<h3>XIII</h3>
<p>He was standing immediately inside the door at the bottom,
though it was so dark she could hardly see him. The
villagers were audibly talking just without.</p>
<p>‘He’s sure to come, rathe or late,’
resounded up the spiral in the vocal note of Hezzy Biles.
‘He wouldn’t let such a fine show as the comet makes
to-night go by without peeping at it,—not Master
Cleeve! Did ye bring along the flagon, Haymoss? Then
we’ll sit down inside his little board-house here, and
wait. He’ll come afore bed-time. Why, his
spy-glass will stretch out that there comet as long as Welland
Lane!’</p>
<p>‘I’d as soon miss the great peep-show that comes
every year to Greenhill Fair as a sight of such a immortal
spectacle as this!’ said Amos Fry.</p>
<p>‘“Immortal spectacle,”—where did ye
get that choice mossel, Haymoss?’ inquired Sammy
Blore. ‘Well, well, the Lord save good
scholars—and take just a bit o’ care of them that
bain’t! As ’tis so dark in the hut, suppose we
draw out the bench into the front here, souls?’</p>
<p>The bench was accordingly brought forth, and in order to have
a back to lean against, they placed it exactly across the door
into the spiral staircase.</p>
<p>‘Now, have ye got any backy? If ye haven’t,
I have,’ continued Sammy Blore. A striking of matches
followed, and the speaker concluded comfortably, ‘Now we
shall do very well.’</p>
<p>‘And what do this comet mean?’ asked
Haymoss. ‘That some great tumult is going to happen,
or that we shall die of a famine?’</p>
<p>‘Famine—no!’ said Nat Chapman.
‘That only touches such as we, and the Lord only consarns
himself with born gentlemen. It isn’t to be supposed
that a strange fiery lantern like that would be lighted up for
folks with ten or a dozen shillings a week and their gristing,
and a load o’ thorn faggots when we can get
’em. If ’tis a token that he’s getting
hot about the ways of anybody in this parish, ’tis about my
Lady Constantine’s, since she is the only one of a figure
worth such a hint.’</p>
<p>‘As for her income,—that she’s now
lost.’</p>
<p>‘Ah, well; I don’t take in all I hear.’</p>
<p>Lady Constantine drew close to St. Cleeve’s side, and
whispered, trembling, ‘Do you think they will wait
long? Or can we get out?’</p>
<p>Swithin felt the awkwardness of the situation. The men
had placed the bench close to the door, which, owing to the
stairs within, opened outwards; so that at the first push by the
pair inside to release themselves the bench must have gone over,
and sent the smokers sprawling on their faces. He whispered
to her to ascend the column and wait till he came.</p>
<p>‘And have the dead man left her nothing?
Hey? And have he carried his inheritance into’s
grave? And will his skeleton lie warm on account
o’t? Hee-hee!’ said Haymoss.</p>
<p>‘’Tis all swallered up,’ observed Hezzy
Biles. ‘His goings-on made her miserable till
’a died, and if I were the woman I’d have my randys
now. He ought to have bequeathed to her our young gent, Mr.
St. Cleeve, as some sort of amends. I’d up and marry
en, if I were she; since her downfall has brought ’em quite
near together, and made him as good as she in rank, as he was
afore in bone and breeding.’</p>
<p>‘D’ye think she will?’ asked Sammy
Blore. ‘Or is she meaning to enter upon a virgin life
for the rest of her days?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t want to be unreverent to her ladyship;
but I really don’t think she is meaning any such waste of a
Christian carcase. I say she’s rather meaning to
commit flat matrimony wi’ somebody or other, and one young
gentleman in particular.’</p>
<p>‘But the young man himself?’</p>
<p>‘Planned, cut out, and finished for the delight of
’ooman!’</p>
<p>‘Yet he must be willing.’</p>
<p>‘That would soon come. If they get up this tower
ruling plannards together much longer, their plannards will soon
rule them together, in my way o’ thinking. If
she’ve a disposition towards the knot, she can soon teach
him.’</p>
<p>‘True, true, and lawfully. What before mid
ha’ been a wrong desire is now a holy wish!’</p>
<p>The scales fell from Swithin St. Cleeve’s eyes as he
heard the words of his neighbours. How suddenly the truth
dawned upon him; how it bewildered him, till he scarcely knew
where he was; how he recalled the full force of what he had only
half apprehended at earlier times, particularly of that sweet
kiss she had impressed on his lips when she supposed him
dying,—these vivid realizations are difficult to tell in
slow verbiage. He could remain there no longer, and with an
electrified heart he retreated up the spiral.</p>
<p>He found Lady Constantine half way to the top, standing by a
loop-hole; and when she spoke he discovered that she was almost
in tears. ‘Are they gone?’ she asked.</p>
<p>‘I fear they will not go yet,’ he replied, with a
nervous fluctuation of manner that had never before appeared in
his bearing towards her.</p>
<p>‘What shall I do?’ she asked. ‘I ought
not to be here; nobody knows that I am out of the house.
Oh, this is a mistake! I must go home somehow.’</p>
<p>‘Did you hear what they were saying?’</p>
<p>‘No,’ said she. ‘What is the
matter? Surely you are disturbed? What did they
say?’</p>
<p>‘It would be the exaggeration of frankness in me to tell
you.’</p>
<p>‘Is it what a woman ought not to be made acquainted
with?’</p>
<p>‘It is, in this case. It is so new and so
indescribable an idea to me—that’—he leant
against the concave wall, quite tremulous with strange incipient
sentiments.</p>
<p>‘What sort of an idea?’ she asked gently.</p>
<p>‘It is—an awakening. In thinking of the
heaven above, I did not perceive—the—’</p>
<p>‘Earth beneath?’</p>
<p>‘The better heaven beneath. Pray, dear Lady
Constantine, give me your hand for a moment.’</p>
<p>She seemed startled, and the hand was not given.</p>
<p>‘I am so anxious to get home,’ she repeated.
‘I did not mean to stay here more than five
minutes!’</p>
<p>‘I fear I am much to blame for this accident,’ he
said. ‘I ought not to have intruded here. But
don’t grieve! I will arrange for your escape,
somehow. Be good enough to follow me down.’</p>
<p>They redescended, and, whispering to Lady Constantine to
remain a few stairs behind, he began to rattle and unlock the
door.</p>
<p>The men precipitately removed their bench, and Swithin stepped
out, the light of the summer night being still enough to enable
them to distinguish him.</p>
<p>‘Well, Hezekiah, and Samuel, and Nat, how are
you?’ he said boldly.</p>
<p>‘Well, sir, ’tis much as before wi’
me,’ replied Nat. ‘One hour a week wi’
God A’mighty and the rest with the devil, as a chap may
say. And really, now yer poor father’s gone,
I’d as lief that that Sunday hour should pass like the
rest; for Pa’son Tarkenham do tease a feller’s
conscience that much, that church is no hollerday at all to the
limbs, as it was in yer reverent father’s time! But
we’ve been waiting here, Mr. San Cleeve, supposing ye had
not come.’</p>
<p>‘I have been staying at the top, and fastened the door
not to be disturbed. Now I am sorry to disappoint you, but
I have another engagement this evening, so that it would be
inconvenient to admit you. To-morrow evening, or any
evening but this, I will show you the comet and any stars you
like.’</p>
<p>They readily agreed to come the next night, and prepared to
depart. But what with the flagon, and the pipes, and the
final observations, getting away was a matter of time.
Meanwhile a cloud, which nobody had noticed, arose from the north
overhead, and large drops of rain began to fall so rapidly that
the conclave entered the hut till it should be over. St.
Cleeve strolled off under the firs.</p>
<p>The next moment there was a rustling through the trees at
another point, and a man and woman appeared. The woman took
shelter under a tree, and the man, bearing wraps and umbrellas,
came forward.</p>
<p>‘My lady’s man and maid,’ said Sammy.</p>
<p>‘Is her ladyship here?’ asked the man.</p>
<p>‘No. I reckon her ladyship keeps more kissable
company,’ replied Nat Chapman.</p>
<p>‘Pack o’ stuff!’ said Blore.</p>
<p>‘Not here? Well, to be sure! We can’t
find her anywhere in the wide house! I’ve been sent
to look for her with these overclothes and umbrella.
I’ve suffered horse-flesh traipsing up and down, and
can’t find her nowhere. Lord, Lord, where can she be,
and two months’ wages owing to me!’</p>
<p>‘Why so anxious, Anthony Green, as I think yer name is
shaped? You be not a married man?’ said Hezzy.</p>
<p>‘’Tis what they call me, neighbours, whether or
no.’</p>
<p>‘But surely you was a bachelor chap by late, afore her
ladyship got rid of the regular servants and took ye?’</p>
<p>‘I were; but that’s past!’</p>
<p>‘And how came ye to bow yer head to ’t,
Anthony? ’Tis what you never was inclined to.
You was by no means a doting man in my time.’</p>
<p>‘Well, had I been left to my own free choice, ’tis
as like as not I should ha’ shunned forming such kindred,
being at that time a poor day man, or weekly, at my highest luck
in hiring. But ’tis wearing work to hold out against
the custom of the country, and the woman wanting ye to stand by
her and save her from unborn shame; so, since common usage would
have it, I let myself be carried away by opinion, and took
her. Though she’s never once thanked me for covering
her confusion, that’s true! But, ’tis the way
of the lost when safe, and I don’t complain. Here she
is, just behind, under the tree, if you’d like to see
her?—a very nice homespun woman to look at, too, for all
her few weather-stains. . . . Well, well, where can my lady
be? And I the trusty jineral man—’tis more than
my place is worth to lose her! Come forward, Christiana,
and talk nicely to the work-folk.’</p>
<p>While the woman was talking the rain increased so much that
they all retreated further into the hut. St. Cleeve, who
had impatiently stood a little way off, now saw his opportunity,
and, putting in his head, said, ‘The rain beats in; you had
better shut the door. I must ascend and close up the
dome.’</p>
<p>Slamming the door upon them without ceremony he quickly went
to Lady Constantine in the column, and telling her they could now
pass the villagers unseen he gave her his arm. Thus he
conducted her across the front of the hut into the shadows of the
firs.</p>
<p>‘I will run to the house and harness your little
carriage myself,’ he said tenderly. ‘I will
then take you home in it.’</p>
<p>‘No; please don’t leave me alone under these
dismal trees!’ Neither would she hear of his getting
her any wraps; and, opening her little sunshade to keep the rain
out of her face, she walked with him across the insulating field,
after which the trees of the park afforded her a sufficient
shelter to reach home without much damage.</p>
<p>Swithin was too greatly affected by what he had overheard to
speak much to her on the way, and protected her as if she had
been a shorn lamb. After a farewell which had more meaning
than sound in it, he hastened back to Rings-Hill Speer. The
work-folk were still in the hut, and, by dint of friendly
converse and a sip at the flagon, had so cheered Mr. and Mrs.
Anthony Green that they neither thought nor cared what had become
of Lady Constantine.</p>
<p>St. Cleeve’s sudden sense of new relations with that
sweet patroness had taken away in one half-hour his natural
ingenuousness. Henceforth he could act a part.</p>
<p>‘I have made all secure at the top,’ he said,
putting his head into the hut. ‘I am now going
home. When the rain stops, lock this door and bring the key
to my house.’</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />