muttered Best to himself with great satisfaction, as he watched the languid pace quicken to overtake the boy, who had gone on with his sister.
Perhaps the irritability of illness had some effect upon the ordinary gentleness of Lord Northmoor's temper, and besides, he was exceedingly annoyed at such ungrateful slaughter of what was known to be a favourite of his wife; so when he came upon Herbert, sauntering down to the stables, he accosted him sharply with, 'What is this I hear, Herbert? I could not have believed that you would have deliberately killed the creature that you knew to be a special delight to your aunt.'
Herbert had reached the state of mind when a third, if not a fourth, reproach on the same subject on which his conscience was already uneasy, was simply exasperating, and without the poor excuse he had offered his aunt and sister, he burst out that it was very hard that such a beastly row should be made about a fellow knocking down mere trumpery vermin.
'Speak properly, Herbert, or hold your tongue,' said his uncle. 'I am extremely displeased at finding that you do not know how to conduct yourself to my servants, and have presumed to act in this lawless, heartless manner, in defiance of what you knew to be your aunt's wishes and my orders, and that you replied to Best's remonstrance with insolence.'
'That's a good one! Insolent to an old fool of a keeper,' muttered Herbert sullenly.
'Insolence is shameful towards any man,' returned his uncle. 'And from a foolish headstrong boy to a faithful old servant it is particularly unbecoming. However, bad as this is, it is not all that I have to speak of.'
Then Herbert recollected with dismay how much his misdemeanour would tell against his pardon for the more important act of disobedience, and he took refuge in a sullen endeavour at indifference, while his uncle, thoroughly roused, spoke of the sins of disobedience and the dangers of betting. Perhaps the only part of the lecture that he really heard was, 'Remember, it was these habits in those who came before us that have been so great a hindrance in life to both you and me, and made you, my poor boy, so utterly mistaken as to what becomes your position. How much have you thrown away?'
Herbert looked up and muttered the amount--twelve pounds and some shillings.
'Very well, I will not have it owed. I shall pay it, deducting two pounds from your allowance each term till it is made up. Give me the address or addresses.'
At this Herbert writhed and remonstrated, but his uncle was inexorable.
'The fellows will be at me,' he said, as he gave Stanhope's name.
'You will see no more of Stanhope after this week. I have arranged to send you to a tutor in Hertfordshire, who I hope will make you work, and where, I trust, you will find companions who will give you a better idea of what becomes a gentleman.'
In point of fact, this had been arranged for some time past, though by the desire of Herbert's present tutor it had not been made known to the young people, so that, coming thus, there was a sound of punishment in it to Herbert.
The interview ended there. The annoyance, enhanced in his mind by having come on a Sunday, brought on another attack of headache; but late in the evening he sent for Herbert, who always had to go very early on the Monday. It was to ask him whether he would not prefer the payment being made to Stanhope and the other pupil after he had left them. Herbert's scowl pa.s.sed off. It was a great relief. He said they were prepared to wait till he had his allowance, and the act of consideration softened him, as did also the manifest look of suffering and illness, as his uncle lay on the couch, hardly able to speak, and yet exerting himself thus to spare the lad.
'Thank you, sir,' actually Herbert said, and then, with a gulp, 'I am sorry about that bird--I wish I'd never told them, but it was Stanhope who drove me to it, not believing.'
'I thought it was not your better mind,' said his uncle, holding out his hand. 'I should like you to make me a promise, Herbert, not to make a bet while I am away. I should go with an easier mind.'
'I will, uncle,' said Herbert, heartily reflecting, perhaps, it must be owned, on the fewer opportunities in that line at Westhaven, except at the regatta, but really resolving, as the only salve to his conscience.
And there was that in his face and the clasp of his hand that gave his uncle a sense of comfort and hope.
CHAPTER XVII ON THE SURFACE
Lady Adela, though small and pale, was one of the healthy women who seem unable to believe in any ailments short of a raging fever; and when she heard of neuralgia, decided that it was all a matter of imagination, and a sort of excuse for breaking off the numerous occupations in which she felt his value, but only as she would have acknowledged that of a good schoolmaster. Their friendly intercourse had never ripened into intimacy, and was still punctiliously courteous; each tacitly dreaded the influence of the other on the Vicar-in-Church matters, and every visit of the Westhaven family confirmed Lady Adela's belief that it was undesirable to go below the surface.
Bertha, who came down for a day or two to a.s.sist at the breaking-up demonstration of the High School at Colbeam, was as ever much more cordial. The chief drawbacks with her were that cynical tone, which made it always doubtful whether she were making game of her hearers, and the philanthropy, not greatly tinged with religion, so as to confuse old-fashioned minds. She used to bring down strange accounts of her startling adventures in the slums, and relate them in a rattling style, interluded with slang, being evidently delighted to shock and puzzle her hearers; but still she was always good-natured in deed if not in word, and Lord Northmoor was very grateful for her offer of hospitality to Herbert, who was coming to London for his preliminary examination.
She had come up to call, determined to be of use to them, and she had experience enough of travelling to be very helpful. Finding that they shuddered at the notion of fashionable German '_baden_,' she exclaimed--
'I'll hit you off! There's that place in the Austrian Tyrol that Lettice Bury frequents--a regular primitive place with a name--Oh, what is it, Addie, like rats and mice?'
'Ratzes,' said Adela.
'Yes. The tourists have not molested it yet, and only natives bathe there, so she goes every year to renovate herself and sketch, and comes back furbished up like an old snake, with lots of drawings of impossible peaks, like t.i.tian's backgrounds. We'll write and tell her to make ready for the head of her house!'
'Oh, but--' began Frank, looking to his wife.
'Would it not be intruding?' said Mary.
'She will be enchanted! She always likes to have anything to do for anybody, and she says the scenery is just a marvel. You care for that!
You are so deliciously fresh, beauties aren't a bore to you.'
'We are glad of the excuse,' said Frank gravely.
'You look ill enough to be an excuse for anything, and Mary too! How about a maid? Is Harte going?'
'No,' said Mary; 'she says that foreign food made her so ill once before that she cannot attempt going again. I meant to do without.'
'That would never do!' cried Bertha. 'You have quite enough on your hands with Northmoor, and the luggage and the languages.'
'Is not an English maid apt to be another trouble?' said Mary. 'I do not suppose my French is good, but I have had to talk it constantly; and I know some German, if that will serve in the Tyrol.'
'I'll reconcile it to your consciences,' said Bertha triumphantly. 'It will be a real charity. There's a bonny little Swiss girl whom some reckless people brought home and then turned adrift. It will be a real kindness to help her home, and you shall pick her up when you come up to me on your way, and see my child! Oh, didn't I tell you? We had a housemaid once who was demented enough to marry a scamp of a stoker on one of the Thames steamers. He deserted her, and I found her living, or rather dying, in an awful place at Rotherhithe, surrounded by tipsy women, raging in opposite corners. I got her into a decent room, but too late to save her life--and a good thing too; so I solaced her last moments with a promise to look after her child, such a jolly little mortal, in spite of her name--Boadicea Ethelind Davidina Jones. She is two years old, and quite delicious--the darling of all the house!'
'I hope you will have no trouble with the father,' said Frank.
'I trust he has gone to his own locker, or, if not, he is only too glad to be rid of her. I can tackle him,' said Bertha confidently. 'The child is really a little duck!'
She spoke as if the little one filled an empty s.p.a.ce in her heart; and, even though there might be trouble in store, it was impossible not to be glad of her present gladness, and her invitation was willingly accepted.
Moreover, her recommendations were generally trustworthy, and Mary only hesitated because, she said--
'I thought, if I could do without a maid, we might take Constance. She is doing so very well, and likely to pa.s.s so well in her examinations, that it would be very nice to give her this pleasure.'
'Good little girl! So it would. I should like nothing better; but I am afraid that if you took her without a maid, Emma would misunderstand it, and say you wanted to save the expense.'
'Would it make much difference?'
'Not more than we could bear now that we are in for it, but I fear it would excite jealousies.'
'Is that worse than leaving the poor child to Westhaven society all the holidays?'
'Perhaps not; and Conny is old enough now to be more injured by it than when she was younger.'
'You know I have always hoped to make her like a child of our own when her school education is finished.'
Frank smiled, for he was likewise very fond of little Constance.
There was a public distribution of prizes, at which all the grandees of the neighbourhood were expected to a.s.sist, and it was some consolation to the Northmoors, for the dowager d.u.c.h.ess being absent, that the pleasure of taking the prize from her uncle would be all the greater--if--
The whole party went--Lady Adela, Miss Morton, and all--and were installed in chairs of state on the platform, with the bright array of books before them--the head-mistress telling Lady Northmoor beforehand that her niece would have her full share of honours. No one could be a better or more diligent girl.
It quite nerved Lord Northmoor when he looked forth upon the sea of waving tresses of all shades of brown, while his wife watched in nervousness, both as to how he would acquit himself and how the exertion would affect him; and Bertha, as usual, was anxious for the credit of the name.