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"I meant to be in, Aunt Edith; indeed I did; but I was playing chess with George Ryle, and did not notice the time. It was only just turned half-past when I got here; Mr. Chattaway might have let me in without any great stretch of indulgence," he added, bitterly. "So might Cris."
"What did you do?" she asked.
"I got in at old Canham's, and lay on the settle. Don't repeat this, or it may get the Canhams into trouble."
"Have you breakfasted?"
"I am not to have any."
The words startled her. "Rupert!"
"Mr. Chattaway ordered me from the table. The next thing, I expect, he will order me from the house. If I knew where to go I wouldn't stop in it another hour. I would not, Aunt Edith."
"Have you had nothing--nothing?"
"Nothing. I would go round to the dairy and get some milk, but I should be reported. I'm off to Blackstone now. Good-bye."
Tears were filling her eyes as she lifted them in their sad yearning. He stooped and kissed her.
"Don't grieve, Aunt Edith. You can't make it better for me. I have got the cramp like anything," he carelessly observed as he went off. "It is through lying on the cold, hard settle."
"Rupert! Rupert!"
He turned back, half in alarm. The tone was one of wild, painful entreaty.
"You will come home to-night, Rupert?"
"Yes. Depend upon me."
She remained a few minutes longer watching him down the avenue. He had put on his coat, and went along with slow and hesitating steps; very different from the firm, careless steps of a strong frame, springing from a happy heart. Mrs. Chattaway pressed her hands to her brow, lost in a painful vision. If his father, her once dearly-loved brother Joe, could look on at the injustice done on earth, what would he think of the portion meted out to Rupert?
She descended to the breakfast-room. Mr. Chattaway had finished his breakfast and was rising. She kissed her children one by one; sat down patiently and silently, smiling without cheerfulness. Octave pa.s.sed her a cup of coffee, which was cold; and then asked her what she would take to eat. But she said she was not hungry that morning, and would eat nothing.
"Rupert's gone away without his breakfast, mamma," cried Emily. "Papa would not let him have it. Serve him right! He stayed out all night."
Mrs. Chattaway stole a glance at Maude. She was sitting pale and quiet; her air that of one who has to bear some long, wearing pain.
"If you have finished your breakfast, Maude, you can be getting ready to take the children for their walk," said Octave, speaking with her usual a.s.sumption of authority--an a.s.sumption Maude at least might not dispute.
Mr. Chattaway left the room, and ordered his horse to be got ready. He was going to ride over his land for an hour before proceeding to Blackstone. Whilst the animal was being saddled, he rejoiced his eyes with his rich stores; the corn in his barns, the hay-ricks in his yard.
All very satisfactory, very consoling to the covetous master of the Hold.
He went out, riding hither and thither. Half-an-hour afterwards, in the lane skirting Mrs. Ryle's lands on the one side and his on the other, he saw another horseman before him. It was George Ryle. Mr. Chattaway touched his horse with the spur, and rode up to him. George turned his head and continued his way. Chattaway had been better pleased had George stopped.
"Are you hastening on to avoid me, Mr. Ryle?" he called out, sullenly.
"You might have seen that I wished to speak to you, by the pace at which I urged my horse."
George reined in, and turned to face Mr. Chattaway. "I saw nothing of the sort," he answered. "Had I known you wanted me, I should have stopped; but it is no unusual circ.u.mstance to see you riding fast about your land."
"Well, what I have to say is this: that I'd recommend you not to get Rupert Trevlyn to your house at night, and keep him there to unreasonable hours."
George paused. "I don't understand you, Mr. Chattaway."
"Don't you?" retorted that gentleman. "I'm not talking Dutch. Rupert Trevlyn has taken to frequenting your house of late; it's not altogether good for him."
"Do you fear he will get any harm in it?" quietly asked George.
"I think it would be better that he should stay away. Is the Hold not sufficient for him to spend his evenings in, but he must seek amus.e.m.e.nt elsewhere? I shall be obliged to you not to encourage his visits."
"Mr. Chattaway," said George, his face full of earnestness, "it appears to me that you are labouring under some mistake, or you would certainly not speak to me as you are now doing. I do not encourage Rupert to my mother's house, in one sense of the word; I never press for his visits.
When he does come, I show myself happy to see him and make him welcome--as I should do by any other visitor. Common courtesy demands this of me."
"You do press for his visits," said Mr. Chattaway.
"I do not," firmly repeated George. "Shall I tell you why I do not? I have no wish but to be open in the matter. An impression has seated itself in my mind that his visits to our house displease you, and therefore I have not encouraged them."
Perhaps Mr. Chattaway was rather taken back by this answer. At any rate, he made no reply to it.
"But to receive him courteously when he does come, I cannot help doing,"
continued George. "I shall do it still. If Trevlyn Farm is to be a forbidden house to Rupert, it is not from our side the veto shall come.
As long as Rupert pays us these visits of friendship--and what harm you can think they do him, or why he should not pay them, I am unable to conceive--so long he will be met with a welcome."
"Do you say this to oppose me?"
"Far from it. If you look at the case in an unprejudiced light, you may see that I speak in accordance with the commonest usages of civility. To close the doors of our house to Rupert when there exists no reason why they should be closed--and most certainly he has given us none--would be an act we might blush to be guilty of."
"You have been opposing me all the later years of your life. From that time when I wished to place you with Wall and Barnes, you have done nothing but act in opposition to me."
"I have forgiven that," said George, pointedly, a glow rising to his face at the recollection. "As to any other opposition, I am unconscious of it. You have given me advice occasionally respecting the farm; but the advice has not in general tallied with my own opinion, and therefore I have not taken it. If you call that opposing you, Mr. Chattaway, I cannot help it."
"I see you have been mending that fence in the three-cornered paddock,"
remarked Mr. Chattaway, pa.s.sing to another subject, and speaking in a different tone. Possibly he had had enough of the last.
"Yes," said George. "You would not mend it, and therefore I have had it done. I cannot let my cattle get into the pound. I shall deduct the expense from the rent."
"You'll not," said Mr. Chattaway. "I won't be at the cost of a penny-piece of it."
"Oh yes, you will," returned George, equably. "The damage was done by your team, through your waggoner's carelessness, and the cost of making it good lies with you. Have you anything more to say to me?" he asked, after a pause. "I am very busy this morning."
"Only this," replied Mr. Chattaway significantly. "That the more you encourage Rupert Trevlyn, by making a companion of him, the worse it will be for him."
George lifted his hat in salutation. The master of Trevlyn Hold replied by an ungracious nod, and turned his horse back down the lane. As George rode on, he met Edith and Emily Chattaway--the children, as Octave had styled them--running towards him. They had seen their father, and were hastening after him. Maude came up more leisurely. George stopped to shake hands with her.
"You look pale and ill, Maude," he said, his low voice full of sympathy, his hand retaining hers. "Is it about Rupert?"
"Yes," she replied, striving to keep back her tears. "He was not allowed to come in last night, and has been sent away without breakfast this morning."
"I know all about it," said George. "I met Rupert just now, and he told me. I asked him if he would go to Nora for some breakfast--I could not do less, you know," he added musingly, as if debating the question with himself. "But he declined. I am almost glad he did."