<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXI.</h3>
<p> </p>
<p>The weather was fine, which was by no means always
a certainty at Waterdale, and Elinor had become a
great pedestrian, and was ready to accompany John in
his walks, which were long and varied. It was rather a
curious test to which to subject himself after the long
time he had been away, and the other tests through
which he had gone. Never had he been so entirely the
companion of Elinor, never before had they spent so
many hours together without other society. At Windyhill,
indeed, their interviews had been quite unrestrained,
but then Elinor had many friends and interests
in the parish and outside of it, visits to pay and duties
to perform. Now she had her child, which occupied
her mornings and evenings, but left her free for hours
of rambling among the hills, for long walks, from which
she came back blooming with the fresh air and breezes
which had blown her about, ruffling her hair, and stirring
up her spirits and thoughts. Sometimes when
there has been heavy and premature suffering there
occurs thus in the young another spring-time, an almost
childhood of natural, it may be said superficial pleasure—the
power of being amused, and of enjoying every
simple satisfaction without any <i>arrière pensée</i> like a
child. She had recovered her strength and vigour in
the mountain air—and in that freedom of being unknown,
with no look ever directed to her which reminded
her of the past, no question which brought
back her troubles, had blossomed out into that fine
youthful maturity of twenty-six, which has already an
advantage over the earlier girlhood, the perfection of
the woman grown. Elinor had thought of many things
and understood many things, which she had still regarded
with the high assumptions of ignorance three
or four years ago. And poor John, who had tried so
hard to find himself a mate that suited him, who had
studied so many girls more beautiful, more accomplished
than Elinor, in the hope of goading himself, so to
speak, into love, and had not succeeded—and who
had felt so strongly that another man's wife must not
occupy so much of his thoughts, nor another man's
child give him an unwilling pleasure which was almost
fatherly—poor John felt himself placed in a position
more trying than any he had known before, more
difficult to steer his way through. He had never had
so much of her company, and she did not conceal the
pleasure it was to her to have some one to walk with,
to talk with, who understood what she said and what
she did not say, and was in that unpurchasable sympathy
with herself which is not to be got by beauty,
or by will, or even by love itself, but comes by nature.
Elinor felt this with simple pleasure. Without any complicating
suspicion, she said, "What a brother John is!
I always felt him so, but now more than ever." "You
have been, so to speak, brought up together," said Mrs.
Dennistoun, whose mind was by no means so easy on
the subject. "That is the reason, I suppose," said
Elinor, with happy looks.</p>
<p>But poor John said nothing of this kind. What he
felt was that he might have spared himself the trouble
of all those researches of his; that to roam about looking
for a young lady whom he might—not devour, but
learn to love, was pains as unnecessary as ever man
took. He still hugged himself, however, over the
thought that in no circumstances would he have been a
marrying man; that if Elinor had been free he would
have found plenty of reasons why they should remain
on their present terms and go no farther. As it was
clear that they must remain on their present terms,
and could go no farther, it was certainly better that he
should cherish that thought.</p>
<p>And curiously enough, though they heard so little from
the outside world, they had heard just so much as this,
that John's assiduities to the Miss Gaythornes (which
the reader may remember was the first of all his
attempts, and quite antiquated in his recollection) had
occasioned remarks, and he had not been many evenings
at Lakeside before he was questioned on the subject.
Had it been true, or had he changed his mind
or had the lady<span class="norewrap">——</span>? It vexed him that there was
not the least little opposition or despite in their tones,
such as a man's female friends often show towards
the objects of his admiration, not from any feeling on
their own part, except that most natural one, which is
surprised and almost hurt to find that, "having known
me, he could decline"—a feeling which, in its original
expression, was not a woman's sentiment, but a man's,
and therefore is, I suppose, common to both sides. But
the ladies at Lakeside did not even betray this feeling.
They desired to know if there had been anything in it—with
smiles, it is true; but Mrs. Dennistoun at the
same time expressed her regret warmly.</p>
<p>"We were in great hopes something would come of
it, John. Elinor has met the Gaythornes, and thought
them very nice; and if there is a thing in the world
that would give me pleasure, it would be to see you
with a nice wife, John."</p>
<p>"I am sure I am much obliged to you, aunt; but
there really was nothing in it. That is, I was seized
with various impulses on the subject, and rather agreed
with you: but I never mentioned the matter to any of
the Miss Gaythornes. They are charming girls, and I
don't suppose would have looked at me. At the same
time, I did not feel it possible to imagine myself in love
with any of them. That's quite a long time since," he
added with a laugh.</p>
<p>"Then there have been others since then? Let us
put him in the confessional, mother," cried Elinor with
a laugh. "He ought not to have any secrets of that description
from you and me."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, there have been others since," said John.
"To tell the truth, I have walked round a great many
nice girls asking myself whether I shouldn't find it
very delightful to have one of them belonging to me.
I wasn't worthy the least attractive of them all, I
quite knew; but still I am about the same as other
men. However, as I've said, I never mentioned the
matter to any of them."</p>
<p>"Never?" cried Mrs. Dennistoun, feeling a hesitation
in his tone.</p>
<p>He laughed a little, shamefaced: "Well, if you like,
I will say hardly ever," he said. "There was one that
might, perhaps, have taken pity upon me—but fortunately
an old lover of hers, who was much more enterprising,
turned up before anything decisive had been
said."</p>
<p>"Fortunately, John?"</p>
<p>"Well, yes, I thought so. You see I am not a marrying
man. I tried to screw myself up to the point, but
it was altogether, I am afraid, as a matter of principle.
I thought it would be a good thing, perhaps, to have a
wife."</p>
<p>"That was a very cold-blooded idea. No wonder
you—it never came to anything. That is not the way
to go about it," said Elinor with the ringing laugh of a
child.</p>
<p>And yet her way of going about it had been far from
a success. How curious that she did not remember that!</p>
<p>"Yes," he said, "I am quite aware that I did not go
about it in the right way, but then that was the only
way in which it presented itself to me; and when I had
made up my mind at last that it was a failure, I confess
it was with a certain sense of relief. I suppose I was
born to live and die an old bachelor."</p>
<p>"Do not be so sure of that," said Elinor. "Some day
or other, in the most unlooked-for moment, the fairy
princess will bound upon the scene, and the old bachelor
will be lost."</p>
<p>"We'll wait quite contentedly for that day—which I
don't believe in," he said.</p>
<p>Mrs. Dennistoun did not take any part in the later
portion of this discussion; her smile was feeble at the
places where Elinor laughed. She said seriously after
this fireside conference, when he got up to prepare for
dinner, putting her hand tenderly on his shoulder, "I
wish you had found some one you could have loved,
John."</p>
<p>"So did I—for a time," he said, lightly. "But you
see, it was not to be."</p>
<p>She shook her head, standing against the firelight in
the dark room, so that he could not see her face. "I
wish," she said, "I wish—that I saw you with a nice
wife, John."</p>
<p>"You might wish—to see me on the woolsack, aunt."</p>
<p>"Well—and it might come to pass. I shall see you
high up—if I live long enough; but I wish I was as
sure of the other, John."</p>
<p>"Well," he said with a laugh, "I did my best; but
there is no use in struggling against fate."</p>
<p>No, indeed! how very, very little use there was.
He had kept away from them for nearly two years;
while he had done his best in the meantime to get a
permanent tenant for his heart which should prevent
any wandering tendencies. But he had not succeeded;
and now if ever a man could be put in circumstances of
danger it was he. If he did not appear in time for
their walk Elinor would call him. "Aren't you coming,
John?" And she overflowed in talk to him of
everything—excepting always of that one dark passage
in her life of which she never breathed a word. She
asked him about his work, and about his prospects, insisting
upon having everything explained to her—even
politics, to which he had a tendency, not without ideas
of their use in reaching the higher ranks of his profession.
Elinor entered into all with zest and almost
enthusiasm. She wrapped him up in her sympathy
and interest. There was nothing he did that she did
not wish to know about, did not desire to have a part
in. A sister in this respect is, as everybody knows,
often more full of enthusiasm than a wife, and Elinor,
who was vacant of all concerns of her own (except the
baby) was delighted to take up these subjects of excitement,
and follow John through them, hastening after
him on every line of indication or suggestion which he
gave—nay, often with her lively intelligence hastening
before him, making incursions into undiscovered countries
of which he had not yet perceived the importance.
They walked over all the country, into woods which
were a little damp, and up hill-sides where the scramble
was often difficult enough, and along the side of the
lake—or, for a variety, went rowing across to the other
side, or far down the gleaming water, out of sight,
round the wooded corner which, with all its autumnal
colours, blazed like a brilliant sentinel into the air
above and the water below. Mrs. Dennistoun watched
them, sometimes with a little trouble on her face. She
would not say a word to throw suspicions or doubts between
them. She would not awaken in Elinor's mind
the thought that any such possibilities as arise between
two young people free of all bonds could be imagined
as affecting her and any man such as her cousin John.
Poor John! if he must be the victim, the victim he
must be. Elinor could not be disturbed that he might
go free. And indeed, what good would it have done to
disturb Elinor? It would but have brought consciousness,
embarrassment, and a sense of danger where no
such sense was. She was trebly protected, and without
a thought of anything but the calm yet close relations
that had existed so long. He<span class="norewrap">——</span> but he could take
care of himself, Mrs. Dennistoun reflected in despair;
he must take care of himself. He was a man and must
understand what his own risks and perils were.</p>
<p>"And do you think this plan is a success?" John
asked her one day as they were rowing homeward up
the lake. The time of his visit was drawing to a close;
indeed it had drawn to a close several times, and been
lengthened very unadvisedly, yet very irresistibly as he
felt.</p>
<p>Her face grew graver than usual, as with a sudden
recollection of that shadow upon her life which Elinor
so often seemed to have forgotten. "As much of a
success," she said, "as anything of the kind is likely
to be."</p>
<p>"It suits you better than Windyhill?"</p>
<p>"Only in being more out of the world. It is partially
out of the world for a great part of the year; but I suppose
no place is so wholly. It seems impossible to keep
from making acquaintances."</p>
<p>"Of course," he said, "I have noticed. You know
people here already."</p>
<p>"How can we keep from knowing people? Mamma
says it is the same thing everywhere. If we lived up in
that little house which they say is the highest in England—at
the head of the pass—we should meet people
I suppose even there."</p>
<p>"Most likely," he replied; "but the same difficulties
can hardly arise."</p>
<p>"You mean we shall not know people so well as at—at
home, and will not be compelled to give an account
of ourselves whatever we do? Heaven knows! There
is a vicarage here, and there is a squire's house: and
there are two or three people besides who already begin
to inquire if we are related to So-and-So, if we are the
Scotch Dennistouns, or the Irish Comptons, or I don't
know what; and whether we are going to Penrith or
any other capital city for the winter." Elinor ended
with a laugh.</p>
<p>"So soon?" John said.</p>
<p>"So soon—very much sooner, the first year: with
mamma so friendly as she is and with me so silly, unable
to keep myself from smiling at anybody who smiles
at me!"</p>
<p>"Poor Elinor!"</p>
<p>"Oh, you may laugh; but it is a real disadvantage.
I am sure there was not very much smile in me when
we came; and yet, notwithstanding, the first pleasant
look is enough for me, I cannot but respond; and I
shall always be so, I suppose," she said, with a sigh.</p>
<p>"I hope so, Elinor. It would be an evil day for all
of us if you did not respond."</p>
<p>"For how many, John? For my mother and—ah,
you are so good, more like my brother than my cousin—for
you, perhaps, a little; but what is it to anybody
else in the world whether I smile or sigh? It does not
matter, however," she said, flinging back her head;
"there it is, and I can't help it. If you smile at me I
must smile back again—and so we make friends; and
already I get a great deal of advice about little Pippo.
If we live here till he grows up, the same thing will
happen as at the Cottage. We will require to account
to everybody for what we do with him—for the school
he goes to, and all he does; to explain why he has
one kind of training or another; and, in short, all that
I ran away from: the world wherever one goes seems
to be so much the same."</p>
<p>"The world is very much the same everywhere; and
you cannot get out of it were you to take refuge in a
cave on the hill. The best thing is generally to let it
know all that can be known, and so save the multitude
of guesses it always makes."</p>
<p>Elinor looked at him for a moment with her lips
pressed tightly together, and a light in her eyes; then
she looked away across the water to the golden hills,
and said nothing; but there was a great deal in that
look of eager contradiction, yet forced agreement, of determination
above all, with which right and wrong had
nothing to do.</p>
<p>"Elinor," he said, "do you mean that child to grow
up here between your mother and you—in ignorance
of all that there is in the world besides you two?"</p>
<p>"That child!" she cried. "John, I think you dislike
my boy; for, of course, it is Pippo you mean."</p>
<p>"I wish you would not call him by that absurd
name."</p>
<p>"You are hard to please," she said, with an angry
laugh. "I think it is a very sweet little name."</p>
<p>"The child will not always be a baby," said John.</p>
<p>"Oh, no: I suppose if we all live long enough he
will some time be a—possibly disagreeable man, and
punish us well for all the care we have spent upon
him," Elinor said.</p>
<p>"I don't want to make you angry, Elinor<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"No, I don't suppose you do. You have been very
nice to me, John. You have neither scolded me nor
given me good advice. I never expected you would
have been so forbearing. But I have always felt you
must mean to give me a good knock at the end."</p>
<p>"You do me great injustice," he said, much wounded.
"You know that I think only of what is best for you—and
the child."</p>
<p>They were approaching the shore, and Mrs. Dennistoun's
white cap was visible in the waning light, looking
out for them from the door. Elinor said hastily,
"And the child? I don't think that you care much
for the child."</p>
<p>"There you are mistaken, Elinor. I did not perhaps
at first: but I acknowledge that a little thing like
that does somehow creep into one's heart."</p>
<p>Her face, which had been gloomy, brightened up as
if a sunbeam had suddenly burst upon it. "Oh, bless
you, John—Uncle John; how good and how kind, and
what a dear friend and brother you are! And I such
a wretch, ready to quarrel with those I love best! But,
John, let me keep quiet, let me keep still, don't make
me rake up the past. He is such a baby, such a baby!
There cannot be any question of telling him anything
for years and years!"</p>
<p>"I thought you were lost," said Mrs. Dennistoun,
calling to them. "I began to think of all kinds of
things that might have happened—of the steamboat
running into you, or the boat going on a rock, or<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"You need not have had any fear when I was with
John," Elinor said, with a smile that made him warm at
once, like the sun. He knew very well, however, that
it was only because he had made that little pleasant
speech about her boy.</p>
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