance once a month, when accounts and such-like items were gone over between them.
When it was that Hyde first got on speaking terms with Kettie, or where, or how, I cannot tell. So far as I know, n.o.body could tell. It was late in the autumn when Ketira and her daughter came back to their hut; and by the following early spring some of us had grown accustomed to seeing Hyde and Kettie together in an evening, s.n.a.t.c.hing a short whisper or a five-minutes' walk. In March, I think it was, she and Ketira went away again, and returned in May.
The twenty-ninth of May was at that time kept as a holiday in Worcestershire, though it has dropped out of use as such in late years.
In Worcester itself there was a grand procession, which country people went in to see, and a special service in the cathedral. We had service also at Church d.y.k.ely, and the villagers adorned their front-doors with immense oak boughs, sprays of which we young ones wore in our jackets, the oak-b.a.l.l.s and leaves gilded. I remember one year that the big bough (almost a tree) which Henry Rimmer had hoisted over his sign, the "Silver Bear," came to grief. Whether Rimmer had not secured it as firmly as usual, or that the cords were rotten, down came the huge bough with a crash on old Mr. Stirling's head, who chanced to be coming out of the inn. He went on at Rimmer finely, vowing his neck was broken, and that Rimmer ought to be hung up there himself.
On this twenty-ninth of May I met Kettie. It was on the common, near Abel Carew's. Kettie had caught up the fashion of the place, and wore a little spray of oak peeping out from between the folds of her red cloak.
And I may as well say that neither she nor her mother ever went out without the cloak. In cold and heat, in rain and sunshine, the red cloak was worn out-of-doors.
"Are you making holiday to-day, Kettie?"
"Not more than usual; all days are the same to us," she answered, in her sweet, soft voice, and with the slightly foreign accent that attended the speech of both. But Kettie had it more strongly than her mother.
"You have not gilded your oak-ball."
Kettie glanced down at the one ball, nestling amid its green leaves.
"I had no gilding to put on it, Mr. Johnny."
"No! I have some in my pocket. Let me gild it for you."
Her teeth shone like pearls as she smiled and held out the spray. How beautiful she was! with those delicate features and the large dark eyes!--eyes that were softer than Ketira's. Taking the little paper book from my pocket, and some of the gilt leaf from between its tissue leaves, I wetted the oak-ball and gilded it. Kettie watched intently.
"Where did you get it all from?" she asked, meaning the gilt leaf.
"I bought it at Hewitt's. Don't you know the shop? A stationer's; next door to Pettipher the druggist's. Hewitt does no end of a trade in these leaves on the twenty-ninth of May."
"Did you buy it to gild oak-b.a.l.l.s for yourself, sir?"
"For the young ones at home: Hugh and Lena. There it is, Kettie."
Had it been a ball of solid gold that I put into her hand, instead of a gilded oak-ball, Kettie could not have shown more intense delight.
Her cheeks flushed; the wonderful brilliancy that joy brought to her eyes caused my own eyes to turn away. For her eighteen years she was childish in some things; very much so, considering the experience that her wandering life must (as one would suppose) have brought her. In replacing the spray within her cloak, Kettie dropped something out of her hand--apparently a small box folded in paper. I picked it up.
"Is it a fairing, Kettie? But this is not fair time."
"It is--I forget the name," she replied, looking at me and hesitating.
"My mother is ill; the pains are in her shoulder again; and my uncle Abel has given me this to rub upon it, the same that did her good before. I cannot just call the name to mind in the English tongue."
"Say it in your own."
She spoke a very outlandish word, laughed, and turned red again.
Certainly there never lived a more modest girl than Kettie.
"Is it liniment?--ointment?"
"Yes, it is that, the last," she said: "Abel calls it so. I thank you for what you have done for me, sir. Good-day."
To show so much grat.i.tude for that foolish bit of gilt leaf on her oak-ball! It illumined every line of her face. I liked Kettie: liked her for her innocent simplicity. Had she not been a gipsy, many a gentleman might have been proud to make her his wife.
Close upon that, it was known that Ketira was laid up with rheumatism.
The weather came in hot, and the days went on: and Kettie and Hyde were now and then seen together.
One evening, on leaving Mrs. Scott's, where we had been to arrange with Sam to go fishing with us on the morrow, Tod said he would invite Hyde Stockhausen to be of the party; so we took Virginia Cottage on our road home, and asked for Hyde.
"Not at home!" retorted Tod, resenting the old woman's answer, as though it had been a personal affront. "Where is he?"
"Master Hyde has only just stepped out, sir; twenty minutes ago, or so,"
said she, pleadingly excusing the fact. Which was but natural: she had been Hyde's nurse when he was a child; and had now come here to do for him. "I dare say, sir, he be only walking about a bit, to get the fresh air."
Tod whistled some bars of a tune thoughtfully. He did not like to be crossed.