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Hannah's hand dropped from her shoulder in sudden excitement.
"Miss Clodagh!" she said breathlessly--"Miss Clodagh, is it a husband you'll be thinkin' to take?"
Again Clodagh's gaze wandered across the sky, melting now from gold to orange.
"There is a man who wants to take me for his wife, Hannah," she corrected, very gently.
"An' you do be puttin' him before everythin' in the world?"
Clodagh turned swiftly and met the small, anxious eyes.
"So much before everything, that if I were to lose him now I should lose"--she paused for an instant, then added--"myself."
Hannah's eyes narrowed in the intensity of her concern.
"An' he do be carin' for you, Miss Clodagh?"
Clodagh learnt forward; and the warm light from the sunset touched and transfigured her face.
"Yes--he cares," she said very slowly.
CHAPTER XVIII
Late on the afternoon that followed her arrival, Clodagh--with Larry in attendance--climbed up the uneven path that led from the Orristown boat-cove to the house. A considerable change had taken place in the weather since the previous evening. The sky no longer hung low and motionless above the horizon line; the sea no longer shone white and polished as a mirror. A gale had sprung up, breaking the clouds and whipping the sea into small green waves; and more than once, as the cousins clambered up the rugged track, a.s.shlin paused to look back at his small boat, lying with furled sail and shipped oars on the shingle.
"I hope I've beached her high enough," he said. "There will be a big sea to-night."
Clodagh laughed. The prospect of a storm stirred her. She felt boundlessly happy, boundlessly confident in this free, open life.
The night before, after Larry had left her, and the first tinge of twilight had fallen across the old house, there had been a moment in which the ghosts of memory had threatened to a.s.sail her--to come trooping up the gaunt staircase, and through the great, bare rooms. But her will had conquered; she had dispelled the phantoms, and had slept dreamlessly in the big four-post bed.
In the morning she had awakened, as James Milbanke had awakened long ago, to a world of light and joy. But with this difference, that to him the world had been a thing to speculate upon and study, while to her it was a thing familiar--understood--possessed. While she partook of breakfast and while she visited the stables, she kept Hannah by her side, learning from her the vicissitudes of the many humble lives around Orristown that had been known to her since childhood; then, before the tales had been half recounted, Larry had arrived in his boat; and the two cousins, like children playing at a long-loved game, had gone down together to the boat-cove to where the little craft flashed its white sail like a seagull in the sun, and danced with impatience to be off across the crisp green waves.
Clodagh's first act on landing, at Carrigmore, had been to visit the little ivy-covered post-office, in the hope that the Orristown letters might possibly be intercepted. But the postman had already left the village, and she had no choice but to wait patiently for Gore's first letter until her return in the evening. But the postponement had not been sufficient to damp her spirits; and she had started on her various expeditions with a very light heart. Last of all, had come the visit to Mrs. a.s.shlin, who now rarely left her room, but lay all day in the semi-light made by drawn blinds, drinking numerous cups of strong tea and keeping up a fitful murmur of complaint.
With senses that rebelled against the depressing atmosphere, Clodagh had entered the bedroom and had sat for nearly an hour beside her aunt's couch, listening with all the patience she could muster to the oft-repeated tale of discontent and ill-health. Then at last, feeling that duty could demand no more, she had risen and kissed Mrs. a.s.shlin's worn cheek.
"We must have you over in London, Aunt Fan," she said cheerfully. "We must take you to a really good doctor, and have you made quite well."
But Mrs. a.s.shlin had shaken her head dubiously.
"I never had faith in really good doctors since Molyneaux came down to see your poor father."
To this, there seemed no possible response; so Clodagh had kissed her aunt once more, and, with a promise that she would return the next day, had slipped silently out of the gloomy room followed by Larry. Outside, in the vivid daylight, the cousins had looked at each other involuntarily.
"Sometimes life seems awful, Clo!" a.s.shlin had said, in a despondent voice. And with a momentary shock, Clodagh had caught a gleam of the restlessness, the brooding gloom, that used long ago to settle on the face of her father.
"Why don't you leave Carrigmore, Larry?" she had said quickly. "It's a wonderful place to rest in, but it's not the place for the whole of a man's life."
a.s.shlin had made a descriptive gesture, indicating the house behind him; then, with a sudden impulse of confidence, he had thrust his hand into his pocket, and had drawn out six five-pound notes.
"When this represents the whole exchequer of the next three months, there isn't much question of foreign travel--or fortune-seeking," he had said. "Come along! The gale is freshening!"
And Clodagh had obeyed, depressed for the moment by contact with that hidden poverty of the proud and well-born, that is one of the most pathetic factors in the scheme of Irish social life. She had longed ardently to make some suggestion, some offer of help, to this bright, spirited boy, who was wasting the best years G.o.d had given him in coping with an estate that could never be made to pay, and attending upon an invalid who hovered perpetually on the borderland of shadows; but a native comprehension of the position held her dumb. An offer of help made on the moment of his confidence would set an irrevocable barrier between them in the very dawning of their renewed friendship.
So she had talked to him of the crops, of the fishing, of the Orristown live-stock, while the boat carried them back across the bay. And the sail homeward under the scudding clouds, while the little boat danced and dipped to the buffeting of the waves, had erased the pa.s.sing gloom; and now, as they climbed the steep pathway and pa.s.sed across the fields to the house, Clodagh's heart was beating high in her own egotistical joy at the mere fact of life.
She laughed out of sheer pleasure, as they pa.s.sed round the house and four or five dogs rushed forth from the hall to greet them; and stooping impulsively, she drew Mick close to her and kissed his rough head.
"Larry, do you remember how you won him from me long ago, and how n.o.bly you gave him back? I have never forgotten it." She smiled affectionately at her tall young cousin; and, freeing Mick, led the way into the house.
On the shabby hall table, where the silver sconces stood as of old, lay a small heap of letters; and with an exclamation of pleasure, Clodagh ran forward and picked them up, pa.s.sing them hastily in review.
There was a thick, important-looking one from Nance. And--yes! the first letter from Gore--the letter she had been waiting for!
For an instant her face fell. It felt thin and disappointing, as she held the envelope between her fingers. But almost at once her face cleared. After all, men had not as much time as women for the writing of letters! And this had been written on the day of her departure! She looked at the postmark: "London--10.30." Of course he had only had time to scribble a line. How good and thoughtful of him even to have sent that line! She turned and looked at Larry, her face radiant once more.
"Larry," she said, "will you tell Burke that we'll dine in half an hour, if Hannah has everything ready? And tell them to have candles in all the sconces. It is to be a dinner party, you know!" She gave a pleasant little laugh and turned towards the stairs, closing her fingers over her letters in a delightful, secret sense of antic.i.p.ation and possession.
Her own room was filled with a cold grey light as she entered it--a peculiar light drawn from the wind-swept sky and the pale, agitated waters; and she noticed, as she crossed the threshold, that the wind roared draughtily down the wide chimney, in a way that suggested autumn and autumnal gales. But the circ.u.mstance made little impression; she carried her own world in her heart--and here, in the letter Gore had written.
In a second impulse of love, she laid the others aside, and opened Gore's envelope. Drawing out the letter, she held it for a moment against her face. On this paper his hand had rested when he wrote to her! There was a sense of personal contact in the mere thought. Then, at last, with a smile at her own sentiment, she opened it slowly and smoothed out the pages.
The written lines--scarcely more than a dozen in number--danced for an instant before her eyes; then focused themselves with terrible distinctness.
There was no formal beginning to the letter; it was merely a statement made in sharp, uneven characters, as though the sender had written under great stress--great emotion or resolve.
"I find," it began, "that you have treated me with an unpardonable want of honour and want of truth on a matter that concerned me very deeply--the matter of Deerehurst; and it seems to me, under the circ.u.mstances, only just and right that our engagement should come to an end. A marriage built upon such a basis could only have one termination. If this seems hard or abrupt, I can only say that the knowledge of my mistake has come hardly to me. I shall go abroad again as soon as I can make my plans. I am glad to think that, as no one but your sister knew of our engagement, my action can cause no public comment or unpleasantness for you.
"WALTER GORE."
Clodagh read the lines--read and re-read them. For the first time in her life, her quick brain failed to respond to a first suggestion; then, at last, as though the cloud that obscured her mind had been rent asunder, conception of all that the letter conveyed sprang to her understanding.
Walter had written this letter! Walter had given her up! Her face became very white; she swayed a little, looking about her vaguely, as if for some physical aid; then suddenly revolt took the place of panic.
It was all some horrible mistake. She must go to him--rend the web of doubt that had divided them--if need be, humble herself, show him the greatness of her love, until he must condone--must forgive--must reinstate her in his heart!
Moving swiftly, she crossed the room to the fireplace, drawing out her watch as she went. With a good horse, she might still catch the last train from Muskeere--take the night mail from Cork to Dublin--cross to Holyhead in the morning, and be back in London to-morrow!
She lifted her hand to the frayed and ta.s.selled bell-rope that hung from the ceiling: then, by a strange impulse, her arm dropped to her side.
When her journey was accomplished--when she met Gore, what had she to explain? what had she to confess? The ta.s.sel of the bell-rope slipped from between her fingers.
The vision of herself pleading with him rose vividly before her,--she, with her pa.s.sionate impulsiveness; he, with his grave dignity, his uncompromising integrity. She recalled the peculiar words he had made use of on the day he had discovered Deerehurst's gift of flowers. "I should either believe in you--or disbelieve in you!" His critical att.i.tude in their first acquaintance started to life at the remembrance of the words. He, who expected of others what he himself performed--he who, as Nance had said, was "so honourable himself"--how would he receive the poor, lame story she had to offer? A horrible, confusing dread closed in about her. A week ago, she would have gone forth confidently, to make her confession; but now her faith was less. On the night in Deerehurst's study she had tasted of the tree of knowledge--had seen things as men see them; and her fearlessness had been shaken.
She looked helplessly round the bare room filled with cold grey light.