<h2>VIII. ANNE MAKES A CIRCUIT OF THE CAMP</h2>
<p>When Anne was crossing the last field, she saw approaching her
an old woman with wrinkled cheeks, who surveyed the earth and its
inhabitants through the medium of brass-rimmed spectacles.
Shaking her head at Anne till the glasses shone like two moons,
she said, ‘Ah, ah; I zeed ye! If I had only kept on
my short ones that I use for reading the Collect and Gospel I
shouldn’t have zeed ye; but thinks I, I be going out
o’ doors, and I’ll put on my long ones, little
thinking what they’d show me. Ay, I can tell folk at
any distance with these—’tis a beautiful pair for out
o’ doors; though my short ones be best for close work, such
as darning, and catching fleas, that’s true.’</p>
<p>‘What have you seen, Granny Seamore?’ said
Anne.</p>
<p>‘Fie, fie, Miss Nancy! you know,’ said Granny
Seamore, shaking her head still. ‘But he’s a
fine young feller, and will have all his uncle’s money when
‘a’s gone.’ Anne said nothing to this,
and looking ahead with a smile passed Granny Seamore by.</p>
<p>Festus, the subject of the remark, was at this time about
three-and-twenty, a fine fellow as to feet and inches, and of a
remarkably warm tone in skin and hair. Symptoms of beard
and whiskers had appeared upon him at a very early age, owing to
his persistent use of the razor before there was any necessity
for its operation. The brave boy had scraped unseen in the
out-house, in the cellar, in the wood-shed, in the stable, in the
unused parlour, in the cow-stalls, in the barn, and wherever he
could set up his triangular bit of looking-glass without
observation, or extemporize a mirror by sticking up his hat on
the outside of a window-pane. The result now was that, did
he neglect to use the instrument he once had trifled with, a fine
rust broke out upon his countenance on the first day, a golden
lichen on the second, and a fiery stubble on the third to a
degree which admitted of no further postponement.</p>
<p>His disposition divided naturally into two, the boastful and
the cantankerous. When Festus put on the big pot, as it is
classically called, he was quite blinded ipso facto to the
diverting effect of that mood and manner upon others; but when
disposed to be envious or quarrelsome he was rather shrewd than
otherwise, and could do some pretty strokes of satire. He
was both liked and abused by the girls who knew him, and though
they were pleased by his attentions, they never failed to
ridicule him behind his back. In his cups (he knew those
vessels, though only twenty-three) he first became noisy, then
excessively friendly, and then invariably nagging. During
childhood he had made himself renowned for his pleasant habit of
pouncing down upon boys smaller and poorer than himself, and
knocking their birds’ nests out of their hands, or
overturning their little carts of apples, or pouring water down
their backs; but his conduct became singularly the reverse of
aggressive the moment the little boys’ mothers ran out to
him, brandishing brooms, frying-pans, skimmers, and whatever else
they could lay hands on by way of weapons. He then fled and
hid behind bushes, under faggots, or in pits till they had gone
away; and on one such occasion was known to creep into a
badger’s hole quite out of sight, maintaining that post
with great firmness and resolution for two or three hours.
He had brought more vulgar exclamations upon the tongues of
respectable parents in his native parish than any other boy of
his time. When other youngsters snowballed him he ran into
a place of shelter, where he kneaded snowballs of his own, with a
stone inside, and used these formidable missiles in returning
their pleasantry. Sometimes he got fearfully beaten by boys
his own age, when he would roar most lustily, but fight on in the
midst of his tears, blood, and cries.</p>
<p>He was early in love, and had at the time of the story
suffered from the ravages of that passion thirteen distinct
times. He could not love lightly and gaily; his love was
earnest, cross-tempered, and even savage. It was a positive
agony to him to be ridiculed by the object of his affections, and
such conduct drove him into a frenzy if persisted in. He
was a torment to those who behaved humbly towards him, cynical
with those who denied his superiority, and a very nice fellow
towards those who had the courage to ill-use him.</p>
<p>This stalwart gentleman and Anne Garland did not cross each
other’s paths again for a week. Then her mother began
as before about the newspaper, and, though Anne did not much like
the errand, she agreed to go for it on Mrs. Garland pressing her
with unusual anxiety. Why her mother was so persistent on
so small a matter quite puzzled the girl; but she put on her hat
and started.</p>
<p>As she had expected, Festus appeared at a stile over which she
sometimes went for shortness’ sake, and showed by his
manner that he awaited her. When she saw this she kept
straight on, as if she would not enter the park at all.</p>
<p>‘Surely this is your way?’ said Festus.</p>
<p>‘I was thinking of going round by the road,’ she
said.</p>
<p>‘Why is that?’</p>
<p>She paused, as if she were not inclined to say. ‘I
go that way when the grass is wet,’ she returned at
last.</p>
<p>‘It is not wet now,’ he persisted; ‘the sun
has been shining on it these nine hours.’ The fact
was that the way by the path was less open than by the road, and
Festus wished to walk with her uninterrupted. ‘But,
of course, it is nothing to me what you do.’ He flung
himself from the stile and walked away towards the house.</p>
<p>Anne, supposing him really indifferent, took the same way,
upon which he turned his head and waited for her with a proud
smile.</p>
<p>‘I cannot go with you,’ she said decisively.</p>
<p>‘Nonsense, you foolish girl! I must walk along
with you down to the corner.’</p>
<p>‘No, please, Mr. Derriman; we might be seen.’</p>
<p>‘Now, now—that’s shyness!’ he said
jocosely.</p>
<p>‘No; you know I cannot let you.’</p>
<p>‘But I must.’</p>
<p>‘But I do not allow it.’</p>
<p>‘Allow it or not, I will.’</p>
<p>‘Then you are unkind, and I must submit,’ she
said, her eyes brimming with tears.</p>
<p>‘Ho, ho; what a shame of me! My wig, I won’t
do any such thing for the world,’ said the repentant
yeoman. ‘Haw, haw; why, I thought your “go
away” meant “come on,” as it does with so many
of the women I meet, especially in these clothes. Who was
to know you were so confoundedly serious?’</p>
<p>As he did not go Anne stood still and said nothing.</p>
<p>‘I see you have a deal more caution and a deal less
good-nature than I ever thought you had,’ he continued
emphatically.</p>
<p>‘No, sir; it is not any planned manner of mine at
all,’ she said earnestly. ‘But you will see, I
am sure, that I could not go down to the hall with you without
putting myself in a wrong light.’</p>
<p>‘Yes; that’s it, that’s it. I am only
a fellow in the yeomanry cavalry—a plain soldier, I may
say; and we know what women think of such: that they are a bad
lot—men you mustn’t speak to for fear of losing your
character—chaps you avoid in the roads—chaps that
come into a house like oxen, daub the stairs wi’ their
boots, stain the furniture wi’ their drink, talk rubbish to
the servants, abuse all that’s holy and righteous, and are
only saved from being carried off by Old Nick because they are
wanted for Boney.’</p>
<p>‘Indeed, I didn’t know you were thought so bad of
as that,’ said she simply.</p>
<p>‘What! don’t my uncle complain to you of me?
You are a favourite of that handsome, nice old gaffer’s, I
know.’</p>
<p>‘Never.’</p>
<p>‘Well, what do we think of our nice trumpet-major,
hey?’</p>
<p>Anne closed her mouth up tight, built it up, in fact, to show
that no answer was coming to that question.</p>
<p>‘O now, come, seriously, Loveday is a good fellow, and
so is his father.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know.’</p>
<p>‘What a close little rogue you are! There is no
getting anything out of you. I believe you would say
“I don’t know,” to every mortal question, so
very discreet as you are. Upon my heart, there are some
women who would say “I don’t know,” to
“Will ye marry me?”’</p>
<p>The brightness upon Anne’s cheek and in her eyes during
this remark showed that there was a fair quantity of life and
warmth beneath the discretion he complained of. Having
spoken thus, he drew aside that she might pass, and bowed very
low. Anne formally inclined herself and went on.</p>
<p>She had been at vexation point all the time that he was
present, from a haunting sense that he would not have spoken to
her so freely had she been a young woman with thriving male
relatives to keep forward admirers in check. But she had
been struck, now as at their previous meeting, with the power she
possessed of working him up either to irritation or to
complacency at will; and this consciousness of being able to play
upon him as upon an instrument disposed her to a humorous
considerateness, and made her tolerate even while she rebuffed
him.</p>
<p>When Anne got to the hall the farmer, as usual, insisted upon
her reading what he had been unable to get through, and held the
paper tightly in his skinny hand till she had agreed. He
sent her to a hard chair that she could not possibly injure to
the extent of a pennyworth by sitting in it a twelvemonth, and
watched her from the outer angle of his near eye while she bent
over the paper. His look might have been suggested by the
sight that he had witnessed from his window on the last occasion
of her visit, for it partook of the nature of concern. The
old man was afraid of his nephew, physically and morally, and he
began to regard Anne as a fellow-sufferer under the same
despot. After this sly and curious gaze at her he withdrew
his eye again, so that when she casually lifted her own there was
nothing visible but his keen bluish profile as before.</p>
<p>When the reading was about half-way through, the door behind
them opened, and footsteps crossed the threshold. The
farmer diminished perceptibly in his chair, and looked fearful,
but pretended to be absorbed in the reading, and quite
unconscious of an intruder. Anne felt the presence of the
swashing Festus, and stopped her reading.</p>
<p>‘Please go on, Miss Anne,’ he said, ‘I am
not going to speak a word.’ He withdrew to the
mantelpiece and leaned against it at his ease.</p>
<p>‘Go on, do ye, maidy Anne,’ said Uncle Benjy,
keeping down his tremblings by a great effort to half their
natural extent.</p>
<p>Anne’s voice became much lower now that there were two
listeners, and her modesty shrank somewhat from exposing to
Festus the appreciative modulations which an intelligent interest
in the subject drew from her when unembarrassed. But she
still went on that he might not suppose her to be disconcerted,
though the ensuing ten minutes was one of disquietude. She
knew that the bothering yeoman’s eyes were travelling over
her from his position behind, creeping over her shoulders, up to
her head, and across her arms and hands. Old Benjy on his
part knew the same thing, and after sundry endeavours to peep at
his nephew from the corner of his eye, he could bear the
situation no longer.</p>
<p>‘Do ye want to say anything to me, nephew?’ he
quaked.</p>
<p>‘No, uncle, thank ye,’ said Festus heartily.
‘I like to stay here, thinking of you and looking at your
back hair.’</p>
<p>The nervous old man writhed under this vivisection, and Anne
read on; till, to the relief of both, the gallant fellow grew
tired of his amusement and went out of the room. Anne soon
finished her paragraph and rose to go, determined never to come
again as long as Festus haunted the precincts. Her face
grew warmer as she thought that he would be sure to waylay her on
her journey home to-day.</p>
<p>On this account, when she left the house, instead of going in
the customary direction, she bolted round to the further side,
through the bushes, along under the kitchen-garden wall, and
through a door leading into a rutted cart-track, which had been a
pleasant gravelled drive when the fine old hall was in its
prosperity. Once out of sight of the windows she ran with
all her might till she had quitted the park by a route directly
opposite to that towards her home. Why she was so seriously
bent upon doing this she could hardly tell but the instinct to
run was irresistible.</p>
<p>It was necessary now to clamber over the down to the left of
the camp, and make a complete circuit round the
latter—infantry, cavalry, sutlers, and all—descending
to her house on the other side. This tremendous walk she
performed at a rapid rate, never once turning her head, and
avoiding every beaten track to keep clear of the knots of
soldiers taking a walk. When she at last got down to the
levels again she paused to fetch breath, and murmured, ‘Why
did I take so much trouble? He would not, after all, have
hurt me.’</p>
<p>As she neared the mill an erect figure with a blue body and
white thighs descended before her from the down towards the
village, and went past the mill to a stile beyond, over which she
usually returned to her house. Here he lingered. On
coming nearer Anne discovered this person to be Trumpet-major
Loveday; and not wishing to meet anybody just now Anne passed
quickly on, and entered the house by the garden door.</p>
<p>‘My dear Anne, what a time you have been gone!’
said her mother.</p>
<p>‘Yes, I have been round by another road.’</p>
<p>‘Why did you do that?’</p>
<p>Anne looked thoughtful and reticent, for her reason was almost
too silly a one to confess. ‘Well, I wanted to avoid
a person who is very busy trying to meet me—that’s
all,’ she said.</p>
<p>Her mother glanced out of the window. ‘And there
he is, I suppose,’ she said, as John Loveday, tired of
looking for Anne at the stile, passed the house on his way to his
father’s door. He could not help casting his eyes
towards their window, and, seeing them, he smiled.</p>
<p>Anne’s reluctance to mention Festus was such that she
did not correct her mother’s error, and the dame went on:
‘Well, you are quite right, my dear. Be friendly with
him, but no more at present. I have heard of your other
affair, and think it is a very wise choice. I am sure you
have my best wishes in it, and I only hope it will come to a
point.’</p>
<p>‘What’s that?’ said the astonished Anne.</p>
<p>‘You and Mr. Festus Derriman, dear. You need not
mind me; I have known it for several days. Old Granny
Seamore called here Saturday, and told me she saw him coming home
with you across Park Close last week, when you went for the
newspaper; so I thought I’d send you again to-day, and give
you another chance.’</p>
<p>‘Then you didn’t want the paper—and it was
only for that!’</p>
<p>‘He’s a very fine young fellow; he looks a
thorough woman’s protector.’</p>
<p>‘He may look it,’ said Anne.</p>
<p>‘He has given up the freehold farm his father held at
Pitstock, and lives in independence on what the land brings
him. And when Farmer Derriman dies, he’ll have all
the old man’s, for certain. He’ll be worth ten
thousand pounds, if a penny, in money, besides sixteen horses,
cart and hack, a fifty-cow dairy, and at least five hundred
sheep.’</p>
<p>Anne turned away, and instead of informing her mother that she
had been running like a doe to escape the interesting
heir-presumptive alluded to, merely said ‘Mother, I
don’t like this at all.’</p>
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