<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXVII </h2>
<h3> LIFE </h3>
<p>Mount Dunstan, walking through the park next morning on his way to the
vicarage, just after post time, met Mr. Penzance himself coming to make an
equally early call at the Mount. Each of them had a letter in his hand,
and each met the other's glance with a smile.</p>
<p>"G. Selden," Mount Dunstan said. "And yours?"</p>
<p>"G. Selden also," answered the vicar. "Poor young fellow, what ill-luck.
And yet—is it ill-luck? He says not."</p>
<p>"He tells me it is not," said Mount Dunstan. "And I agree with him."</p>
<p>Mr. Penzance read his letter aloud.</p>
<p>"DEAR SIR:</p>
<p>"This is to notify you that owing to my bike going back on me when going
down hill, I met with an accident in Stornham Park. Was cut about the head
and leg broken. Little Willie being far from home and mother, you can see
what sort of fix he'd been in if it hadn't been for the kindness of Reuben
S. Vanderpoel's daughters—Miss Bettina and her sister Lady
Anstruthers. The way they've had me taken care of has been great. I've
been under a nurse and doctor same as if I was Albert Edward with
appendycytus (I apologise if that's not spelt right). Dear Sir, this is to
say that I asked Miss Vanderpoel if I should be butting in too much if I
dropped a line to ask if you could spare the time to call and see me. It
would be considered a favour and appreciated by</p>
<p>"G. SELDEN,</p>
<p>"Delkoff Typewriter Co. Broadway.</p>
<p>"P. S. Have already sold three Delkoffs to Miss Vanderpoel."</p>
<p>"Upon my word," Mr. Penzance commented, and his amiable fervour quite
glowed, "I like that queer young fellow—I like him. He does not wish
to 'butt in too much.' Now, there is rudimentary delicacy in that. And
what a humorous, forceful figure of speech! Some butting animal—a
goat, I seem to see, preferably—forcing its way into a group or
closed circle of persons."</p>
<p>His gleeful analysis of the phrase had such evident charm for him that
Mount Dunstan broke into a shout of laughter, even as G. Selden had done
at the adroit mention of Weber & Fields.</p>
<p>"Shall we ride over together to see him this morning? An hour with G.
Selden, surrounded by the atmosphere of Reuben S. Vanderpoel, would be a
cheering thing," he said.</p>
<p>"It would," Mr. Penzance answered. "Let us go by all means. We should not,
I suppose," with keen delight, "be 'butting in' upon Lady Anstruthers too
early?" He was quite enraptured with his own aptness. "Like G. Selden, I
should not like to 'butt in,'" he added.</p>
<p>The scent and warmth and glow of a glorious morning filled the hour.
Combining themselves with a certain normal human gaiety which surrounded
the mere thought of G. Selden, they were good things for Mount Dunstan.
Life was strong and young in him, and he had laughed a big young laugh,
which had, perhaps tended to the waking in him of the feeling he was
suddenly conscious of—that a six-mile ride over a white,
tree-dappled, sunlit road would be pleasant enough, and, after all, if at
the end of the gallop one came again upon that other in whom life was
strong and young, and bloomed on rose-cheek and was the far fire in the
blue deeps of lovely eyes, and the slim straightness of the fair body, why
would it not be, in a way, all to the good? He had thought of her on more
than one day, and felt that he wanted to see her again.</p>
<p>"Let us go," he answered Penzance. "One can call on an invalid at any
time. Lady Anstruthers will forgive us."</p>
<p>In less than an hour's time they were on their way. They laughed and
talked as they rode, their horses' hoofs striking out a cheerful ringing
accompaniment to their voices. There is nothing more exhilarating than the
hollow, regular ring and click-clack of good hoofs going well over a fine
old Roman road in the morning sunlight. They talked of the junior
assistant salesman and of Miss Vanderpoel. Penzance was much pleased by
the prospect of seeing "this delightful and unusual girl." He had heard
stories of her, as had Lord Westholt. He knew of old Doby's pipe, and of
Mrs. Welden's respite from the Union, and though such incidents would seem
mere trifles to the dweller in great towns, he had himself lived and done
his work long enough in villages to know the village mind and the scale of
proportions by which its gladness and sadness were measured. He knew more
of all this than Mount Dunstan could, since Mount Dunstan's existence had
isolated itself, from rather gloomy choice. But as he rode, Mount Dunstan
knew that he liked to hear these things. There was the suggestion of new
life and new thought in them, and such suggestion was good for any man—or
woman, either—who had fallen into living in a dull, narrow groove.</p>
<p>"It is the new life in her which strikes me," he said. "She has brought
wealth with her, and wealth is power to do the good or evil that grows in
a man's soul; but she has brought something more. She might have come here
and brought all the sumptuousness of a fashionable young beauty, who drove
through the village and drew people to their windows, and made clodhoppers
scratch their heads and pull their forelocks, and children bob curtsies
and stare. She might have come and gone and left a mind-dazzling memory
and nothing else. A few sovereigns tossed here and there would have earned
her a reputation—but, by gee! to quote Selden—she has begun
LIVING with them, as if her ancestors had done it for six hundred years.
And what <i>I</i> see is that if she had come without a penny in her
pocket she would have done the same thing." He paused a pondering moment,
and then drew a sharp breath which was an exclamation in itself. "She's
Life!" he said. "She's Life itself! Good God! what a thing it is for a man
or woman to be Life—instead of a mass of tissue and muscle and
nerve, dragged about by the mere mechanism of living!"</p>
<p>Penzance had listened seriously.</p>
<p>"What you say is very suggestive," he commented. "It strikes me as true,
too. You have seen something of her also, at least more than I have."</p>
<p>"I did not think these things when I saw her—though I suppose I felt
them unconsciously. I have reached this way of summing her up by processes
of exclusion and inclusion. One hears of her, as you know yourself, and
one thinks her over."</p>
<p>"You have thought her over?"</p>
<p>"A lot," rather grumpily. "A beautiful female creature inevitably gives an
unbeautiful male creature something to think of—if he is not
otherwise actively employed. I am not. She has become a sort of dawning
relief to my hopeless humours. Being a low and unworthy beast, I am
sometimes resentful enough of the unfairness of things. She has too much."</p>
<p>When they rode through Stornham village they saw signs of work already
done and work still in hand. There were no broken windows or palings or
hanging wicket gates; cottage gardens had been put in order, and there
were evidences of such cheering touches as new bits of window curtain and
strong-looking young plants blooming between them. So many small, but
necessary, things had been done that the whole village wore the aspect of
a place which had taken heart, and was facing existence in a hopeful
spirit. A year ago Mount Dunstan and his vicar riding through it had been
struck by its neglected and dispirited look.</p>
<p>As they entered the hall of the Court Miss Vanderpoel was descending the
staircase. She was laughing a little to herself, and she looked pleased
when she saw them.</p>
<p>"It is good of you to come," she said, as they crossed the hall to the
drawing-room. "But I told him I really thought you would. I have just been
talking to him, and he was a little uncertain as to whether he had assumed
too much."</p>
<p>"As to whether he had 'butted in,'" said Mr. Penzance. "I think he must
have said that."</p>
<p>"He did. He also was afraid that he might have been 'too fresh.'" answered
Betty.</p>
<p>"On our part," said Mr. Penzance, with gentle glee, "we hesitated a moment
in fear lest we also might appear to be 'butting in.'"</p>
<p>Then they all laughed together. They were laughing when Lady Anstruthers
entered, and she herself joined them. But to Mount Dunstan, who felt her
to be somehow a touching little person, there was manifest a tenderness in
her feeling for G. Selden. For that matter, however, there was something
already beginning to be rather affectionate in the attitude of each of
them. They went upstairs to find him lying in state upon a big sofa placed
near a window, and his joy at the sight of them was a genuine, human
thing. In fact, he had pondered a good deal in secret on the possibility
of these swell people thinking he had "more than his share of gall" to
expect them to remember him after he passed on his junior assistant
salesman's way. Reuben S. Vanderpoel's daughters were of the highest of
his Four Hundred, but they were Americans, and Americans were not as a
rule so "stuck on themselves" as the English. And here these two swells
came as friendly as you please. And that nice old chap that was a vicar,
smiling and giving him "the glad hand"!</p>
<p>Betty and Mount Dunstan left Mr. Penzance talking to the convalescent
after a short time. Mount Dunstan had asked to be shown the gardens. He
wanted to see the wonderful things he had heard had been already done to
them.</p>
<p>They went down the stairs together and passed through the drawing-room
into the pleasure grounds. The once neglected lawns had already been mown
and rolled, clipped and trimmed, until they spread before the eye huge
measures of green velvet; even the beds girdling and adorning them were
brilliant with flowers.</p>
<p>"Kedgers!" said Betty, waving her hand. "In my ignorance I thought we must
wait for blossoms until next year; but it appears that wonders can be
brought all ready to bloom for one from nursery gardens, and can be made
to grow with care—and daring—and passionate affection. I have
seen Kedgers turn pale with anguish as he hung over a bed of transplanted
things which seemed to droop too long. They droop just at first, you know,
and then they slowly lift their heads, slowly, as if to listen to a Voice
calling—calling. Once I sat for quite a long time before a rose,
watching it. When I saw it BEGIN to listen, I felt a little trembling pass
over my body. I seemed to be so strangely near to such a strange thing. It
was Life—Life coming back—in answer to what we cannot hear."</p>
<p>She had begun lightly, and then her voice had changed. It was very quiet
at the end of her speaking. Mount Dunstan simply repeated her last words.</p>
<p>"To what we cannot hear."</p>
<p>"One feels it so much in a garden," she said. "I have never lived in a
garden of my own. This is not mine, but I have been living in it—with
Kedgers. One is so close to Life in it—the stirring in the brown
earth, the piercing through of green spears, that breaking of buds and
pouring forth of scent! Why shouldn't one tremble, if one thinks? I have
stood in a potting shed and watched Kedgers fill a shallow box with damp
rich mould and scatter over it a thin layer of infinitesimal seeds; then
he moistens them and carries them reverently to his altars in a
greenhouse. The ledges in Kedgers' green-houses are altars. I think he
offers prayers before them. Why not? I should. And when one comes to see
them, the moist seeds are swelled to fulness, and when one comes again
they are bursting. And the next time, tiny green things are curling
outward. And, at last, there is a fairy forest of tiniest pale green stems
and leaves. And one is standing close to the Secret of the World! And why
should not one prostrate one's self, breathing softly—and touching
one's awed forehead to the earth?"</p>
<p>Mount Dunstan turned and looked at her—a pause in his step—they
were walking down a turfed path, and over their heads meeting branches of
new leaves hung. Something in his movement made her turn and pause also.
They both paused—and quite unknowingly.</p>
<p>"Do you know," he said, in a low and rather unusual voice, "that as we
were on our way here, I said of you to Penzance, that you were Life—YOU!"</p>
<p>For a few seconds, as they stood so, his look held her—their eyes
involuntarily and strangely held each other. Something softly glowing in
the sunlight falling on them both, something raining down in the song of a
rising skylark trilling in the blue a field away, something in the warmed
incense of blossoms near them, was calling—calling in the Voice,
though they did not know they heard. Strangely, a splendid blush rose in a
fair flood under her skin. She was conscious of it, and felt a second's
amazed impatience that she should colour like a schoolgirl suspecting a
compliment. He did not look at her as a man looks who has made a pretty
speech. His eyes met hers straight and thoughtfully, and he repeated his
last words as he had before repeated hers.</p>
<p>"That YOU were Life—you!"</p>
<p>The bluebells under water were for the moment incredibly lovely. Her
feeling about the blush melted away as the blush itself had done.</p>
<p>"I am glad you said that!" she answered. "It was a beautiful thing to say.
I have often thought that I should like it to be true."</p>
<p>"It is true," he said.</p>
<p>Then the skylark, showering golden rain, swept down to earth and its nest
in the meadow, and they walked on.</p>
<p>She learned from him, as they walked together, and he also learned from
her, in a manner which built for them as they went from point to point, a
certain degree of delicate intimacy, gradually, during their ramble,
tending to make discussion and question possible. Her intelligent and
broad interest in the work on the estate, her frank desire to acquire such
practical information as she lacked, aroused in himself an interest he had
previously seen no reason that he should feel. He realised that his
outlook upon the unusual situation was being illuminated by an
intelligence at once brilliant and fine, while it was also full of nice
shading. The situation, of course, WAS unusual. A beautiful young
sister-in-law appearing upon the dark horizon of a shamefully ill-used
estate, and restoring, with touches of a wand of gold, what a fellow who
was a blackguard should have set in order years ago. That Lady
Anstruthers' money should have rescued her boy's inheritance instead of
being spent upon lavish viciousness went without saying. What Mount
Dunstan was most struck by was the perfect clearness, and its combination
with a certain judicial good breeding, in Miss Vanderpoel's view of the
matter. She made no confidences, beautifully candid as her manner was, but
he saw that she clearly understood the thing she was doing, and that if
her sister had had no son she would not have done this, but something
totally different. He had an idea that Lady Anstruthers would have been
swiftly and lightly swept back to New York, and Sir Nigel left to his own
devices, in which case Stornham Court and its village would gradually have
crumbled to decay. It was for Sir Ughtred Anstruthers the place was being
restored. She was quite clear on the matter of entail. He wondered at
first—not unnaturally—how a girl had learned certain things
she had an obviously clear knowledge of. As they continued to converse he
learned. Reuben S. Vanderpoel was without doubt a man remarkable not only
in the matter of being the owner of vast wealth. The rising flood of his
millions had borne him upon its strange surface a thinking, not an
unthinking being—in fact, a strong and fine intelligence. His
thousands of miles of yearly journeying in his sumptuous private car had
been the means of his accumulating not merely added gains, but ideas,
points of view, emotions, a human outlook worth counting as an asset. His
daughter, when she had travelled with him, had seen and talked with him of
all he himself had seen. When she had not been his companion she had heard
from him afterwards all best worth hearing. She had become—without
any special process—familiar with the technicalities of huge
business schemes, with law and commerce and political situations. Even her
childish interest in the world of enterprise and labour had been
passionate. So she had acquired—inevitably, while almost
unconsciously—a remarkable education.</p>
<p>"If he had not been HIMSELF he might easily have grown tired of a little
girl constantly wanting to hear things—constantly asking questions,"
she said. "But he did not get tired. We invented a special knock on the
door of his private room. It said, 'May I come in, father?' If he was busy
he answered with one knock on his desk, and I went away. If he had time to
talk he called out, 'Come, Betty,' and I went to him. I used to sit upon
the floor and lean against his knee. He had a beautiful way of stroking my
hair or my hand as he talked. He trusted me. He told me of great things
even before he had talked of them to men. He knew I would never speak of
what was said between us in his room. That was part of his trust. He said
once that it was a part of the evolution of race, that men had begun to
expect of women what in past ages they really only expected of each
other."</p>
<p>Mount Dunstan hesitated before speaking.</p>
<p>"You mean—absolute faith—apart from affection?"</p>
<p>"Yes. The power to be quite silent, even when one is tempted to speak—if
to speak might betray what it is wiser to keep to one's self because it is
another man's affair. The kind of thing which is good faith among business
men. It applies to small things as much as to large, and to other things
than business."</p>
<p>Mount Dunstan, recalling his own childhood and his own father, felt again
the pressure of the remote mental suggestion that she had had too much, a
childhood and girlhood like this, the affection and companionship of a man
of large and ordered intelligence, of clear and judicial outlook upon an
immense area of life and experience. There was no cause for wonder that
her young womanhood was all it presented to himself, as well as to others.
Recognising the shadow of resentment in his thought, he swept it away, an
inward sense making it clear to him that if their positions had been
reversed, she would have been more generous than himself.</p>
<p>He pulled himself together with an unconscious movement of his shoulders.
Here was the day of early June, the gold of the sun in its morning, the
green shadows, the turf they walked on together, the skylark rising again
from the meadow and showering down its song. Why think of anything else.
What a line that was which swept from her chin down her long slim throat
to its hollow! The colour between the velvet of her close-set lashes—the
remembrance of her curious splendid blush—made the man's lost and
unlived youth come back to him. What did it matter whether she was
American or English—what did it matter whether she was insolently
rich or beggarly poor? He would let himself go and forget all but the
pleasure of the sight and hearing of her.</p>
<p>So as they went they found themselves laughing together and talking
without restraint. They went through the flower and kitchen gardens; they
saw the once fallen wall rebuilt now with the old brick; they visited the
greenhouses and came upon Kedgers entranced with business, but enraptured
at being called upon to show his treasures. His eyes, turning magnetised
upon Betty, revealed the story of his soul. Mount Dunstan remarked that
when he spoke to her of his flowers it was as if there existed between
them the sympathy which might be engendered between two who had sat up
together night after night with delicate children.</p>
<p>"He's stronger to-day, miss," he said, as they paused before a new
wonderful bloom. "What he's getting now is good for him. I had to change
his food, miss, but this seems all right. His colour's better."</p>
<p>Betty herself bent over the flower as she might have bent over a child.
Her eyes softened, she touched a leaf with a slim finger, as delicately as
if it had been a new-born baby's cheek. As Mount Dunstan watched her he
drew a step nearer to her side. For the first time in his life he felt the
glow of a normal and simple pleasure untouched by any bitterness.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />