<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER IX. </h2>
<p>THREE months passed. During that time Frank remained in London; pursuing
his new duties, and writing occasionally to report himself to Mr.
Vanstone, as he had promised.</p>
<p>His letters were not enthusiastic on the subject of mercantile
occupations. He described himself as being still painfully loose in his
figures. He was also more firmly persuaded than ever—now when it was
unfortunately too late—that he preferred engineering to trade. In
spite of this conviction; in spite of headaches caused by sitting on a
high stool and stooping over ledgers in unwholesome air; in spite of want
of society, and hasty breakfasts, and bad dinners at chop-houses, his
attendance at the office was regular, and his diligence at the desk
unremitting. The head of the department in which he was working might be
referred to if any corroboration of this statement was desired. Such was
the general tenor of the letters; and Frank's correspondent and Frank's
father differed over them as widely as usual. Mr. Vanstone accepted them
as proofs of the steady development of industrious principles in the
writer. Mr. Clare took his own characteristically opposite view. "These
London men," said the philosopher, "are not to be tri fled with by louts.
They ha ve got Frank by the scruff of the neck—he can't wriggle
himself free—and he makes a merit of yielding to sheer necessity."</p>
<p>The three months' interval of Frank's probation in London passed less
cheerfully than usual in the household at Combe-Raven.</p>
<p>As the summer came nearer and nearer, Mrs. Vanstone's spirits, in spite of
her resolute efforts to control them, became more and more depressed.</p>
<p>"I do my best," she said to Miss Garth; "I set an example of cheerfulness
to my husband and my children—but I dread July." Norah's secret
misgivings on her sister's account rendered her more than usually serious
and uncommunicative, as the year advanced. Even Mr. Vanstone, when July
drew nearer, lost something of his elasticity of spirit. He kept up
appearances in his wife's presence—but on all other occasions there
was now a perceptible shade of sadness in his look and manner. Magdalen
was so changed since Frank's departure that she helped the general
depression, instead of relieving it. All her movements had grown languid;
all her usual occupations were pursued with the same weary indifference;
she spent hours alone in her own room; she lost her interest in being
brightly and prettily dressed; her eyes were heavy, her nerves were
irritable, her complexion was altered visibly for the worse—in one
word, she had become an oppression and a weariness to herself and to all
about her. Stoutly as Miss Garth contended with these growing domestic
difficulties, her own spirits suffered in the effort. Her memory reverted,
oftener and oftener, to the March morning when the master and mistress of
the house had departed for London, and then the first serious change, for
many a year past, had stolen over the family atmosphere. When was that
atmosphere to be clear again? When were the clouds of change to pass off
before the returning sunshine of past and happier times?</p>
<p>The spring and the early summer wore away. The dreaded month of July came,
with its airless nights, its cloudless mornings, and its sultry days.</p>
<p>On the fifteenth of the month, an event happened which took every one but
Norah by surprise. For the second time, without the slightest apparent
reason—for the second time, without a word of warning beforehand—Frank
suddenly re-appeared at his father's cottage.</p>
<p>Mr. Clare's lips opened to hail his son's return, in the old character of
the "bad shilling"; and closed again without uttering a word. There was a
portentous composure in Frank's manner which showed that he had other news
to communicate than the news of his dismissal. He answered his father's
sardonic look of inquiry by at once explaining that a very important
proposal for his future benefit had been made to him, that morning, at the
office. His first idea had been to communicate the details in writing; but
the partners had, on reflection, thought that the necessary decision might
be more readily obtained by a personal interview with his father and his
friends. He had laid aside the pen accordingly, and had resigned himself
to the railway on the spot.</p>
<p>After this preliminary statement, Frank proceeded to describe the proposal
which his employers had addressed to him, with every external appearance
of viewing it in the light of an intolerable hardship.</p>
<p>The great firm in the City had obviously made a discovery in relation to
their clerk, exactly similar to the discovery which had formerly forced
itself on the engineer in relation to his pupil. The young man, as they
politely phrased it, stood in need of some special stimulant to stir him
up. His employers (acting under a sense of their obligation to the
gentleman by whom Frank had been recommended) had considered the question
carefully, and had decided that the one promising use to which they could
put Mr. Francis Clare was to send him forthwith into another quarter of
the globe.</p>
<p>As a consequence of this decision, it was now, therefore, proposed that he
should enter the house of their correspondents in China; that he should
remain there, familiarizing himself thoroughly on the spot with the tea
trade and the silk trade for five years; and that he should return, at the
expiration of this period, to the central establishment in London. If he
made a fair use of his opportunities in China, he would come back, while
still a young man, fit for a position of trust and emolument, and
justified in looking forward, at no distant date, to a time when the House
would assist him to start in business for himself. Such were the new
prospects which—to adopt Mr. Clare's theory—now forced
themselves on the ever-reluctant, ever-helpless and ever-ungrateful Frank.
There was no time to be lost. The final answer was to be at the office on
"Monday, the twentieth": the correspondents in China were to be written to
by the mail on that day; and Frank was to follow the letter by the next
opportunity, or to resign his chance in favor of some more enterprising
young man.</p>
<p>Mr. Clare's reception of this extraordinary news was startling in the
extreme. The glorious prospect of his son's banishment to China appeared
to turn his brain. The firm pedestal of his philosophy sank under him; the
prejudices of society recovered their hold on his mind. He seized Frank by
the arm, and actually accompanied him to Combe-Raven, in the amazing
character of visitor to the house!</p>
<p>"Here I am with my lout," said Mr. Clare, before a word could be uttered
by the astonished family. "Hear his story, all of you. It has reconciled
me, for the first time in my life, to the anomaly of his existence." Frank
ruefully narrated the Chinese proposal for the second time, and attempted
to attach to it his own supplementary statement of objections and
difficulties. His father stopped him at the first word, pointed
peremptorily southeastward (from Somersetshire to China); and said,
without an instant's hesitation: "Go!" Mr. Vanstone, basking in golden
visions of his young friend's future, echoed that monosyllabic decision
with all his heart. Mrs. Vanstone, Miss Garth, even Norah herself, spoke
to the same purpose. Frank was petrified by an absolute unanimity of
opinion which he had not anticipated; and Magdalen was caught, for once in
her life, at the end of all her resources.</p>
<p>So far as practical results were concerned, the sitting of the family
council began and ended with the general opinion that Frank must go. Mr.
Vanstone's faculties were so bewildered by the son's sudden arrival, the
father's unexpected visit, and the news they both brought with them, that
he petitioned for an adjournment before the necessary arrangements
connected with his young friend's departure were considered in detail.
"Suppose we all sleep upon it?" he said. "Tomorrow our heads will feel a
little steadier; and to-morrow will be time enough to decide all
uncertainties." This suggestion was readily adopted; and all further
proceedings stood adjourned until the next day.</p>
<p>That next day was destined to decide more uncertainties than Mr. Vanstone
dreamed of.</p>
<p>Early in the morning, after making tea by herself as usual, Miss Garth
took her parasol and strolled into the garden. She had slept ill; and ten
minutes in the open air before the family assembled at breakfast might
help to compensate her, as she thought, for the loss of her night's rest.</p>
<p>She wandered to the outermost boundary of the flower-garden, and then
returned by another path, which led back, past the side of an ornamental
summer-house commanding a view over the fields from a corner of the lawn.
A slight noise—like, and yet not like, the chirruping of a bird—caught
her ear as she approached the summer-house. She stepped round to the
entrance; looked in; and discovered Magdalen and Frank seated close
together. To Miss Garth's horror, Magdalen's arm was unmistakably round
Frank's neck; and, worse still, the position of her face, at the moment of
discovery, showed beyond all doubt that she had just been offering to the
victim of Chinese commerce the first and foremost of all the consolations
which a woman can bestow on a man. In plainer words, she had just given
Frank a kiss.</p>
<p>In the presence of such an emergency as now confronted her, Miss Gart h
felt instinctively that all ordinary phrases of reproof would be phrases
thrown away.</p>
<p>"I presume," she remarked, addressing Magdalen with the merciless
self-possession of a middle-aged lady, unprovided for the occasion with
any kissing remembrances of her own—"I presume (whatever excuses
your effrontery may suggest) you will not deny that my duty compels me to
mention what I have just seen to your father?"</p>
<p>"I will save you the trouble," replied Magdalen, composedly. "I will
mention it to him myself."</p>
<p>With those words, she looked round at Frank, standing trebly helpless in a
corner of the summer-house. "You shall hear what happens," she said, with
her bright smile. "And so shall you," she added for Miss Garth's especial
benefit, as she sauntered past the governess on her way back to the
breakfast-table. The eyes of Miss Garth followed her indignantly; and
Frank slipped out on his side at that favorable opportunity.</p>
<p>Under these circumstances, there was but one course that any respectable
woman could take—she could only shudder. Miss Garth registered her
protest in that form, and returned to the house.</p>
<p>When breakfast was over, and when Mr. Vanstone's hand descended to his
pocket in search of his cigar-case, Magdalen rose; looked significantly at
Miss Garth; and followed her father into the hall.</p>
<p>"Papa," she said, "I want to speak to you this morning—in private."</p>
<p>"Ay! ay!" returned Mr. Vanstone. "What about, my dear!"</p>
<p>"About—" Magdalen hesitated, searching for a satisfactory form of
expression, and found it. "About business, papa," she said.</p>
<p>Mr. Vanstone took his garden hat from the hall table—opened his eyes
in mute perplexity—attempted to associate in his mind the two
extravagantly dissimilar ideas of Magdalen and "business"—failed—and
led the way resignedly into the garden.</p>
<p>His daughter took his arm, and walked with him to a shady seat at a
convenient distance from the house. She dusted the seat with her smart
silk apron before her father occupied it. Mr. Vanstone was not accustomed
to such an extraordinary act of attention as this. He sat down, looking
more puzzled than ever. Magdalen immediately placed herself on his knee,
and rested her head comfortably on his shoulder.</p>
<p>"Am I heavy, papa?" she asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear, you are," said Mr. Vanstone—"but not too heavy for <i>me</i>.
Stop on your perch, if you like it. Well? And what may this business
happen to be?"</p>
<p>"It begins with a question."</p>
<p>"Ah, indeed? That doesn't surprise me. Business with your sex, my dear,
always begins with questions. Go on."</p>
<p>"Papa! do you ever intend allowing me to be married?"</p>
<p>Mr. Vanstone's eyes opened wider and wider. The question, to use his own
phrase, completely staggered him.</p>
<p>"This is business with a vengeance!" he said. "Why, Magdalen! what have
you got in that harum-scarum head of yours now?"</p>
<p>"I don't exactly know, papa. Will you answer my question?"</p>
<p>"I will if I can, my dear; you rather stagger me. Well, I don't know. Yes;
I suppose I must let you be married one of these days—if we can find
a good husband for you. How hot your face is! Lift it up, and let the air
blow over it. You won't? Well—have your own way. If talking of
business means tickling your cheek against my whisker I've nothing to say
against it. Go on, my dear. What's the next question? Come to the point."</p>
<p>She was far too genuine a woman to do anything of the sort. She skirted
round the point and calculated her distance to the nicety of a
hair-breadth.</p>
<p>"We were all very much surprised yesterday—were we not, papa? Frank
is wonderfully lucky, isn't he?"</p>
<p>"He's the luckiest dog I ever came across," said Mr. Vanstone "But what
has that got to do with this business of yours? I dare say you see your
way, Magdalen. Hang me if I can see mine!"</p>
<p>She skirted a little nearer.</p>
<p>"I suppose he will make his fortune in China?" she said. "It's a long way
off, isn't it? Did you observe, papa, that Frank looked sadly out of
spirits yesterday?"</p>
<p>"I was so surprised by the news," said Mr. Vanstone, "and so staggered by
the sight of old Clare's sharp nose in my house, that I didn't much
notice. Now you remind me of it—yes. I don't think Frank took kindly
to his own good luck; not kindly at all."</p>
<p>"Do you wonder at that, papa?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear; I do, rather."</p>
<p>"Don't you think it's hard to be sent away for five years, to make your
fortune among hateful savages, and lose sight of your friends at home for
all that long time? Don't you think Frank will miss <i>us</i> sadly? Don't
you, papa?—don't you?"</p>
<p>"Gently, Magdalen! I'm a little too old for those long arms of yours to
throttle me in fun.—You're right, my love. Nothing in this world
without a drawback. Frank <i>will</i> miss his friends in England: there's
no denying that."</p>
<p>"You always liked Frank. And Frank always liked you."</p>
<p>"Yes, yes—a good fellow; a quiet, good fellow. Frank and I have
always got on smoothly together."</p>
<p>"You have got on like father and son, haven't you?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, my dear."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you will think it harder on him when he has gone than you think
it now?"</p>
<p>"Likely enough, Magdalen; I don't say no."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you will wish he had stopped in England? Why shouldn't he stop in
England, and do as well as if he went to China?"</p>
<p>"My dear! he has no prospects in England. I wish he had, for his own sake.
I wish the lad well, with all my heart."</p>
<p>"May I wish him well too, papa—with all <i>my</i> heart?"</p>
<p>"Certainly, my love—your old playfellow—why not? What's the
matter? God bless my soul, what is the girl crying about? One would think
Frank was transported for life. You goose! You know, as well as I do, he
is going to China to make his fortune."</p>
<p>"He doesn't want to make his fortune—he might do much better."</p>
<p>"The deuce he might! How, I should like to know?"</p>
<p>"I'm afraid to tell you. I'm afraid you'll laugh at me. Will you promise
not to laugh at me?"</p>
<p>"Anything to please you, my dear. Yes: I promise. Now, then, out with it!
How might Frank do better?"</p>
<p>"He might marry Me."</p>
<p>If the summer scene which then spread before Mr. Vanstone's eyes had
suddenly changed to a dreary winter view—if the trees had lost all
their leaves, and the green fields had turned white with snow in an
instant—his face could hardly have expressed greater amazement than
it displayed when his daughter's faltering voice spoke those four last
words. He tried to look at her—but she steadily refused him the
opportunity: she kept her face hidden over his shoulder. Was she in
earnest? His cheek, still wet with her tears, answered for her. There was
a long pause of silence; she waited—with unaccustomed patience, she
waited for him to speak. He roused himself, and spoke these words only:
"You surprise me, Magdalen; you surprise me more than I can say."</p>
<p>At the altered tone of his voice—altered to a quiet, fatherly
seriousness—Magdalen's arms clung round him closer than before.</p>
<p>"Have I disappointed you, papa?" she asked, faintly. "Don't say I have
disappointed you! Who am I to tell my secret to, if not to you? Don't let
him go—don't! don't! You will break his heart. He is afraid to tell
his father; he is even afraid <i>you</i> might be angry with him. There is
nobody to speak for us, except—except me. Oh, don't let him go!
Don't for his sake—" she whispered the next words in a kiss—"Don't
for Mine!"</p>
<p>Her father's kind face saddened; he sighed, and patted her fair head
tenderly. "Hush, my love," he said, almost in a whisper; "hush!" She
little knew what a revelation every word, every action that escaped her,
now opened before him. She had made him her grown-up playfellow, from her
childhood to that day. She had romped with him in her frocks, she had gone
on romping with him in her gowns. He had never been long enough separated
from her to have the external changes in his daughter forced on his
attention. His artless, fatherly experience of her had taught him that she
was a taller child in later years—and had taught him little more.
And now, in one breathless instant, the conviction that she was a woman
rushed over his mind. He felt it in the trouble of her bosom pre ssed
against his; in the nervous thrill of her arms clasped around his neck.
The Magdalen of his innocent experience, a woman—with the
master-passion of her sex in possession of her heart already!</p>
<p>"Have you thought long of this, my dear?" he asked, as soon as he could
speak composedly. "Are you sure—?"</p>
<p>She answered the question before he could finish it.</p>
<p>"Sure I love him?" she said. "Oh, what words can say Yes for me, as I want
to say it? I love him—!" Her voice faltered softly; and her answer
ended in a sigh.</p>
<p>"You are very young. You and Frank, my love, are both very young."</p>
<p>She raised her head from his shoulder for the first time. The thought and
its expression flashed from her at the same moment.</p>
<p>"Are we much younger than you and mamma were?" she asked, smiling through
her tears.</p>
<p>She tried to lay her head back in its old position; but as she spoke those
words, her father caught her round the waist, forced her, before she was
aware of it, to look him in the face—and kissed her, with a sudden
outburst of tenderness which brought the tears thronging back thickly into
her eyes. "Not much younger, my child," he said, in low, broken tones—"not
much younger than your mother and I were." He put her away from him, and
rose from the seat, and turned his head aside quickly. "Wait here, and
compose yourself; I will go indoors and speak to your mother." His voice
trembled over those parting words; and he left her without once looking
round again.</p>
<p>She waited—waited a weary time; and he never came back. At last her
growing anxiety urged her to follow him into the house. A new timidity
throbbed in her heart as she doubtingly approached the door. Never had she
seen the depths of her father's simple nature stirred as they had been
stirred by her confession. She almost dreaded her next meeting with him.
She wandered softly to and fro in the hall, with a shyness unaccountable
to herself; with a terror of being discovered and spoken to by her sister
or Miss Garth, which made her nervously susceptible to the slightest
noises in the house. The door of the morning-room opened while her back
was turned toward it. She started violently, as she looked round and saw
her father in the hall: her heart beat faster and faster, and she felt
herself turning pale. A second look at him, as he came nearer, re-assured
her. He was composed again, though not so cheerful as usual. She noticed
that he advanced and spoke to her with a forbearing gentleness, which was
more like his manner to her mother than his ordinary manner to herself.</p>
<p>"Go in, my love," he said, opening the door for her which he had just
closed. "Tell your mother all you have told me—and more, if you have
more to say. She is better prepared for you than I was. We will take
to-day to think of it, Magdalen; and to-morrow you shall know, and Frank
shall know, what we decide."</p>
<p>Her eyes brightened, as they looked into his face and saw the decision
there already, with the double penetration of her womanhood and her love.
Happy, and beautiful in her happiness, she put his hand to her lips, and
went, without hesitation, into the morning-room. There, her father's words
had smoothed the way for her; there, the first shock of the surprise was
past and over, and only the pleasure of it remained. Her mother had been
her age once; her mother would know how fond she was of Frank. So the
coming interview was anticipated in her thoughts; and—except that
there was an unaccountable appearance of restraint in Mrs. Vanstone's
first reception of her—was anticipated aright. After a little, the
mother's questions came more and more unreservedly from the sweet,
unforgotten experience of the mother's heart. She lived again through her
own young days of hope and love in Magdalen's replies.</p>
<p>The next morning the all-important decision was announced in words. Mr.
Vanstone took his daughter upstairs into her mother's room, and there
placed before her the result of the yesterday's consultation, and of the
night's reflection which had followed it. He spoke with perfect kindness
and self-possession of manner-but in fewer and more serious words than
usual; and he held his wife's hand tenderly in his own all through the
interview.</p>
<p>He informed Magdalen that neither he nor her mother felt themselves
justified in blaming her attachment to Frank. It had been in part,
perhaps, the natural consequence of her childish familiarity with him; in
part, also, the result of the closer intimacy between them which the
theatrical entertainment had necessarily produced. At the same time, it
was now the duty of her parents to put that attachment, on both sides, to
a proper test—for her sake, because her happy future was their
dearest care; for Frank's sake, because they were bound to give him the
opportunity of showing himself worthy of the trust confided in him. They
were both conscious of being strongly prejudiced in Frank's favor. His
father's eccentric conduct had made the lad the object of their compassion
and their care from his earliest years. He (and his younger brothers) had
almost filled the places to them of those other children of their own whom
they had lost. Although they firmly believed their good opinion of Frank
to be well founded—still, in the interest of their daughter's
happiness, it was necessary to put that opinion firmly to the proof, by
fixing certain conditions, and by interposing a year of delay between the
contemplated marriage and the present time.</p>
<p>During that year, Frank was to remain at the office in London; his
employers being informed beforehand that family circumstances prevented
his accepting their offer of employment in China. He was to consider this
concession as a recognition of the attachment between Magdalen and
himself, on certain terms only. If, during the year of probation, he
failed to justify the confidence placed in him—a confidence which
had led Mr. Vanstone to take unreservedly upon himself the whole
responsibility of Frank's future prospects—the marriage scheme was
to be considered, from that moment, as at an end. If, on the other hand,
the result to which Mr. Vanstone confidently looked forward really
occurred—if Frank's probationary year proved his claim to the most
precious trust that could be placed in his hands—then Magdalen
herself should reward him with all that a woman can bestow; and the
future, which his present employers had placed before him as the result of
a five years' residence in China, should be realized in one year's time,
by the dowry of his young wife.</p>
<p>As her father drew that picture of the future, the outburst of Magdalen's
gratitude could no longer be restrained. She was deeply touched—she
spoke from her inmost heart. Mr. Vanstone waited until his daughter and
his wife were composed again; and then added the last words of explanation
which were now left for him to speak.</p>
<p>"You understand, my love," he said, "that I am not anticipating Frank's
living in idleness on his wife's means? My plan for him is that he should
still profit by the interest which his present employers take in him.
Their knowledge of affairs in the City will soon place a good partnership
at his disposal, and you will give him the money to buy it out of hand. I
shall limit the sum, my dear, to half your fortune; and the other half I
shall have settled upon yourself. We shall all be alive and hearty, I
hope"—he looked tenderly at his wife as he said those words—"all
alive and hearty at the year's end. But if I am gone, Magdalen, it will
make no difference. My will—made long before I ever thought of
having a son-in-law divides my fortune into two equal parts. One part goes
to your mother; and the other part is fairly divided between my children.
You will have your share on your wedding-day (and Norah will have hers
when she marries) from my own hand, if I live; and under my will if I die.
There! there! no gloomy faces," he said, with a momentary return of his
every-day good spirits. "Your mother and I mean to live and see Frank a
great merchant. I shall leave you, my dear, to enlighten the son on our
new projects, while I walk over to the cottage—"</p>
<p>He stopped; his eyebrows contra cted a little; and he looked aside
hesitatingly at Mrs. Vanstone.</p>
<p>"What must you do at the cottage, papa?" asked Magdalen, after having
vainly waited for him to finish the sentence of his own accord.</p>
<p>"I must consult Frank's father," he replied. "We must not forget that Mr.
Clare's consent is still wanting to settle this matter. And as time
presses, and we don't know what difficulties he may not raise, the sooner
I see him the better."</p>
<p>He gave that answer in low, altered tones; and rose from his chair in a
half-reluctant, half-resigned manner, which Magdalen observed with secret
alarm.</p>
<p>She glanced inquiringly at her mother. To all appearance, Mrs. Vanstone
had been alarmed by the change in him also. She looked anxious and uneasy;
she turned her face away on the sofa pillow—turned it suddenly, as
if she was in pain.</p>
<p>"Are you not well, mamma?" asked Magdalen.</p>
<p>"Quite well, my love," said Mrs. Vanstone, shortly and sharply, without
turning round. "Leave me a little—I only want rest."</p>
<p>Magdalen went out with her father.</p>
<p>"Papa!" she whispered anxiously, as they descended the stairs; "you don't
think Mr. Clare will say No?"</p>
<p>"I can't tell beforehand," answered Mr. Vanstone. "I hope he will say
Yes."</p>
<p>"There is no reason why he should say anything else—is there?"</p>
<p>She put the question faintly, while he was getting his hat and stick; and
he did not appear to hear her. Doubting whether she should repeat it or
not, she accompanied him as far as the garden, on his way to Mr. Clare's
cottage. He stopped her on the lawn, and sent her back to the house.</p>
<p>"You have nothing on your head, my dear," he said. "If you want to be in
the garden, don't forget how hot the sun is—don't come out without
your hat."</p>
<p>He walked on toward the cottage.</p>
<p>She waited a moment, and looked after him. She missed the customary
flourish of his stick; she saw his little Scotch terrier, who had run out
at his heels, barking and capering about him unnoticed. He was out of
spirits: he was strangely out of spirits. What did it mean?</p>
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