<h2>XX. HOW THEY LESSENED THE EFFECT OF THE CALAMITY</h2>
<p>Meanwhile Anne Garland had gone home, and, being weary with
her ramble in search of Matilda, sat silent in a corner of the
room. Her mother was passing the time in giving utterance
to every conceivable surmise on the cause of Miss Johnson’s
disappearance that the human mind could frame, to which Anne
returned monosyllabic answers, the result, not of indifference,
but of intense preoccupation. Presently Loveday, the
father, came to the door; her mother vanished with him, and they
remained closeted together a long time. Anne went into the
garden and seated herself beneath the branching tree whose boughs
had sheltered her during so many hours of her residence
here. Her attention was fixed more upon the miller’s
wing of the irregular building before her than upon that occupied
by her mother, for she could not help expecting every moment to
see some one run out with a wild face and announce some awful
clearing up of the mystery.</p>
<p>Every sound set her on the alert, and hearing the tread of a
horse in the lane she looked round eagerly. Gazing at her
over the hedge was Festus Derriman, mounted on such an incredibly
tall animal that he could see to her very feet over the thick and
broad thorn fence. She no sooner recognized him than she
withdrew her glance; but as his eyes were fixed steadily upon her
this was a futile manoeuvre.</p>
<p>‘I saw you look round!’ he exclaimed
crossly. ‘What have I done to make you behave like
that? Come, Miss Garland, be fair. ’Tis no use
to turn your back upon me.’ As she did not turn he
went on—‘Well, now, this is enough to provoke a
saint. Now I tell you what, Miss Garland; here I’ll
stay till you do turn round, if ’tis all the
afternoon. You know my temper—what I say I
mean.’ He seated himself firmly in the saddle,
plucked some leaves from the hedge, and began humming a song, to
show how absolutely indifferent he was to the flight of time.</p>
<p>‘What have you come for, that you are so anxious to see
me?’ inquired Anne, when at last he had wearied her
patience, rising and facing him with the added independence which
came from a sense of the hedge between them.</p>
<p>‘There, I knew you would turn round!’ he said, his
hot angry face invaded by a smile in which his teeth showed like
white hemmed in by red at chess.</p>
<p>‘What do you want, Mr. Derriman?’ said she.</p>
<p>‘“What do you want, Mr. Derriman?”—now
listen to that! Is that my encouragement?’</p>
<p>Anne bowed superciliously, and moved away.</p>
<p>‘I have just heard news that explains all that,’
said the giant, eyeing her movements with somnolent
irascibility. ‘My uncle has been letting things
out. He was here late last night, and he saw
you.’</p>
<p>‘Indeed he didn’t,’ said Anne.</p>
<p>‘O, now! He saw Trumpet-major Loveday courting
somebody like you in that garden walk; and when he came you ran
indoors.’</p>
<p>‘It is not true, and I wish to hear no more.’</p>
<p>‘Upon my life, he said so! How can you do it, Miss
Garland, when I, who have enough money to buy up all the
Lovedays, would gladly come to terms with ye? What a
simpleton you must be, to pass me over for him! There, now
you are angry because I said simpleton!—I didn’t mean
simpleton, I meant misguided—misguided rosebud!
That’s it—run off,’ he continued in a raised
voice, as Anne made towards the garden door. ‘But
I’ll have you yet. Much reason you have to be too
proud to stay with me. But it won’t last long; I
shall marry you, madam, if I choose, as you’ll
see.’</p>
<p>When he was quite gone, and Anne had calmed down from the not
altogether unrelished fear and excitement that he always caused
her, she returned to her seat under the tree, and began to wonder
what Festus Derriman’s story meant, which, from the
earnestness of his tone, did not seem like a pure
invention. It suddenly flashed upon her mind that she
herself had heard voices in the garden, and that the persons seen
by Farmer Derriman, of whose visit and reclamation of his box the
miller had told her, might have been Matilda and John
Loveday. She further recalled the strange agitation of Miss
Johnson on the preceding evening, and that it occurred just at
the entry of the dragoon, till by degrees suspicion amounted to
conviction that he knew more than any one else supposed of that
lady’s disappearance.</p>
<p>It was just at this time that the trumpet-major descended to
the mill after his talk with his brother on the down. As
fate would have it, instead of entering the house he turned aside
to the garden and walked down that pleasant enclosure, to learn
if he were likely to find in the other half of it the woman he
loved so well.</p>
<p>Yes, there she was, sitting on the seat of logs that he had
repaired for her, under the apple-tree; but she was not facing in
his direction. He walked with a noisier tread, he coughed,
he shook a bough, he did everything, in short, but the one thing
that Festus did in the same circumstances—call out to
her. He would not have ventured on that for the
world. Any of his signs would have been sufficient to
attract her a day or two earlier; now she would not turn.
At last, in his fond anxiety, he did what he had never done
before without an invitation, and crossed over into Mrs.
Garland’s half of the garden, till he stood before her.</p>
<p>When she could not escape him she arose, and, saying
‘Good afternoon, trumpet-major,’ in a glacial manner
unusual with her, walked away to another part of the garden.</p>
<p>Loveday, quite at a loss, had not the strength of mind to
persevere further. He had a vague apprehension that some
imperfect knowledge of the previous night’s unhappy
business had reached her; and, unable to remedy the evil without
telling more than he dared, he went into the mill, where his
father still was, looking doleful enough, what with his concern
at events and the extra quantity of flour upon his face through
sticking so closely to business that day.</p>
<p>‘Well, John; Bob has told you all, of course? A
queer, strange, perplexing thing, isn’t it? I
can’t make it out at all. There must be something
wrong in the woman, or it couldn’t have happened. I
haven’t been so upset for years.’</p>
<p>‘Nor have I. I wouldn’t it should have
happened for all I own in the world,’ said the
dragoon. ‘Have you spoke to Anne Garland
to-day—or has anybody been talking to her?’</p>
<p>‘Festus Derriman rode by half-an-hour ago, and talked to
her over the hedge.’</p>
<p>John guessed the rest, and, after standing on the threshold in
silence awhile, walked away towards the camp.</p>
<p>All this time his brother Robert had been hastening along in
pursuit of the woman who had withdrawn from the scene to avoid
the exposure and complete overthrow which would have resulted had
she remained. As the distance lengthened between himself
and the mill, Bob was conscious of some cooling down of the
excitement that had prompted him to set out; but he did not pause
in his walk till he had reached the head of the river which fed
the mill-stream. Here, for some indefinite reason, he
allowed his eyes to be attracted by the bubbling spring whose
waters never failed or lessened, and he stopped as if to look
longer at the scene; it was really because his mind was so
absorbed by John’s story.</p>
<p>The sun was warm, the spot was a pleasant one, and he
deposited his bundle and sat down. By degrees, as he
reflected, first on John’s view and then on his own, his
convictions became unsettled; till at length he was so balanced
between the impulse to go on and the impulse to go back, that a
puff of wind either way would have been well-nigh sufficient to
decide for him. When he allowed John’s story to
repeat itself in his ears, the reasonableness and good sense of
his advice seemed beyond question. When, on the other hand,
he thought of his poor Matilda’s eyes, and her, to him,
pleasant ways, their charming arrangements to marry, and her
probable willingness still, he could hardly bring himself to do
otherwise than follow on the road at the top of his speed.</p>
<p>This strife of thought was so well maintained that sitting and
standing, he remained on the borders of the spring till the
shadows had stretched out eastwards, and the chance of overtaking
Matilda had grown considerably less. Still he did not
positively go towards home. At last he took a guinea from
his pocket, and resolved to put the question to the hazard.
‘Heads I go; tails I don’t.’ The piece of
gold spun in the air and came down heads.</p>
<p>‘No, I won’t go, after all,’ he said.
‘I won’t be steered by accidents any more.’</p>
<p>He picked up his bundle and switch, and retraced his steps
towards Overcombe Mill, knocking down the brambles and nettles as
he went with gloomy and indifferent blows. When he got
within sight of the house he beheld David in the road.</p>
<p>‘All right—all right again, captain!’,
shouted that retainer. ‘A wedding after all!
Hurrah!’</p>
<p>‘Ah—she’s back again?’ cried Bob,
seizing David, ecstatically, and dancing round with him.</p>
<p>‘No—but it’s all the same! it is of no
consequence at all, and no harm will be done! Maister and
Mrs. Garland have made up a match, and mean to marry at once,
that the wedding victuals may not be wasted! They felt
’twould be a thousand pities to let such good things get
blue-vinnied for want of a ceremony to use ’em upon, and at
last they have thought of this.’</p>
<p>‘Victuals—I don’t care for the
victuals!’ bitterly cried Bob, in a tone of far higher
thought. ‘How you disappoint me!’ and he went
slowly towards the house.</p>
<p>His father appeared in the opening of the mill-door, looking
more cheerful than when they had parted. ‘What,
Robert, you’ve been after her?’ he said.
‘Faith, then, I wouldn’t have followed her if I had
been as sure as you were that she went away in scorn of us.
Since you told me that, I have not looked for her at
all.’</p>
<p>‘I was wrong, father,’ Bob replied gravely,
throwing down his bundle and stick. ‘Matilda, I find,
has not gone away in scorn of us; she has gone away for other
reasons. I followed her some way; but I have come back
again. She may go.’</p>
<p>‘Why is she gone?’ said the astonished miller.</p>
<p>Bob had intended, for Matilda’s sake, to give no reason
to a living soul for her departure. But he could not treat
his father thus reservedly; and he told.</p>
<p>‘She has made great fools of us,’ said the miller
deliberately; ‘and she might have made us greater
ones. Bob, I thought th’ hadst more sense.’</p>
<p>‘Well, don’t say anything against her,
father,’ implored Bob. ‘’Twas a sorry
haul, and there’s an end on’t. Let her down
quietly, and keep the secret. You promise that?’</p>
<p>‘I do.’ Loveday the elder remained thinking
awhile, and then went on—‘Well, what I was going to
say is this: I’ve hit upon a plan to get out of the awkward
corner she has put us in. What you’ll think of it I
can’t say.’</p>
<p>‘David has just given me the heads.’</p>
<p>‘And do it hurt your feelings, my son, at such a
time?’</p>
<p>‘No—I’ll bring myself to bear it,
anyhow! Why should I object to other people’s
happiness because I have lost my own?’ said Bob, with
saintly self-sacrifice in his air.</p>
<p>‘Well said!’ answered the miller heartily.
‘But you may be sure that there will be no unseemly
rejoicing, to disturb ye in your present frame of mind. All
the morning I felt more ashamed than I cared to own at the
thought of how the neighbours, great and small, would laugh at
what they would call your folly, when they knew what had
happened; so I resolved to take this step to stave it off, if so
be ’twas possible. And when I saw Mrs. Garland I knew
I had done right. She pitied me so much for having had the
house cleaned in vain, and laid in provisions to waste, that it
put her into the humour to agree. We mean to do it right
off at once, afore the pies and cakes get mouldy and the blackpot
stale. ’Twas a good thought of mine and hers, and I
am glad ’tis settled,’ he concluded cheerfully.</p>
<p>‘Poor Matilda!’ murmured Bob.</p>
<p>‘There—I was afraid ’twould hurt thy
feelings,’ said the miller, with self-reproach:
‘making preparations for thy wedding, and using them for my
own!’</p>
<p>‘No,’ said Bob heroically; ‘it shall
not. It will be a great comfort in my sorrow to feel that
the splendid grub, and the ale, and your stunning new suit of
clothes, and the great table-cloths you’ve bought, will be
just as useful now as if I had married myself. Poor
Matilda! But you won’t expect me to join in—you
hardly can. I can sheer off that day very easily, you
know.’</p>
<p>‘Nonsense, Bob!’ said the miller
reproachfully.</p>
<p>‘I couldn’t stand it—I should break
down.’</p>
<p>‘Deuce take me if I would have asked her, then, if I had
known ’twas going to drive thee out of the house!
Now, come, Bob, I’ll find a way of arranging it and
sobering it down, so that it shall be as melancholy as you can
require—in short, just like a funeral, if thou’lt
promise to stay?’</p>
<p>‘Very well,’ said the afflicted one.
‘On that condition I’ll stay.’</p>
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