<p><SPAN name="1-6"></SPAN> </p>
<h3>Chapter VI.<br/> <br/> <span class="smallcaps">I'll go bail she likes it.</span></h3>
<p> </p>
<p>It might be that the young man was a ravenous wolf, but his manners were
not wolfish. Had Mrs. O'Hara been a princess, supreme in her own rights,
young Neville could not have treated her or her daughter with more
respect. At first Kate had wondered at him, but had said but little. She
had listened to him, as he talked to her mother and the priest about the
cliffs and the birds and the seals he had shot, and she had felt that it
was this, something like this, that was needed to make life so sweet
that as yet there need be no longing, no thought, for eternity. It was
not that all at once she loved him, but she felt that he was a thing to
love. His very appearance on the cliff, and the power of thinking of him
when he was gone, for a while banished all tedium from her life. "Why
should you shoot the poor gulls?" That was the first question she asked
him; and she asked it hardly in tenderness to the birds, but because
with the unconscious cunning of her sex she understood that tenderness
in a woman is a charm in the eyes of a man.</p>
<p>"Only because it is so difficult to get at them," said Fred. "I believe
there is no other reason,—except that one must shoot something."</p>
<p>"But why must you?" asked Mrs. O'Hara.</p>
<p>"To justify one's guns. A man takes to shooting as a matter of course.
It's a kind of institution. There ain't any tigers, and so we shoot
birds. And in this part of the world there ain't any pheasants, and so
we shoot sea-gulls."</p>
<p>"Excellently argued," said the priest.</p>
<p>"Or rather one don't, for it's impossible to get at them. But I'll tell
you what, Father Marty,"—Neville had already assumed the fashion of
calling the priest by his familiar priestly name, as strangers do much
more readily than they who belong to the country,—"I'll tell you what,
Father Marty,—I've shot one of the finest seals I ever saw, and if
Morony can get him at low water, I'll send the skin up to Mrs. O'Hara."</p>
<p>"And send the oil to me," said the priest. "There's some use in shooting
a seal. But you can do nothing with those birds,—unless you get enough
of their feathers to make a bed."</p>
<p>This was in October, and before the end of November Fred Neville was,
after a fashion, intimate at the cottage. He had never broken bread at
Mrs. O'Hara's table; nor, to tell the truth, had any outspoken, clearly
intelligible word of love been uttered by him to the girl. But he had
been seen with them often enough, and the story had become sufficiently
current at Liscannor to make Lady Mary Quin think that she was justified
in sending her bad news to her friend Lady Scroope. This she did not do
till Fred had been induced, with some difficulty, to pass a night at
Castle Quin. Lady Mary had not scrupled to ask a question about Miss
O'Hara, and had thought the answer very unsatisfactory. "I don't know
what makes them live there, I'm sure. I should have thought you would
have known that," replied Neville, in answer to her question.</p>
<p>"They are perfect mysteries to us," said Lady Mary.</p>
<p>"I think that Miss O'Hara is the prettiest girl I ever saw in my life,"
said Fred boldly, "and I should say the handsomest woman, if it were not
that there may be a question between her and her mother."</p>
<p>"You are enthusiastic," said Lady Mary Quin, and after that the letter
to Scroope was written.</p>
<p>In the meantime the seal-skin was cured,—not perhaps in the very best
fashion, and was sent up to Miss O'Hara, with Mr. Neville's compliments.
The skin of a seal that has been shot by the man and not purchased is a
present that any lady may receive from any gentleman. The most prudent
mamma that ever watched over her dovecote with Argus eyes, permitting no
touch of gallantry to come near it, could hardly insist that a seal-skin
in the rough should be sent back to the donor. Mrs. O'Hara was by no
means that most prudent mamma, and made, not only the seal-skin, but the
donor also welcome. Must it not be that by some chance advent such as
this that the change must be effected in her girl's life, should any
change ever be made? And her girl was good. Why should she fear for her?
The man had been brought there by her only friend, the priest, and why
should she fear him? And yet she did fear; and though her face was never
clouded when her girl spoke of the new comer, though she always
mentioned Captain Neville's name as though she herself liked the man,
though she even was gracious to him when he shewed himself near the
cottage,—still there was a deep dread upon her when her eyes rested
upon him, when her thoughts flew to him. Men are wolves to women, and
utterly merciless when feeding high their lust. 'Twas thus her own
thoughts shaped themselves, though she never uttered a syllable to her
daughter in disparagement of the man. This was the girl's chance. Was
she to rob her of it? And yet, of all her duties, was not the duty of
protecting her girl the highest and the dearest that she owned? If the
man meant well by her girl, she would wash his feet with her hair, kiss
the hem of his garments, and love the spot on which she had first seen
him stand like a young sea-god. But if evil,—if he meant evil to her
girl, if he should do evil to her Kate,—then she knew that there was so
much of the tiger within her bosom as would serve to rend him limb from
limb. With such thoughts as these she had hardly ever left them
together. Nor had such leaving together seemed to be desired by them. As
for Kate she certainly would have shunned it. She thought of Fred
Neville during all her waking moments, and dreamed of him at night. His
coming had certainly been to her as the coming of a god. Though he did
not appear on the cliffs above once or twice a week, and had done so but
for a few weeks, his presence had altered the whole tenour of her life.
She never asked her mother now whether it was to be always like this.
There was a freshness about her life which her mother understood at
once. She was full of play, reading less than was her wont, but still
with no sense of tedium. Of the man in his absence she spoke but seldom,
and when his name was on her lips she would jest with it,—as though the
coming of a young embryo lord to shoot gulls on their coast was quite a
joke. The seal-skin which he had given her was very dear to her, and she
was at no pains to hide her liking; but of the man as a lover she had
never seemed to think.</p>
<p>Nor did she think of him as a lover. It is not by such thinking that
love grows. Nor did she ever tell herself that while he was there,
coming on one day and telling them that his boat would be again there on
another, life was blessed to her, and that, therefore, when he should
have left them, her life would be accursed to her. She knew nothing of
all this. But yet she thought of him, and dreamed of him, and her young
head was full of little plans with every one of which he was connected.</p>
<p>And it may almost be said that Fred Neville was as innocent in the
matter as was the girl. It is true, indeed, that men are merciless as
wolves to women,—that they become so, taught by circumstances and
trained by years; but the young man who begins by meaning to be a wolf
must be bad indeed. Fred Neville had no such meaning. On his behalf it
must be acknowledged that he had no meaning whatever when he came again
and again to Ardkill. Had he examined himself in the matter he would
have declared that he liked the mother quite as well as the daughter.
When Lady Mary Quin had thrown at him her very blunt arrow he had
defended himself on that plea. Accident, and the spirit of adventure,
had thrust these ladies in his path, and no doubt he liked them the
better because they did not live as other people lived. Their solitude,
the close vicinity of the ocean, the feeling that in meeting them none
of the ordinary conventional usages of society were needed, the wildness
and the strangeness of the scene, all had charms which he admitted to
himself. And he knew that the girl was very lovely. Of course he said so
to himself and to others. To take delight in beauty is assumed to be the
nature of a young man, and this young man was not one to wish to differ
from others in that respect. But when he went back to spend his
Christmas at Scroope, he had never told even himself that he intended to
be her lover.</p>
<p>"Good-bye, Mrs. O'Hara," he said, a day or two before he left Ennis.</p>
<p>"So you're going?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I'm off. The orders from home are imperative. One has to cut
one's lump of Christmas beef and also one's lump of Christmas pudding.
It is our family religion, you know."</p>
<p>"What a happiness to have a family to visit!"</p>
<p>"It's all very well, I suppose. I don't grumble. Only it's a bore going
away, somehow."</p>
<p>"You are coming back to Ennis?" asked Kate.</p>
<p>"Coming back;—I should think so. Barney Morony wouldn't be quite so
quiet if I was not coming back. I'm to dine with Father Marty at
Liscannor on the 15th of January, to meet another priest from Milltown
Malbay,—the best fellow in the world he says."</p>
<p>"That's Father Creech;—not half such a good fellow, Mr. Neville, as
Father Marty himself."</p>
<p>"He couldn't be better. However, I shall be here then, and if I have any
luck you shall have another skin of the same size by that time." Then he
shook hands with them both, and there was a feeling that the time would
be blank till he should be again there in his sailor's jacket.</p>
<p>When the second week in January had come Mrs. O'Hara heard that the
gallant young officer of the 20th was back in Ennis, and she well
remembered that he had told her of his intention to dine with the
priest. On the Sunday she saw Mr. Marty after mass, and managed to have
a few words with him on the road while Kate returned to the cottage
alone. "So your friend Mr. Neville has come back to Ennis," she said.</p>
<p>"I didn't know that he had come. He promised to dine with me on
Thursday,—only I think nothing of promises from these young fellows."</p>
<p>"He told me he was to be with you."</p>
<p>"More power to him. He'll be welcome. I'm getting to be a very ould man,
Misthress O'Hara; but I'm not so ould but I like to have the young ones
near me."</p>
<p>"It is pleasant to see a bright face like his."</p>
<p>"That's thrue for you, Misthress O'Hara. I like to see 'em bright and
ganial. I don't know that I ever shot so much as a sparrow, meself, but
I love to hear them talk of their shootings, and huntings, and the like
of that. I've taken a fancy to that boy, and he might do pretty much as
he plazes wid me."</p>
<p>"And I too have taken a fancy to him, Father Marty."</p>
<p>"Shure and how could you help it?"</p>
<p>"But he mustn't do as he pleases with me." Father Marty looked up into
her face as though he did not understand her. "If I were alone, as you
are, I could afford, like you, to indulge in the pleasure of a bright
face. Only in that case he would not care to let me see it."</p>
<p>"Bedad thin, Misthress O'Hara, I don't know a fairer face to look on in
all Corcomroe than your own,—that is when you're not in your tantrums,
Misthress O'Hara." The priest was a privileged person, and could say
what he liked to his friend; and she understood that a priest might say
without fault what would be very faulty if it came from any one else.</p>
<p>"I'm in earnest now, Father Marty. What shall we do if our darling Kate
thinks of this young man more than is good for her?" Father Marty raised
his hat and began to scratch his head. "If you like to look at the fair
face of a handsome lad—"</p>
<p>"I do thin, Misthress O'Hara."</p>
<p>"Must not she like it also?"</p>
<p>"I'll go bail she likes it," said the priest.</p>
<p>"And what will come next?"</p>
<p>"I'll tell you what it is, Misthress O'Hara. Would you want to keep her
from even seeing a man at all?"</p>
<p>"God forbid."</p>
<p>"It's not the way to make them happy, nor yet safe. If it's to be that
way wid her, she'd better be a nun all out; and I'd be far from
proposing that to your Kate."</p>
<p>"She is hardly fit for so holy a life."</p>
<p>"And why should she? I niver like seeing too many of 'em going that way,
and them that are prittiest are the last I'd send there. But if not a
nun, it stands to reason she must take chance with the rest of 'em.
She's been too much shut up already. Let her keep her heart till he asks
her for it; but if he does ask her, why shouldn't she be his wife? How
many of them young officers take Irish wives home with 'em every year.
Only for them, our beauties wouldn't have a chance."</p>
<p> </p>
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