QDQ A-^/ ' We seem fated to meet," I said. " It does look like it," he answered. Page 34. A JilVs Journal. A JILT'S JOURNAL A NOVEL BY "RITA" * Give me a nook and a book, And let the proud world spin round.' A. L. BURT COMPANY, PUBLISHERS, 52-58 DUANE STREET, NEW YORK ** Copyright, 1903. BY A. L. BUET COMPANY. A JILT'S JOURNAL. BY "RiTA." SRLF URL 142610 A JILT'S JOURNAL PART I. The Desire of Knowkdge. CHAPTER I. IT was something one of the girls said yesterday, when we were in the Swedish gymnasium, that made me do it. "Some people scribble with their pens, but you, Paula, scribble with your mind," was her remark. "What do you mean ?" I made answer. "You are always presenting things to yourself in the light of an event. You don't accept a plain fact ; you must embroider it. I believe everything that happens is a story to you. You act in it, and live in it, and imagine all sorts of extra things about it things that don't really happen, except in your own mind. 'He said/ and 'she said,' and 'he answered/ is always going on within you. You're the sort of girl who ought to write a book, or go on the stage. You're bound to do something." "My mother wrote books," I said thoughtfully. "Perhaps that accounts for it. Lesley and I were talking about you last night, and we came to the * A JILT'S JOURNAL. conclusion that you're too restless to be just the ordinary girl. You're a a " "Personality?" I suggested. "I suppose that's the word. I mean something that can't be suppressed: that wants to come out and speak, and live. You would like to keep a record of your emotions, for the sheer delight of seeing them written down." Claire le Creux was eighteen, and was leaving school. I was a year younger, but my education was finished also. At least I had received an intimation from my guardian, who was also my uncle, that I was to return to him at the expiration of this Christmas term. We elder girls were arranging the gymnasium for the breaking-up party, which great event was to take place that evening. The long room was decorated with ivy and holly ; the poles and swings and bars were put away, or fastened back. Rows of chairs had been placed for expected visitors, and on the impromptu stage at the end of the room a last rehearsal of a fairy scene was going on. The younger children were solemnly pirouetting in obedience to directions from the dancing mistress. The French governess was assisting us in the deco- rations. A flock of girls were perpetually flitting through the room, hindering or helping, according to their mood. I, Paula Trent, Claire le Creux, and my special friend, Lesley Heath, were sufficiently apart from the crowd for conversation. The conversation I have described, the chance words that suddenly seemed to throw a side-light upon the odd and changeful and supremely discontented self which I had dignified as a "personality." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 5 As a rule schoolgirls are not supposed to think of themselves individually so much as of the life and duties and routine by which their lives are bounded. They are so much part of a system that they must forget, or ignore, their own small place in the vast community. Only a great gift, a great lone- liness, or a great sorrow lifts them into a separate sphere of existence. A place where routine is not; where thought claims creative force, and where"! the Individual" becomes a creature of importance. To myself I had long been "I the Individual." Claire's words only illuminated what I had kept in the background of my own thoughts. She was the star of our scholastic firmament, the brightest, cleverest, most accomplished of all the accomplished pupils turned out of this mill of learn- ing. She had taken more prizes, passed more ex- aminations, won more honors than any of the girls. And she and I and Lesley Heath were leaving at the same time, after many terms of school friend- ship. Lesley was a general favorite I was not. I do not intend to convey that I was unpopular. Far from it. But my tastes were exclusive, and my tongue had a trick of sharpness. It offended oftener than it flattered, and plain-speaking, even if veiled by irony, is not beloved of schoolgirls. Claire was the supreme favorite. I had been spasmodically jealous of her friendship for Lesley, but, having proved it less devated than my own, was content to rank myself first in that coveted affection. We stood as "The Three," in schoolgirl parlance. A trio of united excellence in point of conduct, gifts, and credit to the establishment. Claire came first, Lesley second and I third. I could have taken place in the first rank had I so chosen, but I had a knack of starting at a gallop and then coming in at a walk. I grew tired of things so quickly, even of endeavor. I saw myself attain- ing so much in fancy that I allowed myself to fail in fact. What I felt I could do ceased to be worthy the effort of accomplishment. That sentence of Claire's "You scribble with your mind" sums up very accurately my pecu- liarity. I was always living scenes and situations in a mental atmosphere that held me aloof and ab- sorbed. My mind was filled with imaginary friends I might have loved, imaginary deeds I might have done, imaginary speeches I might have made. The outer world, the real life I lived, could not content me. I wanted a wider stage on which to play, an impossible canvas on which to paint; an infinitude of manuscript would have represented the book I wished to write. The strangest thoughts came to me and the most impossible dreams. I was badly equipped for life, but I panted to set foot on its pathway of freedom. Anything seemed freedom that was unbounded by school walls and school discipline. I did not speak of my feelings, even to Lesley. It flattered me therefore to feel I had interested her sufficiently for discussion. And such a discussion! It gave me a new im- portance in my own eyes. It set my queer mind scribbling afresh. Even throughout that evening, the recitations, the piano playing, the fairy tableaux, the general "showing-off" to delighted parents, critical elder sisters, scoffing brothers and cousins, I was living a description of it all. Putting it into shape, laugh- ing at the puppets, and criticising the show. A JILT'S JOURNAL. T My own performance was sufficiently meritorious to win applause. But I had no parents to delight, no relatives to admire me; no friends to fill the benches, and give pleased attention to my part in the programme. We ended up with a dance. I had partners of all ages and sizes and incompetence. My toes suf- fered severely. A stolid, awkward, but persevering youth persisted in requesting the favor of my hand. I grew exasperated. I loved dancing, but my feet ached, and he had trampled my shoes into shape- lessness. At his last "May I have the pleasure?" my tongue forgot conventionality, and I answered, "You may have the pleasure, but I have had the pain." He grew red, stared stupidly at me, and then walked off. Lesley laughed softly. She had overheard. "If you are as truthful with future partners in the ballroom as with that poor youth, I pity them," she said. But I sat out the dance, and nursed my injured foot, and felt thankful for a space of untrampled peace. The evening was over at last. The day pupils had all departed, cloaked and hatted and ecstatic at the prospect of holidays. The boarders were to follow their example next morning. A relaxation on the part of tired governesses brought about the assembling of Lesley, Claire and"myself in the bed- room I shared with the former. It was a momentous occasion, and we felt its gravity. One phase of life had closed for us. We jould never again be three schoolgirls interested only in the rivalries and duties of fully occupied 8 A JILT'S JOURNAL. days. We were to stretch our clipped wings at last and soar to the world beyond our safely sheltered nest. We were to be free if such a thing be pos- sible except in the form of comparison with varying modes of feminine bondage. Free ! It had a pleas- ant sound as we discussed it, brushing out long, silky locks to the rhythm of pleasant speculations. It was then that, at the instigation of the others I decided to keep a journal a journal which was to be a faithful record of my after life, which, by some method of reasoning, they both declared was certain to be eventful. ''Why more than yours?" I asked them. And Claire referred to that speech in the gym- nasium. "You are a born scribbler," she added, "and you will be able to make even commonplace things picturesque." "My life at Scarffe will be uneventful enough," I observed. "My guardian is old and learned, a cele- brated archaeologist. He has written some wonder- ful book on the ruined castles of England, and knows more about Norman and Tudor architecture than any other professor. I believe he only settled at Scarffe because there is an old ruin there that dates from the Saxon era. He has been two years investigating it, and has not finished his researches yet." "And you will live alone with him?" "Yes. And the village is as quiet as the deserted one of Goldsmith's. It only wakes up once a year for the Fair Day. Fancy, they even ring the curfew there r "That must be interesting," said Claire. "Have vou all to put out your lights and go to bed at sun- set?" !A! JILT'S JOURNAL. 9 "I believe some of the country folk do." "What are the people round about you like? The county, I mean." "I only spent one holiday there. I know nothing of them/' ''What? Not the squire or rector, or doctor! Don't tell me it's quite so God- forsaken." "Oh, no ! There is a title and park in the neigh- borhood, and some good families, and a rector and curate to look after their souls, and a doctor to take care of their bodies; but my uncle never goes to church, and is never ill, so they leave him severely alone." "It seems a dull look-out for you, Paula," said Lesley. "I hope, of your charity, you will come and stay with me sometimes," I answered. "I will, and carry you off to London in return. You must not be buried alive." "London! How I should love it!" I exclaimed. "Perhaps you would not. It is not half so en- chanting as its name portends." "And you, Claire you go to Paris," I said. "I am the only country mouse, it appears." "Oh! Paris is to finish me, that's all. I shall come out then. My parents have decided that." "Come out!" I exclaimed. "How funny that sounds! A female Columbus making discoveries of men, minds, and manners. That is an experi- ence I can't look forward to. My uncle cares noth- ing for society. I don't suppose I shall ever go to a ball a real ball ; what Claire calls 'come out.' ' "After all, balls aren't absolutely necessary to a first acquaintance with life," said Lesley. "It can be interesting in other forms." 10 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "But one has to make the interest for oneself instead of having it made." "You are well adapted for making discoveries, Paula," laughed Claire. "And interests too," said Lesley. "There may be country swains to conquer, country hearts to sub- jugate before she tries her powers on the town." I made a gesture of impatience. "Why is it," I said, "that a girl's first mission in life is to win the attention of a man, her next to get married to one ? It really seems as if we were edu- cated for no other purpose. There's something very horrid about it. We are shut away from men so that they may not be disenchanted with us in our chrysalis stage. Then they spring into life our life as possible lovers and husbands. We can make no discoveries about them, and yet the inex- perience of girlhood is applied as a test to the weal or woe of our future." "What a Minerva you are!" laughed Lesley. "And already occupying her wisdom in the uses of man as applied to schoolgirl enlightenment," said Claire. "It will have to come," I said. "There's no use shutting our eyes to the fact. And there are two ways of treating the experience. To test, or accept it." "Which shall you do, Paula?" asked Lesley, her laughing eyes looking at me from a cloud of dusky hair. "Need you ask her that?" said Claire. "Did you ever know Paula accept a thing without question or criticism. She'll carry out the habit, depend on it." "But you can't treat men as you treat other things," said Lesley. "How are you to test them 'A JILT'S JOURNAL. 11 until you know them; and how can you possibly know them until you have passed all the conven- tional stages, bounded by ballroom conversation, or casual acquaintanceship?" "I think I shall find a way," I answered. They looked at me eagerly. "I really believe you .will," they said. And that is how I came to write this journal. CHAPTER II. MY holidays, with but rare exception, had been spent at school. I was going to a life quite strange and quite different from any previous experience. I traveled alone, and being Christmas Eve the trains were crowded, slow, and the changes and waits most wearisome. A novel I purchased at the bookstall helped me to pass away the time as well as affording me an insight into certain phases of life and society hitherto unknown and undreamt of. The title was Friendship, and had allured me into purchase. I need hardly say that the sort of friendship I had expected to read about was widely different from the author's ideas on the subject! However, I was too enthralled and delighted to cavil at doubt- ful morality surprised also to find that Love, as a passion, or an experience, was not absolutely lim- ited to the unwedded members of society. The beauty of the writing and its style carried me on as by magic, and threw an enchanted haze over all that was harmful. I could find in those pages, however, no manly action in any way appealing to my ideas of the sex. Prince lo seemed to me a weak, vain fool, who never knew' his own mind. The common- place husband of Lady Joan was a hateful person, the other male creatures mere sketches. Naturally my sympathies flowed towards Etoile, the beautiful and wonderful artist, but even she appeared to me what I can only describe as a "book- woman." Her 12 A JILT'S JOUKNAL. 13 sorrows didn't appeal, and with all her great genius and wonderful dreams, she certainly never spared expense in the matter of household luxuries, or per- sonal adornment. Such velvet robes, such lace, such jewels, such wealth of hothouse flowers, and fruits, and carriages, and servants ! I came to the conclusion that painting must be a most lucrative profession for a woman. When it grew too dark to read I closed the book and thought it out. Tried to fathom the supreme art which, even while it repels, exacts one's admira- tion and one's wonder. To write so that your thoughts seemed actual living things! To take some creature of your fancy and clothe it with mere words yet make out of those words a flesh and blood covering for the creature. That, indeed, was magical and great and worthy of all praise ! I wished such a power had been mine; and that wish brought back to my memory again those odd words of Claire le Creux, "You scribble with your mind." That was the truth a scathing one. Scribble nothing more. She did not designate my ability by any better title, and Claire was a clever girl! I turned over the leaves of the book with careless, wandering fingers. It was a soiled, second-hand copy, and I had singled it out of a pile marked, "Re- duced Prices." I came suddenly upon the title- page and saw written on the blank space between title and publisher's name, two lines in pencil. I held the page close to the window, and in the failing light made out with some difficulty the following words : "Yet there is one that comes before the rest, And there is one that stays when all are gone." 14 I closed the book, and looking straight before me, met the eyes of a fellow-passenger. A man a young man, whom I vaguely remem- bered entering the train at the last changing place. "It is too dark to read," he said. "I am not reading now/' I hastily added. He smiled. The "now" was so recent. "How slow the trains are to-day," he went on. "We are more than an hour late." "Are we?" I said vaguely. It did not matter to me. No one would meet me at the station. No rapturous welcome would be my lot. "I I suppose you are going home for the holi- days?" he went on. I drew myself up resentfully. Was schoolgirl written so very obviously on my outward appear- ance? "For good," I corrected the bold questioner. "I have left school." "Oh !" he said. "I believe I am not wrong in ad- dressing you as Miss Trent. I remember you com- ing home last year. Professor Trent is your guard- ian?" "Yes. I don't remember you, though. Do you live here at Scarffe, I mean?" "Yes. My father's place is called Woodcote. He is a farmer on a large scale." "Oh!" I echoed. He looked something superior to my ideas of a farmer's son. "And are you a farmer also?" "I am," he said, with a twinkle in the depths of his blue eyes that the dull carriage lamp managed to light up for a second. "I used to see you wander- ing about when I was at work, or driving to mar- ket. You looked very lonely. I often wished " A JILTS JOURNAL. 15 He paused abruptly, and I felt my face grow sud- denly warm. "Perhaps you'll be offended," he went on, "but I often wished you would come to our place and see my mother and the girls. They're very cheery folk, and I'm sure they'd do their best to brighten the days up a bit. It must be an awfully dull life, al- though the old gentleman is so clever. Having no young people about, I mean." "Why should you think my guardian dull?" I inquired. "On the contrary, he is most entertain- ing." "I'm sure I beg your pardon," he stammered. "I mean in a different way, of course. No jokes, or games, or dances, or that sort of thing. To-night, for instance, we have a dance and a Christmas tree, and all sorts of fun." "Perhaps," I said somewhat cruelly, "our ideas of fun are different. I don't care for dancing, and I think Christmas trees are only fit for children!" It was quite untrue, and I don't know why I said it, except that the idea of this young farmer pitying me set all my pride on fire. He looked disconcerted at my speech, and with an apologetic "I'm sure I beg your pardon," re- lapsed into silence. I studied his face furtively under shadow of my hat. It was more interesting than good-looking. Dark, sun-tanned, with an expression of independ- ence and pride; firm lips (now set close together in momentary annoyance at my rebuff) ; a fine head set on broad shoulders, and eyes whose sunny blue this temporary annoyance could not cloud. "He does not look like a farmer," I told myself, as the train sped on through the fast-falling dusk. 16 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "I should have taken him for a gentleman had he not told me." He turned his gaze upon me once more. "We are almost there," he said. "Can I be of any as- sistance, about luggage or or anything? If you have not ordered a cab I'm afraid there'll be a dif- ficulty." "Oh ! I left all that to my uncle," I said. "Usual- ly the porter brings up my luggage, and I walk to the house. It's not far." "It's raining, though, and very dark," he said. "My trap will be waiting for me. Could I give you a lift?" "You're very kind. If no one is at the station I shall be glad to accept your offer." ("Give you a lift" sounded homely, and left a measurable distance between us, of which I ap- proved. ) "No kindness at all," he answered; "and half a mile's walk in the rain and darkness can't be much of a treat to a young lady like yourself." The distance was apparently increasing. My snub had been effectual. One doesn't call one's equal a "young lady" except in irony of the term ! The train stopped at the insignificant, dirty little station at the foot of the hill a hill famous in his- tory, as was the ruin that crowned its summit. No one was there to meet me. I had scarcely expected it. To an individual wrapped in clouds of historical research, and more concerned with dates than living personages, the arrival of a schoolgirl was too in- significant for attention. I stretched my numbed limbs and gathered together such details as travel- ing bag, rug, and umbrella. Then my new ac- A JILT'S JOURNAL. 17 quaintance helped me out of the carriage, and left me on the platform while he went to look after my box. He soon returned, and I gave the superannuated porter the usual instructions. Then we went out to the entrance where a smart little trap and spanking chestnut were waiting, held by a rough-looking lad who had driven from the farm. The owner handed me in. I was still ignorant of his name. The boy clambered up behind, and the chestnut started up the hill at a speed that atoned for long waiting and the attentions of wind and rain. How dreary and desolate the little village looked ! The great castle loomed above it like a pro- tecting giant, a shapeless mass against the dull and starless sky. The quairt eld inn, deserted in win- ter, showed a light in its square stone porch. The Market Cross was but a white gleam amidst the queer old houses as we dashed by. The horse's hoofs struck fire from the flint stones of the street, and the rattle of the wheels roused a whirlwind of echoes. The few shops had made festive efforts to signalize the season, but they left a feeling of pity in my mind. Fashion and frivolity were alike out of place at Scarffe. It is a bit of mediaeval history dropped into mod- ern life. As out of place in it as the bicycles of the tourists, and the cheap teas it advertises in its sum- mer season of prosperity. Fortunately it possesses only that season a brief one at best and a thing organized by coaching trips, and inquisitive Amer- icans, to whom, apparently, all things connected with English history possess the attraction of non- possession. The summer season of Scarffe was as yet un- 18 A JILT'S JOURNAL. known to me, but I had heard of it from the pro- fessor. I never called him "uncle" ; it would have seemed a liberty. My companion was absolutely silent during that drive. I imagined the chestnut required all his energies. We soon left the village behind (though called a town and dignified as a borough, Scarffe is nothing but that) ; a long, straight road lay between fields, dark and solitary, mere masses of shadow, over which a struggling ray of moonlight fell as the clouds drifted or parted. My guardian's house was a large, square, ugly building of gray stone, standing back from the road, and surrounded by a thick hedge. Elm and ash trees waved leafless branches in the adjoining grounds ; the garden was allowed to run wild at its own sweet will. In the distance, that everlasting feature of the landscape, the castle ruins, towered in broken desolation. It was a dreary-looking place seen under that brooding sky, and my eyes roved over it with little interest. My new acquaintance checked the horse, and the boy came to its head. "Thank you for your kindness," I murmured somewhat lamely, as my belongings were handed to me. I stood at the gate, which he held open. My arms were full and I had no hand to extend. He lifted his hat, smiled and said, "A pleasure, miss, I assure you," then turned back and sprang into his trap. "Miss," I repeated, as I marched up the graveled pathway leading to the front door. "Fancy calling me 'miss.' But then he isn't a gentleman." I rang the bell, and after an interval the door was opened by the old woman who served as house- keeper to my uncle. Mrs. Graddage was her name. A JILT'S JOURNAL. 19 She was a sour old person, with the soul of a Primi- tive Methodist, and a general belief in the wicked- ness of all things young and comely. I was no fav- orite of hers. I gave my usual greeting as I stepped inter the hall, and she surveyed me critically under the hang- ing oil-lamp. "You've growed," she announced. "Quite a young woman, I declare " Then she commenced a quotation from her fav- orite Proverbs of Solomon. "Where's the professor?" I interrupted. "Has he remembered I'm coming home?" "He's in the study," she said curtly. "Busy." "Oh! well, I won't disturb him. I'll go to my room. When will tea be ready? I'm tired and cold and hungry." ? Twill be ready at six. You know the master's hours as well as I do. Who drove you from the train ? I heard the sound o' wheels." "A friend," I said mendaciously. "Apparently everyone here forgot me. I had to depend on a stranger's courtesy, or " "I thought 'twas a friend you mentioned," she said, with a sharp glance at my face. "A friend in need," I answered, beginning to mount the steps. "I do hope you've lit a fire in my room, Graddy?" She hated me to call her that ; so I often did it, to accustom her to the Christian duty of forbearance. She made no answer, but her stiff skirts rustled aggressively as she retired to her own regions. I mounted the stairs and turned into my usual bed- room. There was a fire crackling and blazing brightly in the grate, and a lamp stood on the table, 20 A! JILT'S JOURNAL. shedding a warm glow over the stiffly arranged furniture. A pleasant-looking girl with dark hair and rosy cheeks was drawing down the blind as I entered. "Welcome home, miss," she said, dropping me a curtsey. "Who are you?" I asked. "I'm the niece of Aunt Anne Graddage. She's taken me on as parlormaid, now you've come to live here, miss. And I'm to wait on you." "Oh ! is that it ? What's your name ?" "Merrieless Hibbs, please, miss, at your service." I stared. "Merrieless what a strange name!" "It is, miss. But being baptized, why it's my name, and I have to be satisfied with it." "It doesn't suit your appearance at all events," I said, looking at her rosy face and bright, dark eyes. "Merry, without the last syllable, would express you better." "Just as you please, miss," she answered with another curtsey. "And is there anything I can do for you ?" "You can bring me some warm water, if you will ; and I believe there's an old pair of slippers knocking about somewhere that I left behind last holidays. My feet are numbed in these boots." "They're by the fire, miss. I found them and put them ready in case your box shouldn't arrive with you." "That shows you've got some sense, Merry," I observed approvingly. "I'm sure I hope I shall please you, miss," she answered. "I've only had one place, and it was a very hard one. I thought it would be nice to come where a young lady was." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 21 "Oh ! I dare say we shall get on," I answered. Then she left to fetch the can of hot water for which I had asked, and my fancy took a flying leap into the future, and showed me playing the adored mistress to a devoted maid, and various imaginary benefits descending upon her in consequence. At all events she was a novel and pleasant addition to the household, bringing a breath of young life and young interest to vary its monotony. Between us we might manage to get some fun even out of such unpromising subjects as a profes- sor of archaeology and Aunt Anne Graddage. CHAPTER III. WITH the first summons of the tea bell I entered what Mrs. Graddage termed the "parlor," and found the professor standing with his back to the fire, his hands thrust under his coat-tails, and his spectacles pushed up from his nose and resting on the ridge of his high forehead. I went toward him with hand extended. "How do you do, professor?" His absent-minded glance swept over me. Then he shook hands in a loose and equally absent-minded fashion. "I am pleased to see you, Paula, and looking so so well. You have grown ah considerably." He had a way of pausing between words as if , searching for one to express an escaping thought. "I think I have. And you I I hope you are quite well ?" "Yes, my dear, I believe so." He looked vaguely round the room. "Never better," he went on sud- denly, "never, so to say, ah better. Will you pour out the tea, my dear? You must need re- freshment after your journey." "Did you remember that I was to arrive to- night ?" I asked, as I seated myself at the table. It was spread with a homely, and to a schoolgirl eminently satisfactory meal of hot cakes, scones, marmalade, and thick bread and butter. The pro- fessor would never eat a thin-cut, as introduced by the fashion of afternoon teas. 22 A JILT'S JOURNAL. 23 "Remember? Of course I did. I ah told Mrs. Graddage." "You sent no one to meet me. It was dark and rainy, and the train was nearly an hour late. How- ever, one of the farmers in the neighborhood gave me a lift in his cart. It was very kind of him but I quite forgot to ask his name." He ruffled up his scanty gray hair and surveyed me with that perplexed air that I always managed to arouse in him. "A ah farmer, you say? I regret you have been so inconvenienced. It slipped my memory ; the fact that you would expect to be met by a ah conveyance. I trust you arrived safely." "I suppose I did, seeing that I am here," I an- swered. But I knew of old that to attempt to wake a sense of humor, even at his own oddities, in the professor was a hopeless task. He drank his tea and commenced on the thick bread and butter with an expression of absent- minded content. I followed his example as far as the food and the content were concerned. Our meals were usually signalized by silent enjoyment. "Have you made any new discoveries about the castle?" I asked at last. His face lightened to animation. "Yes," he said. "Oh! yes. I have traced the herring-bone masonry to its origin, in fact as far as A.D. 690. The keep was built in 1075, as you know. The great dispute, of course, has been the discrepancy of dates con- necting the abbey and the castle in history. I have never believed that the latter was built by a Saxon king. Quinton Lacy was once a royal manor and its bounds included the land and the hill whereon the castle stands. The abbey possessed the hill and held 24 A JILT'S JOUKNAL. it till after the Norman Conquest. That doesn't agree with the story of the martyr to whom the church here is dedicated. In fact, the history of the castle has been overladen with fiction, and kept up by romance. I have been involved in many disputes concerning the authenticity of ah its records. But I maintain my point, and I ah shall prove it." This information did not interest me at all. My life seemed to flash out of a mass of dusty historical records as a fresh piece of martyrdom connected with Scarffe and its castle. I knew, however, that when my uncle was once started on his hobby nothing would stop him, so I let him ramble on while I turned my attention to the home-made scones and marmalade. When my appetite was appeased I gave my thoughts up to the consideration of myself in new surroundings and amidst a life that offered the sharpest possible contrast to that of my school days. Was there any important part here for me to play ? Any role that would place Paula as centre of dramatic results? It looked highly improbable. This strange old man, wrapped in his researches, whose whole existence was bound up with dates and parchments and the architecture of stones, what could he be to me save the shadow of all the pro- tective kindliness that makes of that word home an idyl and a sanctuary? For me the word held naught of love, and but scant idealism. I moved, a lonely unit, among its manifold mean- ings, and grasped none. There was no one to please ; no one to care what I did, or left undone. No one to question of school days and their import, no one A JILT'S JOURNAL. 25 to heed what youth might dream or seek amidst the undiscovered treasures of the future. A gentle melancholy stole over me. By the time the professor had prosed himself into a renewed interest with the work he was compiling, I had played the part of the martyred, the neglected, the misunderstood. I had seen my young life glid- ing away under the shadows of that ancient castle ; I had wandered, a lonely girl, a lonely woman, un- der its unchanging aspect. Nothing of girlhood's mirth and light-heartedness was to be my portion. Even romance shrank aside and left me gazing list- lessly after that ''sweet hand-in-hand" companion- ship of moving figures that grouped themselves in the roseate foreground of illusions I should never know. The professor's voice aroused me from my trance. He had pushed back his chair, and was looking at me. "If you will excuse me, Paula, I ah have some work to do in my study. The old formula. I had heard it so often. I should hear it so often still. I sighed and rose also. "Of course, professor. Do not let me make any difference to your usual habits." Then I went up to my own room and unpacked my box, and began a letter to Lesley. I had scarcely got beyond the first page when I was interrupted by a knock at the door, and on my answer the girl Merrieless entered. I laid down my pen and looked inquiry. "If you please, miss, aunt sent me to see if you wanted anything, and help " Her eyes fell on the emptied box. 'Oh, you've done it all yourself, miss !" 26 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Yes," I said. "There wasn't much to do." She glanced at my plain serge frock, and then at me, and then at the wardrobe. "But there will be, miss," she said cheerfully. "By-and-by when you're going to parties and balls and such like, same as Lawyer Triggs' daughters young ladies, I mean used to go where I lived be- fore. A beautiful young lady, miss, like you, won't be moping yourself to death here. And it will be such a pleasure to help dress you, and see you go off in your satins and pearls, and " I laughed aloud. "What are you talking about, Merry?" I ex- claimed. "There's as much probability of my going out to balls and parties, and wearing satins and pearls as as of your doing it." Her bright face fell. "Oh, miss, is that true ? J can't believe it. Young ladies always " "Young ladies," I interrupted, "who have homes, and mothers and fathers to look after them; but I, Merry, have none." "No more than myself, miss," she said sym- pathizingly. "Come, sit down here and let us have a talk," I said. "We're both young, and though I'm mistress, and you are maid, youth stands for much. Tell me your history, Merry? And I well, there's nothing to tell you about myself except that I'm an orphan, and have just left school, and must spend the rest of my life here." She sat down as I bade her, and her large, bright eyes wandered over me with flattering approval. "It won't be for ever, miss," she said cheerfully. "Nor very long, perhaps. You'll be getting mar- A JILT'S JOURNAL. 27 ried pardon my freedom in saying it and to some fine-spoken, rich, handsome gentleman." "Nonsense," I said, frowning. "Marriage is a very important thing, Merry. It means something more than fine speeches, or looks, or even riches." "Love, of course, miss," she said apologetically. "But there's no fear o' that not coming your way." I looked at her with a little sense of wonder. In every grade of life the same thought seemed to meet the woman on the threshold. Love, marriage. The girls at school had discussed them as the all- important factors in our future. This uneducated serving maid was eager to do the same. I found myself evading a disquieting truth, and angered because it so persistently faced me. Surely there must be many other things beside just Love. Why was it ranked so high, why supposed to play so large a part in the existence of men and women ? Then a faint curiosity crept into my mind. I looked at Merrieless. "How old are you?" "I'll be twenty next birthday, miss," she said. Twenty! Surely, with three years' start of me in the shape of experience, she might have some personal knowledge of this great mystery. I would rather believe a person than a book, and Friendship was the first novel of modern life I had read. "And have you," I asked diffidently, "had any sort of experience about love?" "I've felt it, miss," she answered bashfully, "more than once. Not in such gifted language, so to say, as you put it, but with a twinge here, miss, and a deal o' misery." Here evidently represented the region of her 28 A JILT'S JOURNAL. heart, as a large red hand displayed itself like a plaster over the bosom of her neat, black gown. I felt interested. ''More than once," I repeated. "But I thought " "Ah! miss, don't you go after what them silly folks in the story books says. You may get it, and suffer for it, but you don't die of it." That was consoling. My interest grew apace. "And what was it like, Merry," I asked, "the first time?" "The first time," she said with another blush, "was the last also, miss, with me." I felt puzzled. "But I thought you said 'more than once,' Merry?" "So I did, miss, and so I meant it. 'Twas this way. Love as a new sort o' feeling that come first. 'Twas the brightest. It didn't last longer than a quarrel and hasty words, and a parting. Second time 'twas a bashful and who'll-speak-first kind o' business and then a making-up. Next 'twas the same feelin' redivived, so to say, and we knew better than to believe a fallin' out was a everlasting thing. That was the best, miss, and it's still a-goin' on." "With the same person, Merry?" "True for you, miss ; and my word on it that the tenderest love o' them all is the love that's redivived, so to say. It's his word, mi$s, and he's a powerful speaker." I was silent for a moment. The simple story afforded a wide field for speculation. "Would you mind telling me," I asked at last, "what the first quarrel was about ?" "A poor thing, miss, and pitiful enough. Jeal- ousy o' another woman, a bit prettier than myself, but not circumspect. 'Twas her powers I feared, A JILT'S JOURNAL. 29 not having them to apply, for fear o' being thought light-meaning." She clasped her hands tightly together, and the color faded from her rosy face. "My word for it, miss, 'tis a powerful cruel feeling ; I'd never counsel anyone to give way to it." "Is it a case of giving way," I asked, "or can't help it?" "Perhaps a matter o' both, miss. A watery heat of the mind which boils over and puts out the fire of the heart. Tis all confusion then hissing o' steam and fizzing o' ashes, and then clouds o' blackness and nothing." "Nothing!" I echoed. "Save memories," she said. "Black adders of things popping up their heads when most incon- venient ; biting and thrusting out forked tongues till every bit o' you seems pierced and stung and you're mad with the poison." "Oh, Merry!" "Just so, miss. I've been through it. I hope you never may." "So do I, with all my heart," I answered. "But do you mean to say after all this, Merry, that you could believe in love again; go back to the same lover?" "It's this way, miss. You give up something o' yourself when you love that never can come back to you again. And sooner than lose it, why you just goes after it." She said other things, did Merrieless the maid, but nothing that could beat that bit of philosophy. So I wrote it down in my journal, long after she had left me to-night, and solitude, and my own re- flections. 30 A JILT'S JOURNAL. After all, expressed in more homely fashion, it only echoed the words scribbled in my book the chance words that had met me on the threshold of life. "Yet there is one that comes before the rest. And there is one that stays when all are gone." CHAPTER IV. I SOON settled down into the routine of life at Scarffe. Even Christmas day was much like any other day. Mrs. Graddage proposed a variation in the dinner hour, making it seven o'clock instead of two, and abolishing the nine-o'clock supper, a frugal meal which finished the day, but otherwise there was no difference. I walked to the old church of Quinton Lacy in the morning for service, and saw my farmer friend and his family in one of the pews. A hale, rosy-cheeked old man, undoubtedly his father, two apple-faced girls, pretty enough in their own dairymaid, plump and smiling fashion, and my friend of the train, wearing black broadcloth as though to the manner born, and looking decidedly handsome, in a manly, assertive fashion. Just as the service began, a rustle of silks and skirts, and a faint exotic perfume arrested my atten- tion. There appeared in the principal pew, belong- ing, I had heard, to the county magnate, Lord St. Quinton, a party of men and women who embodied in their appearance that essence of a world beyond and apart from country boorishness, that is a special distinction. One woman especially attracted me. She had a lovely, impertinent face, eyes blue as a turquoise and hair that shone like burnished gold as the sun 31 32 'A JILT'S JOURNAL. rays fell on it from the window above her head. The service evidently bored her. I have no doubt it was a vastly different thing from that of a fashion- able London church. Once or twice I caught her roving glance, and it steadied into a critical observa- tion of myself that made me almost nervous. I quitted the church before the party from Quin- ton Court, and gave a somewhat envious glance at the prancing horses and fine liveries of the waiting- carriages. Then I took the road back to Scarffe, passing or being passed by other stragglers going the same way. Once a step halted by my side, the owner giving a half-shy "Good morning and a merry Christmas to you, Miss Trent," as he passed on. It was my friend of the train again. He was alone, and I wondered why he had parted with his family belongings. I watched him going along the road at a brisk, even pace, nodding right and left, giving and re- ceiving greetings. Evidently he was well known. I began to feel some curiosity respecting him. I should like to have asked his name. He was evi- dently quite aware of mine. Instead of going home I took a short cut across the fields, and went up to the castle hill. The ruins had long been closed to visitors except by payment, but I proffered my dole and passed in through the massive towers of the gateway. The sun was shining gloriously, the air was keen and exhilarating. The grand old pile, with its shroud- ing ivy and mellow-tinted stone, looked down se- renely on the little, gray roofs below. I always regarded that castle with a kind of awe. It was so old, so terribly old. It had seen so much, A JILTS JOURNAL. 33 and suffered such stress of fortune ; it held the his- tory of peopled centuries that to me were but school- book records. Men and armies had lived and moved and fought, and loved and died on this same spot where I stood ; gazed, as I was gazing, at the quiet fields, and the babbling stream running under its arched stone bridge; held that ruined drawbridge against savage foes; seen dynasties change, and tasted of good and evil fortune. And now they were dead and forgotten, yet the old ruin stood and conquered Time, and spoke in every tower and stone and buttress of those far-off centuries, and the deeds done in them. Men had known how to work in those days, and had not shirked it. Arrow and axe, and steel and shot, had done their best to destroy this fortress, and failed. Generation after generation had come to gaze at it and wonder. It looked as if genera- tions yet unborn would do the same. I climbed up the old stone stairway of the dun- geon tower, which was my favorite point of view. Here I perched myself, and despite the wind, which has a rare fancy for those heights, I sat gazing down at the magnificent expanse of country lying to east and west. Few visitors came to the castle in the winter sea- son, and I was surprised to see another figure saun- tering through the arch and across the grassy space below my tower. "It looks remarkably like my farmer friend," I thought, and felt vexed at the thought. Presently I heard steps coming up the stone stairs, mounting higher, approaching nearer, until a sudden exclamation forced me to look round. "We seem fated to meet," I said. 34 A JILT'S JOURNAL. He took off his soft felt hat ceremoniously. "It does look like it," he answered. "I should never have dreamt that a young lady would choose a lone- ly place like this to come to." "I like lonely places," I said. "Apparently you do the same." "Oh, I often come here when I've leisure. I love every stone of the old place," he added almost rev- erently. "How speech lends itself to exaggeration," I said flippantly. "Do you mean every stone?" He looked at me a puzzled gaze that seemed to ask whether I was mocking what was a serious mat- ter to himself. "I mean I just love it all, ruin or no ruin. These stones have a history for me. I know the names of ward and keep and tower, as well as I know the look of the skies above them. You see," he went on apologetically, "I was born and bred under shadow of the castle. There seems no time to me when I didn't look up at this hill and see sun- shine, or rain, smite, or clouds enfold it. Every aspect is as familiar as the signs of the seasons. It says 'home' to me when I travel the country round and catch sight of it so true and strong, standing between the hills that have known it nigh on eight hundred years. It seemed hard to believe at first, but now well, it's told me so much of itself that there's nothing too wonderful for me to credit." "You are as great an enthusiast as the professor," I said carelessly. "It strikes me I shall have a sur- feit of the castle ruins before I have done with Scarffe." "The professor; you mean your uncle, the old gentleman who is always exploring around here?" A JILT'S JOURNAL. 85 I laughed slightly. "He is a great and learned authority on architecture and everything belonging to it," I said. "He knows more about the celebrated and uncelebrated ruins of England than any other archaeologist." "So I have heard," he answered. "But I often think that to know too much of a subject is to lose all sense of its charm. For my part, I would rather keep the romance of the castle unimpaired than make researches which throw doubt or discredit on the old stories." I looked at him with unqualified surprise. I had not expected to hear a farmer's son talk like this. "Do you know the professor at all ?" I asked. "We have spoken odd times. But I think he is an old gentleman who very quickly forgets faces." Again I laughed. "I doubt if he ever sees them, except in some inward fashion. His eyes always look as if he were classifying inanimate objects. A dress represents a woman, and a coat and a pair of I mean hat, represents a man, .and that's about all." It was his turn to laugh now. "That's a very good description," he said. "But may I ask, Miss Trent, are you not cold sitting there? The position is exposed, and when the wind blows anywhere it never fails to give this hill a turn." I was cold, and not sorry to dismount from my perch. We descended the stairway, and then came to a pause under the shelter of the King's Tower. Here it was delightfully warm and snug, and my new acquaintance seemed to take my acceptance of his company for granted. "How did your party go off?" I asked him. "Party?" ' 36 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Last night. The Christmas tree and the dance you told me about." "Oh, I believe 'twas greatly enjoyed, but I didn't see much of it." "How is that?" "Something spoiled it for me," he said, slowly, "and I got thinking." I should like to have asked him about the subject of his thoughts, but my ignorance of class-habits or class-prejudices kept me silent. He began to tell me about my neighbors, both here and at Quinton Lacy. Of himself, his school- days, and his family. He spoke well and sensibly. When animated his face brightened and grew al- most handsome. He awoke considerable interest in my mind, though behind it all that curious vanity of mine was asking what sort of interest I had aroused in his. I had no desire to play the mere ordinary girl talking to the mere ordinary young man. I hoped I had dropped school-missishness, but I was not certain. "You will soon be knowing the great folk at Quinton Court," he said presently. "Then it won't be so dull for you." "Yes, I suppose they'll call," I answered, all the more confidently because I had supposed nothing of the sort till his suggestion. "My uncle is not rich," I went on, "but I believe he is quite well known in the scientific world. He goes to London every year." "He will be taking you with him next time?" "I hope so. My greatest friend lives in London. She has invited me to stay with her when I go there." "I know London," he said. A JILT'S JOURNAL. 37 "You!" I could not help a genuine feeling of astonish- ment. "Why not? We all travel cityward nowadays. Too many, I often think. The depopulation of the country is its greatest danger. All its youth and strength and blood pour themselves into that great seething vat of the towns, to gain wealth at any sacrifice." His gaze rested lovingly on the dark, low-lying fields and brooding hills, then swept upward to the stately ruin that seemed always guarding them in overshadowing might. He appeared to have forgotten me for the time. I recalled his wandering attention. "Wealth is a good thing," I said. "It is the greatest power of life. You can do anything if you are only rich enough." "Can you?" he said gravely. "Anything? I think not. Wealth can't purchase happiness or health, or the love of a single human heart. And nothing in life is better than love, Miss Trent." Again that same assertion, this time from a man's lips. With a view of getting at both sides of the question, I settled myself comfortably into my warm niche and prepared for controversy. I could hardly ask him directly what I had asked Merrieless, so I tried strategy. "You say that as if you had found it out for yourself. Are you married?" "I!" The color mounted to his forehead. "Oh, no ! I haven't so much as thought about it yet." "Then, perhaps, you're what they call 'keeping company' ?" as A JILT'S JOUKNAL. The flush faded, and his lips set themselves tightly, as I had noticed they could do. His voice held a defiant respectfulness. "That's foolish sort of talk," he said; "and, though I'm yeoman born and bred, I don't make myself cheap as farm-hands do. I've read a great deal, and thought more; the sort of thought that comes to a man under wide skies, and with the long starlit nights when he lets Nature speak to him. It's wonderful what she can teach." His voice softened, those blue eyes went again to ruined tower and ivied keep. "And she tells no lies," he added. "Books do and men, aye and women, too. But not Nature ; never Nature. She's the grandest book of Truth ever written, and 'tis the finger of God that has touched her pages." I was silent. A sort of pent-up force within him seemed to have burst into words, and they were words with a new meaning for me. My fancy went off on one of its usual canters, but this time it was racing through a field of specu- lation. Nature he was a son of Nature's breeding. A son of the soil, with the blood of toiling ancestry in his veins. Yet, beside him, I felt suddenly in- significant. All my book-learning, all my smatter- ing of languages, 'ologies and accomplishments were suddenly dwarfed. He towered beside my puny complacency by right of a simple nature speak- ing out Life's simple truth. And to him also that truth was Love, with its strength and self-sacrifice, and divine power. So little yet so much. I longed to ask him had he realized all this? If to him as to that simple country maid love had taught more "than them silly story books say." But A JILT'S JOURNAL. 39 I could not do it. There was something 1 in his face that silenced idle curiosity. The embarrass- ment of sexual difference, hitherto unknown, held my glib tongue abashed and dumb. He spoke presently. He was the farmer again. "Your pardon, miss. I don't know what made me speak so. It's not young lady's sort of talk. But when a man gets thinking " "I know," I said quietly. "It's a comfort to speak it out." "That's just it. But " His doubtful glance amused me. "Oh! even school-girls think," I said. "It takes the soreness from the heart like sun- shine after rain," he went on. "Only the sunshine never warms you unless it's " "Comprehensive?" I asked. "The very word. You've a clever brain, young as you look." "Seventeen," I said with dignity. His smile was indulgent. "And I am twenty- seven. A wide bit of difference, miss." "I wish you wouldn't call me that," I said pettishly. "It comes, with a way you have of putting me in my place," he apologized. "I hope I don't forget it. But although a farmer's son, I'm well educated, and fairly well read, and not altogether concerned with ploughing, and sowing, and breeding cattle." "Farming must be rather tiring work?" "I like it in its place and season," he said quietly. "From year's end to year's beginning?" "There's waiting times between." "And then?" "One thinks," he said, "and dreams," 40 A JILT'S JOUENAL. Then my Paul Pry bestirred itself. "What do you dream about?" I asked softly. His glance turned to the massive heights, over which the blue sky bent and smiled. "The deeds done there" he said. "The courage that made the land what it is to-day." "And never," I asked, "of the fair ladies who lived here also, and inspired that courage?" "Sometimes," he said. "But, though the same courage beats in men's hearts to-day, I often think the power to inspire it has passed from the fair ladies' hands." "Why?" "I told you I had known something of the life of cities." "But they hold the very pearl of womanhood. All that is cultured, and brilliant, and beauti- ful " "And vile," he said curtly. "I beg your pardon, I shouldn't have said that. Such things won't come your way. You're but a flower now, and you think only of the sun that will ripen your bloom, not of the rain and the wind that can smite it to the dust to the dust," he echoed vaguely, "as I've seen women's beauty smitten." I thought of Prince lo and Lady Joan, and Etoile broken-hearted in her lonely Roman palace. Was this a phase of life the life of cities; of the great world, of womanhood, to which a girl's dreams are the prelude? His voice recalled me. It was once more apologetic. "I'm sure I don't know why I talk to you so freely. It's not often my way with folk; maidens especially." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 41 The quaint term pleased me. "I like to hear you," I said. "I hope you will always talk to me as if you knew I understood." "There's no doubt o' that," he said, "no doubt whatever. But perhaps you'll be thinking it a liberty on my part when you're gone away, or grown up." "I wish," I said, "you wouldn't treat me as if I were so very young. I assure you I feel quite grown up enough." "Only seventeen," he muttered absently, "and twenty-seven. Seventeen from twenty-seven and ten remains. And what a deal of experience one can gather into ten years!" "I wonder," I said suddenly, "if I shall be back here in another ten years' time, and my experience gathered?" "May it be a good one, a bright one," he said fervently. "For you've the face to draw men's hearts to you, and the tongue to win them, and it's not always a safe power, miss, nor wisely used." "I wish you'd tell me your name," I said abruptly. "I'd like to know it." "I thought you did. It's well known here, father and son for generations past. Herivale it is, miss Adam Herivale at your service." "At my service?" I echoed, fancy playing once more with the literal meaning of words grown meaningless through centuries of formal usage. "Suppose I should ever claim such service, Mr. Adam Herivale?" "It will be yours," he said simply. "And not 'Mr.,' if you please, Miss Trent, but only plain Adam Herivale yeoman born, as I said before 42 A JILT'S JOURNAL. who is your servant and faithful friend if you will so honor him." I looked up quickly at the earnest face, the deep blue eyes, full of steadfast purpose. A man to trust undoubtedly to trust, and reverence and believe in. Quite involuntarily I stretched out my hand. He took it, and a pleased smile parted his lips. "And now I must go home Adam Herivale," I said. CHAPTER V. MERRY brought me some tea to my bedroom at five o'clock, and found me writing. I pushed the papers aside, glad to have some one to talk to. "Oh, what a long day!" I said, "and two hours still to dinner." "I suppose it is terrible lonesome, miss," she said sympathizingly, as she drew a dwarf table up to the fire and then placed the tray upon it. "But you went to church, and had a longish bit o' walking. Didn't that pass the time?" "Oh ! yes. I was up at the castle." " "Pis all the place seemingly, miss. One never loses sight o' it anywheres. Wonderful old it is they do say ! I didn't believe Aunt Anne Graddage when she told me first that it was there time o' the ancient Britons and Norming Conquists. But every one I know here says the same, even Gregory Blox." "Who is Gregory Blox?" I asked. "Him as I told you about, miss." "Oh! And does he live here, in the neigh- borhood?" "At Woodcote Farm, miss; Farmer Herivale's place near Quinton Lacy. Mostly called Heri- vale's." I grew interested. "You can wait till I have finished my tea," I said ; 43 44 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "and tell me about Gregory and the farm. What does he do?" "Helps with the cattle, and field work summer- time, miss. His father's an ancient man, and has been on the Herivale's farm nigh upon sixty years, and they took on Gregory to oblige. 'Twasn't the trade he wanted. He's a blacksmith by nat'ral in- clination. 'Twas part filial duty as brought him back here, his father being a widower, but with a taste for young maidens that seems a unnat'ral thing in an old man. So Gregory came to see as he didn't get into harm. A healthful stretch o' the mind, miss, toward woman-folk is all very well in the prime o' manhood, but 'tis vile in the ancient, and so Gregory told him." I began to think I should like to make acquaint- ance with this merry old gentleman who had so epi- curean a taste at three score and ten. "Tell me some more," I said, pouring out a fresh cup of tea. "And do sit down ; you look so uncom- fortable standing there." "Thank you, miss, and excuse the liberty. But as to more, there's not much o' that to be told. The old gentleman doesn't look favoringly on me since I boxed his ears for trying to snatch a kiss behind the wash-house door one time I had been to the farm on an errand. I had no thought about it but to teach him a lesson. Maybe he didn't care for learn- ing it." I laughed unrestrainedly. "Did he tell Gregory?" "No, miss, but I did; and it made things a bit unpleasant for the ancient man. Gregory called him a old carrion crow, forever sniffing after young flesh, and the old gentleman didn't like it." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 45 "Has he behaved better since ?" I asked. "To me, miss? Well, I haven't given him much chance for disrespectfulness, and Gregory meets me in the village winter times, when we go for a com- pany walk. But I doubt he'll be at his frisky ways again come spring. He was always powerful taken up wi' women, w r as Gregory's father." "I hope the son doesn't take after him ?" " 'Twas my suspicioning him of that roguery, miss, that led to the quarrel I explained to you yes- ter night; but he had no thoughts o' light-minded- ness the Lord forgive me for the doubt. 'Tis a great thing to be well loved by a respectful man, miss." "It must be," I said gravely. "Has Gregory no brothers and sisters?" "Not that's known on, miss, acknowledgably. But what's been done by that ancient piece o' back- sliding is not for a modest girl to speak of." "Oh !" I murmured uncomfortably, feeling I was upon too delicate ground. "What a funny old per- son he must be. I should like to see him." "No trouble about that, miss. Any day you like to go to Herivale's, old Gregory is sure to be about, or any one would show him to you. He's not much to look at, save in the way o' waistcoats, having a fancy for them long from top button downward; nigh to his knees they mostly come. He says 'tis a worshipful high fashion, and points a distinction. But have a care o' yourself, miss, for if his mood be lively there's no sayin' what sly and untimely things he mayn't be sayin'." This did, indeed, promise interest. I resolved to pay a visit to the ancient Gregory at the earliest opportunity. 46 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Tell me," I said, "do you know the names of any of the people staying at the Court? There was such a pretty lady with their party at church. I should like to know who she is." "I don't know any names, miss. Only that they've a heap o' visitors for Christmas week, and wonderful gay doings. The servants there come to Herivale's farm oftentimes for cream and butter and such-like, though they've dairy, and poultry yards, and all such things o' their own. That's how the talk gets round, miss, from one to the other. Man to maid, and Gregory, he tell me. I had a chance of getting service there, as extra help in kitchen work, but aunt wanted me here. I'm glad now I came." "So am I," I said heartily. "There's no manner o' reason, miss, why you shouldn't be of the company up to the Court," she went on. "Lord St. Quinton calls here to see your uncle; Aunt Graddage says so, and I'm sure if he and her ladyship knew such a pretty young lady as yourself was so lonesome-like, they'd be having you off in an eye-twinkling. Perhaps 'twill come about. They do think the old gentleman a powerful clever man. And though he lives so plain-like, and not a satin couch, or a picture frame to be seen in the drawing-room, I'm told no one takes count o' that when you're clever." "Certainly this house is very ugly, and hideously furnished," I said. "But I fancy the professor isn't very well off, and he doesn't notice things either." "If they was brought before him by a forcible word o' argument, miss?" she suggested. "What would Aunt Anne Graddage say at inno- A JILT'S JOURNAL. ,47 vations?" I said, with a laugh. "And she rules here, Merry." "True, miss ; and she's the powerful strong mind of her own, has aunt. Still, you might get round her." "I think I'll wait for the satin couches and picture frames, Merry. After all one can live very com- fortably without grandeur." "Yes, miss," she assented cheerfully. "And it's not as if we was a noble family, though well-born I make no mistake, but not of these parts, are you, miss?" "No. My uncle only came here to make re- searches about the old ruins. He is from quite a different county." "That's as how I've been told it is, miss." "Do people take such an interest in us?" "Strangers coming to a place like this, miss, is as good as a peep-show. There's not a soul so old, or so wearied out, as don't prick ears and cackle news, be it false or true, 'bout newcomers. And the old gentleman always a-going about with his camp stool and his little hammers, and his measuring rods, 'tis but nat'ral he's set up as a wonderment." "Shall I be a wonderment too, Merry?" "With that face, and that hair, and the carriage o' your body so straight and limmer, do you ask it, miss? Of course your gowns are a bit plain, but there's more in a gown than the stuff; there's the way o' wearin' it, and that you've got. And makin' so bold, shall I put out a dress for to-night, being a festival day, miss, and late fashionable dinner?" "Do you suppose the professor would notice what I had on?" " 'Tis a shame to be truthful on the point, but 48 A JILT'S JOTJENAL. I've never so much as seen him give a comprehend- ing look to a female, miss." "Not like the ancient Gregory, Merry?" "A deal better in his morals, miss, though less cheerful in his mind." "Well, put me out my school-party frock, Merry. I wish you could dress my hair. I'd make you my maid, and Graddy could get somebody else for housework." Merry shook her head gravely. "She'd never consent. She thinks a lot o' servants means only a lot o' work and waste. 'Tis a weary, easy place this, once the morning time is over. I'm good at plain sewing, miss, and will do all yours, but about hair-dressing that's something in the extra way, and would want an art of education." So I did my own hair, and put on my white frock, and fastened a bunch of holly berries at my waist. But whatever sort of picture I made, or seemed to make, there was no one to notice or approve, for the professor's eyes were turned inward as usual, and I doubt if he even knew there was a plum pudding on the table. "I was up at the castle to-day," I said, making a valiant effort at conversation, which had spluttered and died out like damp wood newly kindled, during previous stages of soup and roast beef, served and carved by Graddage. He looked up from his plate, where a slice of plum pudding had aroused a speculative regard worthy of an archaeological specimen. "I hope," he said, "you observed that masonry of which I was speaking. It is worthy of study." "But I'm not writing a history of ruins," I said. A JILT'S JOURNAL. 49 "That, Paula, need not prevent you taking an intelligent interest in the subject." "I don't care about it as a subject," I said. "If I were an artist I'd paint the old castle, because it is beautiful and picturesque, but I can't get up any enthusiasm over the architecture of one era as dis- tinct from another." His eyes regarded me now instead of the pud- ding. "You are very young," he remarked. "And all young female things are indifferent to what lies beyond their own immediate interests." To be called "a young female thing!" Well? "I daresay," he went on placidly, "that when you have passed the chrysalis stage you will show more intelligence. I can recommend you a course of study." "Thank you, professor," I said with dignity. "But I've had ten years of study, and am a little tired of it. I should like a change." "A change," he repeated. His eyes went from me to his plate, from his plate back to me. I wondered whether he noticed that I was wear- ing a white dress, and that my eyes were laughing at his perplexity. "Yes," I said; "a change from school routine, and books and classes. I am grown up, you know, professor." If anything so grave and solemn as that face of his could be said to smile, then the professor at- tempted this frivolity. He pushed up his glasses and drew a wrinkled hand over a perplexed brow. "Hardly that, my dear," he said. "Seventeen is your age, if I remember right. Your father's in- structions were that you should leave school at that 50 A JILT'S JOURNAL. period of life, and live under my guardianship. You are entitled also to receive the sum of one hun- dred pounds a year from this date. I believe I mentioned these facts in my letter." "You may have intended to, but I am hearing them for the first time." "Dear me," he said, "dear me! It was certainly written." "Perhaps not posted. That would account for my ignorance." "So it would, my dear, so it would. I do forget to have letters posted. Perhaps I shall find this on my writing table." He rose. "Oh, don't go !" I entreated. "You've not finished your dinner. And it will be such a long evening for me." "As for my dinner," he answered, "I have had all I need. This sort of indigestible, though sea- sonable, addition to the meal is ah unimportant." "But do you never take a holiday?" I urged. "This is Christmas Day, you know, and well, everyone enjoys themselves, and rests, and is as merry as circumstances permit. Why should you be different?" He walked over to the fireplace and stood with his back to it, and his hands thrust behind his long coat tails. I pushed my plate aside, and during the time his silence afforded reflection, I saw myself playing the staff of declining years; the gentle in- fluence who should win him from too-absorbing studies and make of the dreary house a home. Just as his hair had grown to yet more silvered scanti- ness, and his weak voice was blessing my filial devo- tion, he broke into speech. "I suppose I am- different," he said. "And I have A JILT'S JOURNAL. 51 forgotten what this place must seem to you. You are ah your mother's child, Paula, as well as your father's. I should have remembered that." "Am I like her in- any way? Oh, do tell me!" I cried eagerly. I left the table and came to his side. "Please remember," I went on, "that I'm not a stone or a specimen, but a flesh and blood creature, and very ignorant of life. Perhaps if I knew my mother's it would help me." Such a change came over the passionless face that I could only look and wonder. The tremor that stirs a quiet pool into whose waters a chance stone has fallen was such a disturbance as wavered over that wrinkled visage, and stirred it from a long- enforced composure. He looked at me ; at the table, with its scarlet and white decoration; at the room and its bare walls; then again at me. "I forget the years," he said, "and how they pass, and the changes they bring. I forget, ah every- thing. But when you speak and look, Paula, she comes back and speaks and looks also. I have been a recluse so long. I I almost forget what it ever was to have been young. For to-night Christmas night you said it was, Paula I will put aside my work as you ah counseled. You may, if you choose, accompany me to my study, and I will try and tell you what you desire about those parents you lost so young, and whose place I can so ill supply." His arms dropped loosely to his side. He led the way to the door, and I followed. CHAPTER VI. WHEN I came up to my room it was ten o'clock, and I took out my journal to confide to its pages the events of the day. But of that conversation in the study I could not write freely. It was my first glimpse into a human heart, and the heart had not aged with years as the face had done. Time slipped back as the professor told his story, which was my mother's story also, and painted her for me a bright, gifted, enchanting crea- ture, playing havoc with all hearts. She had Irish blood in her veins, and dawned on the life of two stolid English boys as a revelation of woman's beauty and witchery. They both loved her. One won her love. The other never spoke of his. That was what I read between the lines. No new story, I suppose, but it was new to me. Perhaps it was the brief words, the long pauses, the very sim- plicity of speech that made that story so infinitely pathetic. The language of feeling is strong enough to disdain eloquence or exaggeration. I should like to write as the professor spoke, but I know it would be hopeless to attempt it. I made a good listener because I was an intensely interested one. There was no need to act that part. I felt it. A hopeless love, unspoken and unguessed. A tragic death, and then a charge whose import and responsibility were alike undreamt of. I the personality, evolved out of the situation. My place here. But as I thought it all over in the solitude of my 52 A JILT'S JOUKNAL. 63 room I felt dwarfed into insignificance. I could only see that patient figure toiling through long years for sake of work, not the work's reward. And I had laughed at him. A ghost of patient manhood came back from years of cold lovelessness and seemed to reproach youth's heedless judgment. Its sad eyes made my own eyes dim with swift, repentant tears. Love again faced me with a new mystery the mystery of self-sacrifice and unrecompensed devo- tion. Youth, in man and maid, had already spoken, but this time I heard the voice of age telling the same story the story of Love. That vague dream that yet could take substance and overshadow a whole life. Strange doubly, trebly strange. Could one never get away from it? If I am to be quite true to myself and my promise in this journal, I must hide nothing that comes into my life, shapes or affects it. But I find myself wondering to-night what the girls would say at the picture of a sentimental Paula, brooding over the picture of a shabbily dressed, wrinkled old man, who has just made a heroic effort to adjust his life to a new condition. Wondering still more what they would say if they knew the history my imagination had created for me out of such scant materials. For I caught a glimpse of myself wielding my mother's power over hearts ; hurting, enchanting, wounding or winning them. Would one faithful love outweigh all the rest? Would it be for me a love that I should remember even unto the end of life? Staying when all "the rest were gone" ? M A JILT'S JOUKNAL. It was a pathetic thought to meet expectant girl- hood, for whom the rose should possess no thorn; but I could not have been myself had I not looked at the subject from its pathetic as well as its ex- pectant side. I had made up my mind to be strictly truthful to that self-conscious personality of Paula. Neither good nor bad of her should escape my handling and my criticism, though to others would fall the judgment of both. I think, to-night, I felt impatient for the curtain to rise, the play to begin. There were not many actors in the performance as yet, and the piece was not at all dramatic, except in possibilities. Friend- ship, but no enmity interest, but no passion sen- timent, but no love. Yet scope for them all. If only I were not so young and so ignorant! I wish I could find a female mentor to give me some hints or some advice. Walking by oneself is pleas- ant enough sometimes, but if you are walking in a strange country and don't know the way, or how to read the sign-posts, you may find yourself in an undesirable situation. Ah ! . . . I hear Merry's step. She is com- ing up to brush my hair. So good-by to my journal for to-night. ****** I awoke to a cold, crisp December morning, with sunshine streaming on leaf and berry of the glisten- ing holly trees outside my window. Woke fresh, brisk, alert, as is youth's happy privilege. On the breakfast table I found a card and brief scrawl from Lesley. It held an inquiry as to rriy- self and my doings. Claire was staying with her till the New Year, then she was to leave for Paris. A JILT'S JOURNAL. 55 "I suppose you are very lonely," she concluded. "Unless you are living in imagination, and making stories out of commonplace things, as you can do. Remember you have promised to tell me everything. Have you managed to wake up the professor yet?" My glance fell on my guardian, who had received some scientific pamphlet by the same post and was turning over its pages. I laid down my letter. "Your tea is getting cold," I observed. "Shall I pour you out another cup hot?" "Thank you, my dear, if you will," he said. "I have had my meals alone so long that I forget you are here." I took the cup and threw away its chilled contents and handed it back replenished. "Are you going out this morning?" I then asked. "It will be lovely up on the castle heights in this bright sunshine." He shook his head. "I have some work to do. I fear I cannot spare the time." "You seem to be always working," I said. "Are you writing another book ?" "Yes, my dear." "Isn't it tiresome writing so much?" "It is my life now. I have to give the world the fruit of my discoveries. It is expected of me." "That's what's meant by making a name, isn't it?" I inquired. "I suppose so," he said. "By the way!" I exclaimed, "didn't my mother write books? You told me so once. Have you any of hers? I should love to read them." His lips twitched nervously. "She wrote ah! yes. One book was published. I have it my book- case." 56 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Only one!" I echoed disappointedly. "That seems very little. What is the name of it ?" "Fenella's Confessions," he answered. "What a funny title! Who was Fenella?" "I think she is meant for the heroine. But you can read it for yourself. If you will come to the study presently I will ah show it to you." My curiosity was aroused. "Did you ever read it, professor? or was it too frivolous?" "I yes, I read it, although novel-reading is not a habit of mine. But she asked me to do so." When I held the book in my hands shortly after- ward, and turned over the pages with reverent fingers, I saw that many passages were marked with pencil lines, that here and there a word was blistered almost out of recognition. I thought of his simple words "She asked me to read it." The obedience had cost something, if only a heartache at the quickening of memory. "May I take it away and read it, professor?" I asked. "Yes, my dear. It is only right you should know her through her writing. But be very care- ful of that volume, Paula. It is all I have of hers; and she gave it to me." I promised, and then left the room, carrying with me once more the picture of a patient face bent over piles of paper a stooping figure on which Time's hand had laid a heavy burden, uncomplainingly borne. But the sunshine was to me an invitation from the outer world. I put on my hat and jacket, and with the book in my hand went out to it. As usual my steps turned toward the castle hill. I found a A JILT'S JOURNAL. 57 sheltered spot, and sat down on one of the fallen bits of masonry, and then I opened the dull brown cover. I looked at the title-page and the name of the author. Suddenly a great wave of sadness swept over me, and I felt the tears rush to my eyes. For I thought of the hand that had penned those words, and of the brain that had spoken in these pages, and remembered that life was quenched in both. Only a great silence had represented her to me until I held this volume and began to make ac- quaintance with her through its printed pages. I read them as no one else could read them ; as inter- preters of the dead. The only thing that could speak to me of all that one word "motherhood" meant. I read the story uncritically, for how could I question power or plot, style or diction, when my throbbing heart sought only that hint of self- revelation which should make me cry out, "I know you"? Then presently I forgot the story. It was tragic, but it was not hers. I sought through the pages for all the marked passages. He had known her, he would have understood what they spoke of her- self, and to them I applied for interpretation. I copy a few here, for reference, as I had prom- ised to return the book. "One love in a life. How poverty-stricken you would make it! I have loved three men in dif- ferent ways. Now I begin to think I loved none, for a fourth appears on the scene, making up in himself what the others lacked, each in one par- ticular." 58 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "What an awful barrier sentiment can be !" "It's not what you give, but what you refrain from giving, that holds a man your slave. His love can outlive benefits, but not expectation." "When you have conquered the illusions of Love, the falling away of the personality they clothed cannot hurt you. It is only a confirmation of your wiser judgment. Be thankful for that, not re- gretful." "Say to youth 'Test and try before you buy,' and it will still make its purchases blindfold." "Do you thank Fate that you are a beautiful woman? Rather should you curse it. To be be- loved of many is no enviable lot ! Coquette desig- nates your pathway of conquest. A smile is en- couragement. A chance meeting a trap. A granted request makes of triviality a binding agree- ment. Every declaration of passion proclaims you heartless. Could I dared I write my life as it has been, I should call it A Jilt's Journal, to please my disappointed lovers. And The Confessions of a Fool, to please myself." I stopped reading abruptly and closed the book. Were these my mother's thoughts, her experiences, or had she only put them into the mouth of her heroine? It was always a woman who spoke them, and they had a cynical flavor that seemed to say she was no happy or innocent one. I went over the professor's story. I dwelt on his picture of her beauty and allurements. "She was loved wherever A JILT'S JOURNAL. 59 she went. It seemed her prerogative. No man could resist her." That was what he had said. And here, in her book, a similar confession met me. Its opening sen- tence ran thus : "Fenella's fate was to be loved, and love was her life's ban and blessing. She could only make one lover happy, but a hundred believed each individual unit meant that one. Thus on the threshold of life she was an education in the art of disappointment." A hundred lovers and only one could mean any- thing to oneself were one ever so gifted, or ever so beautiful. How I wished I knew if she had penned those lines from personal experience. They set me thinking and wondering. They opened out a new vista of life. All her beauty and the love she had won did not appear to have made this heroine happy. The last page was the sigh of a broken heart, a prayer for death. Could one pic- ture imaginary unhappiness with such graphic force ? Must it not be felt ere it could be expressed ? I knew that I myself could not present it as a reality, however hard I might try, because to me it was an unknown thing. Little griefs, trivial sor- rows, these I had of course experienced, but not anything of the vague discontent, the passionate misery that breathed in those pages. They gave me food enough for thought, and I never noticed how the time was slipping on. Into my warm nook the sun still streamed. The austere outlines of surrounding hills leaned against the soft blue of a sky that seemed to stoop toward them. Far away to the west an old coach road wound its way, like a resolute thought determined on a distant goal. Rooks cawed in leafless elms 60 A JILT'S JOURNAL. that towered around the old gray church. The cur- rent of life stirred in the sleepy old town. It was a holiday, and the solitary inn had awakened to re- sponsibilities and profits. I became conscious of all this in some dreamy fashion that mingled with the book and its story and my own thoughts. Gradually, through the dreami- ness, a sense of things relative to the outer world began to mingle. A chatter and laughter that her- alded the approach of something unconcerned with dreams. I stirred cautiously in my concealing nook, and looked around. A party of men and women stood on the slope below. From them came the chatter and laughter that so ill accorded with the quiet of this old historic place. I leant forward, wondering who they were; quickly conscious of the intrusion of worldliness, curiosity and frivolity among the sacred things of life. One woman's face, uplifted in its audacity of beauty and comment, caught my glance. I knew it at once. She was the woman I had remarked in church on Christmas Day. As I looked down she saw me, and pointed me out to the group of which she seemed the leader and guide. Other heads turned in my direction, and I drew back. Presently I heard a voice behind me a woman's voice. "Can you tell me," it said, "which of these towers is the Butavant? No one seems to know, and this appears to be that rara avis, an historical ruin with- out an historical guide attached to it." F A JILT'S JOURNAL. 61 I half rose and turned in the direction of the speaker. The lovely, impertinent face, the inde- scribable air of distinction and luxury and perfec- tion of clothing, held me dumb with wondering ad- miration. I pointed to the dungeon tower and narrow gang- way. "That is the place," I said. "But the stairs are very narrow, and you want strong nerves to climb them." "Oh, then I'll send Bobby," she said coolly, and turning, made a speaking trumpet of her hand, and shouted something to someone below our level. Then she turned to me. "He's my husband," she said, "and has no nerves to speak of. It will do him good." I suppose I stared. She was the revelation of a type of womanhood as yet unknown. The woman of the world. Such a woman as breathed in the pages of Friendship audacious, insolent, self-pos- sessed, and, to an ignoramus like myself, inexpres- sibly fascinating. She made me feel commonplace, almost boorish. Her eyes, of that curious turquoise blue, so cold and yet so lovely, roved from my face to my dress, rested on the book I held, swept up- ward to the ruins, downward to the gray-roofed town, then back to my face again in a space of seconds. "Do you live here?" she asked sweetly. "I think I remember your face; I saw you in church." I felt flattered. "I have not lived here yet," I said. "But I am to do so." "Poor child !" she said with mocking compassion. "What a life ! Buried alive expresses it. Is there a must in the background in the shape of an un- natural parent ?" 62 A JILT'S JOURNAL. I felt myself color. "I am to live with my uncle. But he is not unnatural. He is making archaeologi- cal researches respecting these old ruins. Perhaps you have heard of him Professor Trent?" Her laugh chimed so sweetly on the still, crisp air that I hardly noted its heartlessness. "My dear child, do I look as if I knew anything of any 'ology whatever, or any professor of it ? But I have heard the St. Quintons, where I'm staying, speak of your uncle. He is very learned, and very clever, and quite a recluse, they say. Does he destine you for a similar existence? If so, I should counsel rebellion." We were both standing now. Though taller than herself, I envied a grace of carriage, which I felt was inimitable. "He does go to London sometimes," I said. Again she laughed. "You mean to say you will go also. That promises entertainment! Lectures and soirees of the Royal Archaeological and Geo- graphical and Astronomical, and all the other soci- eties ! How old are you ?" "Seventeen." Again her eyes swept me from crown of head to tip of toe. "All life before you," she said suddenly. "And that face and buried alive beneath musty ruins, and dug-up fossils, and ponderous, dry-as-dust pro- fessors. Poor child !" "It is very kind of you to pity me," I said, with a sudden show of spirit, "but there may be very good things to be got out of the life." "That's for you to say, of course. My advice would be 'get out of it yourself.' Discontent is fortune's first favor. If we did not long to fly we should never learn to walk." A JILT'S JOUENAL. 63 Perhaps I looked perplexed. Such metaphor was a little beyond the average schoolgirl's knowledge of life and manners. "Why," she went on suddenly, "I was married at your age. Like you, I had just left school when 1 met Bobby." Then another peal of laughter escaped her lovely lips. "Look !" she cried, and pointed to the broken and unsafe stairway, up which a short, fat and emi- nently ungraceful figure was making its way, jeered and urged on by the crowd below. "That's Bobby," she said, laughing more than ever. "Would you think he was a peer of the realm, and 'Earl of broad acres/ as the story books say? He is, though, and has the honor to be my legal possessor. What do you think of him? Don't birth and breeding and aristocratic lineage speak out in those fat limbs, that unwieldy figure? But you should hear him talk ! Why, a stableman could give him points in grammar. Funny, isn't it, that Eton and Oxford can't turn out better things than a Board school ?" I felt more bewildered than ever. That a lady, a titled lady, one wedded to a peer of the realm, should talk of her affairs to an utter stranger in this frank manner was more than a surprise. "How astonished you look," she went on. "It must be funny to find anything in life to astonish one. I wish I could. The nearest approach to it I've had for years is to see Bobby climbing up that old stairway, with the grace of a monkey on a stick. I hope he won't tumble down and break his neck. I want to be Duchess of Dorchester before I die, so I'm very careful of him." "You sent him up there !" I said. 64 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Yes. I didn't think it was so risky." Again she called out: "Come down, Bobby; come down ! You'll break your neck !" I saw the figure halt, turn awkwardly round, and then commence to scramble backward amidst the shouts and screams of his friends below. "You see how obedient he is," she observed, turning again to me. "And I married him when I was only as old as yourself, and no one could do anything with him before! That fact has ranked me as one of the cleverest women in London. I've run him like a show, and he's not been such a bad investment." A feeling of disgust swept over me. To look at this lovely face, this radiant figure, and then hear such words! It reminded me of the princess out of whose mouth the frogs leaped whenever she spoke. Words like those I had heard seemed to clothe thoughts as unlovely as the frogs, and as repelling in their cold heartlessness. "You haven't much to say for yourself," she said suddenly. "Suppose I told you I had taken an in- terest in you?" "I really don't know why you should," I an- swered. "Perhaps because you don't like me, and that's a thing I never permit. They call me Lorely in Lon- don, because but if you ever go there you'll hear my history, or I shall see you. Will you make a bet on it?" I shook my head. "Why should we bet? If it is to be, it will be. That's enough." "Kismet, you mean? Will you come down and be introduced to those people? The St. Quintans A JILTS JOUKNAL. 65 know your uncle. They were speaking about him to-day while we drove here. Come back with us to lunch." She gave the invitation as if the Court and all belonging to it were at her service. I felt more puzzled than ever at the ways of society. "I will come down," I said, "because I should like to know Lord St. Quinton. I have heard so much about him." "Oh ! Darky's not a bad old thing," she said care- lessly. "We all call him that," she added, seeing my look of surprise. "Darchdale is too formal, you know, so it got to Darch, and then Darky. It's the way to nickname everyone now. The smartest idea is to find a name so appropriate that it explains the person. My dear, what a lot you have to learn!" "Of the world and society? I suppose so. I wonder " Then I stopped abruptly. "What, or how much?" she asked quickly. "Of course I know there are different grades sets. I was only going to say I wonder if you know anyone in London of the name of Heath?" "Heath the Archie Heaths? Lady Archie is a great pal of mine. Do you mean them ? They live in Stanhope Street." "Yes," I said, "that is my friend's address. So you know her mother ?" "Step-mother," she corrected. "Lady Archie is "the second wife." "Yes, of course. But Lesley always called her mother." "She told me she had a daughter to introduce next season," continued my new acquaintance. 66 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Odd that she should be a school friend of yours. I knew she was at a school in the country for her health. Well, our destinies seem converging, Miss Trent, isn't it ?" 'That," I said, "is my name." "And here's Darky and the rest of them. Let me introduce you as my new discovery my archaeo- logical discovery. By the way, what's your Chris tian name?" "Paula " "Paula! How lovely! It quite redeems the commonplace Trent. I shall call you that. It's the privilege of my superior years. I came of age a year ago !" CHAPTER VII. WHAT a luncheon party that was ! Talk of a baptism of fire for a man, it is nothing I should say to the baptism of disillusion women offer to their sex, by way of preparing them for social warfare. To the people who surrounded me nothing seemed sacred, or pure, or worthy of respect. Nothing serious except dress and baccarat. I felt as ignorant and as "out of" every subject of discus- sion as of the mode of discussing it. I listened eagerly enough, because the Fruit of the Tree of Knowledge seemed so tempting, but I could feel the color come and go at the half-mocking compliments and comments on myself, and I was conscious of alternate shame and anger at my ignorance. The ball of frivolous chatter, tossed so lightly and so rapidly by these practiced hands, took a hundred prismatic colors in its flight. I wondered how they had words at command for that incessant sport of repartee, cynicism, or epigram. Yet it was all very heartless. A shower of rockets whose sparks warmed nothing they touched, only left a brilliant track in the air ere darkness caught them. They filled me with wonder, these people to whom the great world was a playground its great names puppets of their show. As for Lord Brance- peth, whom everyone called "Bobby," he was to me the greatest surprise of all. Certainly if I had not 67 68 A JILT'S JOURNAL. been told he was an earl I should never have mis- taken him for a gentleman. His talk was all of horses, and studs, and jockeys. It was vulgar and slangy, as well as ungrammatical. His wife made open sport of him to his face, and when I looked at her, so lovely, so young, so full of that supreme dis- tinction which has no name, I marveled what on earth could have induced her to marry such a boor ! "Have we shocked you very much, Paula?" she asked me, when luncheon was at last over, and the party were sitting, lounging, or smoking in the hall. I was longing to get away and to get home. I felt so completely out of my element here. Their language was a shibboleth, their laughter a scream, their jests things of double meaning to me incom- prehensible. "Shocked me I don't know," I said doubtfully. "It is very hard to make out what you all mean. You talk so fast, and you never seem to give any- thing its right name, or any person." "Poor little country mouse!" she mocked. "If Lesley Heath is anything like you, Archie will have her hands full!" "She is not at all like me," I said. "She is very beautiful and very accomplished." "Could you see all that in another girl and not be jealous?" she asked, taking a match out of the tiny gold box which hung at her chatelaine, and pro- ceeding to light a cigarette. I watched the process in unbounded amazement. "You smoke?" I gasped. "Certainly. Why not? Did you never see a woman smoke before ?" "Never!" She burst into a laugh that Nature had modu- lated beyond the power of fashion to mar. "You are quite too delicious !" she exclaimed. Then she turned round to another fashionable exotic lounging on a great cushioned divan near the open fireplace. "My dear Larks," she said, "look at this piece of simplicity! Fancy, she has never seen a woman smoke till to-day !" Several pairs of eyes turned on me, and I colored hotly beneath their fire and impertinence. I wished I could have left my seat and got away, but I seemed glued to it. "Make her try a whiff herself," answered the lady addressed. "She's not half a schoolgirl if she says 'no' to the chance." "Thank you, I'd rather not," I exclaimed quickly. "I don't mind seeing men smoke, but I think it's horrid for a woman !" An amazed stare met me, followed by a burst of scornful laughter. "A female Daniel come to judgment !" murmured the lady whom I had already heard addressed as "Larks" and "Lady-bird," but whose rightful desig- nation was Lady Larkington. "She's quite right, though," said a tall, military- looking man, who was hanging over the speaker's chair. "It's horrid, beastly horrid. Spoils your teeth, your breath, your nerves, your clothes. Beats me why you do it. You can't enjoy it, for you nearly all do it in the wrong way. If it wasn't the thing to copy us, you'd pitch Turkish and Egyp- tians to the wind, and your silver cases and match boxes after them." "Hear the oracle!" exclaimed Lady Brancepeth. "I begin to think innocence is catching." 70 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Hardly," he said. "When you're by to disin- fect us." "That's beastly rude," she said coolly. "And very stupid, for no one nowadays could put up with such a primitive virtue ! You, Jim, least of all." "Innocence," observed Lady Larkington, "is the one thing men pretend to admire, and hate to possess !" "As if they ever did possess it. If they do it never outlasts their first suit of knickerbockers." "If it comes to that," chimed in Bobby, "well, damme, a girl's don't seem to last longer than hers. She wears 'em too." The usual scream greeted this witticism. "Oh I think it goes as far as the church door in appearance," said Lady Brancepeth. "That means the marriage service gives it the coup de grace" "Well, you could hardly expect innocence to out- live that, even if read by an archbishop." "Why do women believe in nothing that seems good ?" asked the man whom they called Jim. "Because it only seems good, I suppose. Women know each other. Men only know what women choose to let them know of women." "Deuced lot of wickedness if they're to be be- lieved." "Wickedness is the salt of life. It's capable of such endless variations !" said Lady Brancepeth. "And do you think smoking a sign of lost inno- cence. Jim?" asked Lady Larkington. "Oh, no! I've known some quite good women smoke, because they couldn't afford to be singular. We get so very exclusive in these days of Radical newspapers." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 71 "Good women!" murmured Lady Brancepeth. "There's quite a country farmhouse flavor about the sound. A good woman is the sort of female that a man always speaks of as 'my friend, Mrs. So and So,' and always makes use of, like charity, to hide a multitude of sins." "His own or someone else's?" "Either, poor souls ! when there's any whitewash- ing to be done." Now what on earth good women could have to do with whitewashing puzzled me. In the first place, it wasn't a woman's work. In the next, the char- acter of the person employed to do it wouldn't affect that work. "So safe too if men only married what was best for them," murmured another voice. "There is a spirit of contradiction in marriage which only comes out after the ceremony. We never do what men expect, nor they what we desire." "I wonder we marry you at all," observed Bobby. "You wouldn't if you could help it, I'm very sure. But every man expects his dip into the lottery will bring him a prize. Women are less hopeful, and take disappointment as their portion." "They know there are no prizes, perhaps," said Lady Brancepeth. Her eyes rested on her "lottery ticket," and mine followed them. Bobby's fat, awkward figure was squatting on a chair, his legs straddled either side of it, as if it were a horse. His arms rested on the back and he had a huge cigar in his mouth. Any- thing more uncouth or unlovely it would be difficult to imagine. Again I thought of this dainty, ex- quisite creature mated with such a common, brain- 72 A JILTS JOURNAL. less boor, and a sort of disgust swept over me. I moved restlessly in my seat, and she turned. "You look tired," she said. "I suppose you're bored to death. Would you like to go home? Are you pining for fossils and mussels? is it mussels they pick up and specify? or do they belong to an- other 'ology? Well, I'll ask Darky to send you back in one of his traps, or a bike, if you prefer." "I'll drive you home, if you'll allow me," said the military man, of whose name I was still ignorant. Lady Brancepeth's blue eyes flashed angrily. "Nonsense," she said. "There are heaps of grooms and coachmen. And I want you, Jim, for a Badminton set in the covered court. A little exer- cise will do you good you're getting stout." Yet when I had stiffly and uncomfortably gone through the ordeal of adieux, and got myself out of that strange atmosphere into the cool, damp outer air, it was no groom who sprang up beside me in the dogcart, but the same "Jim" who had declared he agreed with my opinion as to women smok- ing. "I'm going to drive you home," he said, "if you'll allow me the pleasure?" I began to feel of great importance. A man of the world, of fashion, so good-looking ' too, and forsaking these beautiful witty women to drive me, a mere schoolgirl. "It is very kind of you," I said. "But I thought you were wanted for Badminton?" "They'll have to do without me," he said, taking the reins. "Plenty to take my place. Fond of driv- ing?" "I love it," I said. "But I'm afraid I love a great many things I have to do without." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 73 "You're young enough," he said, "to wait for them. They're pretty sure to come." Not sharing his confidence in the future, I ven- tured to ask a reason for it. He gave me a quick glance. "You must be an awful little innocent," he said, "not to know how pretty you are, and a pretty woman is a social power, you know. She can get most anything she wants." I felt a sudden increase of color in my cheeks, and remained silent for a moment. "Will you tell me," I said presently, "why those people talked as they did? I don't suppose they really meant half the horrid things they said." "Oh, yes, they did, some of them. Lorely, for instance she has the bitterest tongue of the lot. Goodness knows why! She made her own choice, but she girds at it and the man as if she were the injured party." "When I looked at her," I said eagerly, "such a dream of loveliness and then at Lord " "Oh, don't give him his title, pray! No one ever does. Yes, she's played rather low down, taking that stable-yard cad !" "But you said " "I know. I said he was her own choice. I sup- pose she thought he'd have his uses. You see, in the world we've left behind us there are queer mo- tives for marrying. Some do it for wealth ; some for convenience; some for safety." "Safety?" I echoed. He laughed. "There are husbands," he said, who put on the curb, and others who drive with a loose rein, and yet others who never look into the stable yard at all. But there, child, this sort of talk must 74 A JILT'S JOURNAL. be all Greek to you. Besides, you're not of the stuff those women are. I wonder whether they've get such a thing as a soul between them. Certainly they do their best to hide it." "Do they always make sport of everything?" "It's their way; it's supposed to be smart, and one caps the other. They ape heartlessness until they seem to possess it. Now and then you may dig up a bit of real womanhood under the veneer, but it takes some finding." "They must feel, suffer, love, some time or other in their lives?" "Perhaps they do, but there's always doctors, and pick-me-ups, and fools to console them !" I was silent. This first peep into a new phase of life had been so startling that it took time to re- adjust my ideas to their former position. When he spoke again his voice was earnest and less bitter. "I hope, Miss Paula," he said, "that you'll never grow up into a woman of fashion. You heard them jeer at innocence and men's belief in it. Take my word, a man does believe in it, does reverence when he finds it. The love he gives his mother, his wife, his child, is the only sheet anchor his nature pos- sesses. When that drags, or is cut away, he doesn't much care what becomes of himself. I daresay it seems a bit odd I should talk to you like this, but I was watching you during luncheon, and after- ward, and I knew none of them would show ycu the ropes, only jibe and mock. You said something about life being dull here. If you only knew h^v safe that dullness is ! You ought to bless the Fates for it. But, of course, you don't. You'll neve- be content until you're trying your wings in A JILT'S JOUENAL. 75 the flight to conquest like the rest of 'em. Not all the preaching in the world would teach a girl with your eyes and hair that her nest in the hedge is bet- ter than the gilded cage in town. There ! what a duffer you'll think me, and why I talk like this I'm sure I don't know. It's not my way, and how the women would laugh if they heard me! and you?" "I shall not laugh," I said, "although it's hard to believe the world is so harmful, and teaches more of wrong than right. But women like those at Quin- ton Court " "They are a contemptible set," he said. "They ape our vices, and mock at all womanly virtues. The very word is old-fashioned they scream at it. They were only baiting you all the time, though per- haps you didn't see it. Don't ever want to be like one of them. Evil's an insidious thing; it's best not handled. Like tar, some of it's pretty sure to stick to your fingers !" We were silent again until we had almost reached the house. Then I took my courage in my hands. "I don't know your name," I said. "They only called you " "Jim. Yes, that's their way. I'll give you my card, if you like, but I suppose we'll hardly meet again. I'm leaving here to-morrow and going abroad. Still, I'm glad to have met you. It's like a breath of pure air after a night of cards and drink and smoke. After some such night, when I leave the tables, and the dice, and the company behind, I'll remember our drive and our talk. They'll per- haps help to keep a spark of good alight somewhere in my soul. This is your house, isn't it?" "Yes," I said, "and thank you for all this trouble, and for being so kind." 76 A JILT'S JOURNAL. He laughed shortly. "You will find men kind enough to a face like yours," he said. "It's the women who'll be your foes." I sprang lightly down from the step. "Oh your card ! You promised it," I said, looking up. He shifted the reins into one hand and searched his pockets with the other. "I can't open it. Take case and all," he said. "It'll do for a keepsake in memory of our drive. Good-by once more." I gave him my hand as he stooped toward me. Then quite suddenly I remembered my mother's book. I had left it behind at the Court. "Oh I've forgotten my book," I said hastily. "What book?" "I was reading it when Lady Brancepeth found me up on the castle hill. Will you please ask for it when you go back? I wouldn't lose it for the world." "What makes it so valuable ?" he asked. "It's written by my mother. It is the only one she ever had published, though she wrote others." "So you are the daughter of an authoress. May I ask her name?" "The same as my own," I said, "Paula Trent." "And is she " "She died," I said, "when I was quite a little child. I have no memory of her." "I will get your book, and bring it back to-mor- row." "But I thought you were leaving " "So I am. I'll stop here on the way to the sta- tion for a few minutes so it's only ( au revoir! He waved his hand and drove off, leaving a flat- tered, wondering and speculative Paula behind. CHAPTER VIII. MERRIELESS brought me my tea as usual at five o'clock. She was brimful of curiosity as to my long absence. I told her its history. Her comments amused me. Also her prophecies as to my own brilliant doings in the near future. "And such a grand gentleman as drove you home, miss," she said. "He is an officer," I said, with a glance to where the Russia leather card-case lay, its silver mono- gram shining in the lamplight. I had discovered his name was Captain James Con way, and I had a pleasant memory of Paula Trent, the schoolgirl, capable of arousing interest in the breast of a gallant soldier, a man of the world, and a great lady's cavaliere servente. She was indeed coming out of her shell ! "How did you see him, Merry?" I inquired. "I was just lighting the lamp, miss, and looked out of the window when I heard the wheels, and you a-talkin' in a very earnest way, miss. I looked incuriously, but there was light enough in the sky to show a handsome gentleman, and I felt he was interested by the way he held your hand, and looked down at you." "That's nothing, Merry; only politeness." ; "Tis always politeness at first, miss; leading gradual to the oncoming of familiarities; walking out, and holding hands, and such like." 77 78 A JILT'S JOURNAL. I drank my tea slowly, and waited for further information. "You see, having gone through it all myself, miss, I've got the knowledge. And though with my sort 'tis more nature than 'by your leave,' it do mean very much the same thing in the end." "Yes?" I questioned. "'Tis a queer hobble love," she continued. "To think of the days that come and go and not a mor- row of them with any extra meaning, till sudden- like it's 'Will I be seeing him?' or 'Will he be there?' and listening for a step you've' come to know out of a hundred others, and sick at heart when you don't hear it, and all of a flutter if you do. And lifted sky high if so be he's kindly disposed, and down-dropped to what Aunt Graddage do call the Valley o' Humblification if he be indifferent. A wearing thing, miss, even at the best way o' it." "It seems so, indeed," I said gravely. "And all these sensations go to show you're in love, do they, Merry?" "That's right, miss. Then it gets to the fever time. That's bad. You've got to mind yourself then, miss, as well as to keep him in his place. Yet not to be too chilling neither for fear o' dispiriting his fancies. There's so many wimmen in the world that a man can just pick and choose where he pleases, and ofttimes the ugly ones get what the pretty ones lose by sheer rebelliousness." "How came you to learn such things, Merry?" I asked her. '"Tis Nature teaches us, I think, miss, and the best school-time is the love-time." I looked thoughtfully into the fire, and gave the subject due consideration. It was pleasant to be A JILT'S JOURNAL. 79 initiated into such mysteries, to feel oneself gliding down the stream of knowledge helped by an im- personal experience. The contrast between this country girl's simple confessions, and the mocking sneers of the great ladies of the social world, inter- ested me greatly. I was getting at two sides of an all-important question, yet keeping myself in the background as a mere inquirer. "Do you think people ever fall in love the first time they see each other?" I asked. ""Pis mostly men as does that, miss, bein' in a manner o' way caught by beauty, and the snare o' it. I've heerd say 'tis like a spark lighting on furze, and a quick blaze to follow. But that's not so much the way in our manner o' life as in the higher circles where you'll be getting to, miss. Wonderful 'tis, I've heerd, the ways o' them. Putting the whole sex into shape o' one single woman, and makin' so much o' her that the others aren't considered no more than if they weren't seen, or heerd on. A rare way o' loving that, miss, and 'twill come along the way o' yourself or I'm much mistaught." "I can't think how you come to know so much," I said, laughing. "You're a perfect encyclopaedia on affairs of the heart, Merry !" "I do prime myself on some knowlageableness, miss," she said complacently. "Not in the way o' bein' proud or vain-glorious, seein' how it came to me through much tribulation. But I've been told stories o' this sort by them as has been deceived, and them as hasn't. 'Tis a way o' talkin' girls get to, not bein' gifted with fine feelin's as you're brought up to, miss." "I wonder," I said, "if the knowledge is useful?" 80 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Must be, miss ; or you'll court experience with a babe's helplessness, 'stead o' a woman's wit." I sat by the fire long after she had left me and pondered these things in my heart. I also wrote a long letter to Lesley, mentioning my new acquaint- ances and Lady Brancepeth's friendship with her stepmother. There seemed a great deal to tell, once I began to write, or else my habit of putting small events into many words, and building a history round them, had again come into play. I wrote of the young farmer, Adam Herivale. I contrasted him incidentally with Captain Conway. It seemed odd that in so short a time I should have met two men so totally different in station, manners and breeding, and could write so freely of both. When the letter was finished, I found there was still an hour before supper. I was at a loss how to employ my time. The cold, dreary drawing-room possessed no piano, nor did Graddage consider it necessary to light a fire there except on Sundays "to air it," as she called that office. I had only my school books to read, and I felt I had had quite enough of them in the years that had passed. I felt angry at my stu- pidity in leaving my mother's book behind. It would have been so pleasant to sit by the fire and finish those confessions of Fenella. I grew so restless that I went to the window and drew up the blind. The moon was at the full and shone with dazzling brightness. A touch of frost silvered the holly tree and the grass, and made dia- monds along the graveled walk. I suddenly resolved to go out. The posting of my letter would be ex- cuse ; there was no need to ask permission. I seemed free to do as I pleased since I had come to Scarffe. A JILT'S JOURNAL. 81 I got into jacket and hat without delay, took up the letter, and ran downstairs. As I reached the hall Mrs. Graddage came out of the dining-room. She stared at me. "You're surely not goin' walking by yourself, Miss Paula, at this hour o' night!" she exclaimed. 'What's the matter with the hour?" I asked. "'Tis unseemly for young ladies to be walkin* abroad alone." "I don't suppose the professor would come if I asked him, and I'm only going to the post. As for being alone here, why, I don't suppose there's a soul in the streets. They've all gone to bed, poor things !" " 'Twas a holiday, and there may be rough farmin' folk about." I laughed. "I'll risk that, Graddy. If I don't turn up by supper time you can send Merrieless to look for me. My absence won't cost the professor an anxious moment." I opened the door and went out to the tune of "A generation lofty in their own eyes, and their eye- lids lifted up !" ' I laughed softly to myself as I walked over the uneven pavement. "Could Graddy ever have been a girl ?" I thought. "What a queer one. I can't imagine her ever feeling young, even when she was it. And yet she found a man to marry her. What a life she must have led him!" Then my thoughts flew off on a new tack. The cold, brisk air set my blood tingling. Above my head the sky was thickly studded with glittering stars. Serene and pure the full moon hung like a ball of white flame above the ruined castle. To look 82 A JILT'S JOURNAL. at that stately pile from here was to feel all its won- der and romance. To picture the ghosts of dead and gone heroes leaning over those ruined battle- ments, crossing that ancient drawbridge, moving in stately measure over the green slopes, gazing with sad eyes over scenes they had known in their stir- ring and martial lives. Insensibly the spell of the ruins began to work upon me. To be so constantly overshadowed by them was to feel their strange, eventful history as- serting its claim on memory, and linking the past to present associations. A quarter of an hour's walk brought me to the entrance of the little town, and, as Graddy had said, I found it in a comparatively lively condition. Farmers' carts and wagons were rolling home- ward. In the deep old doorways friends were tak- ing noisy leave of each other. The inn was astir with holiday folk, old and young, and a general joviality seemed professing it was Christmas time and excusing an extra glass on the strength of it. I dropped my letter into the box, then remem- bering I had no stamps, went to buy some. The post-office combined its own duties with those of a grocer's store. It appeared to be doing a brisk trade this evening. I stood a little aside waiting my turn; glancing over backs and heads, shawls and hats of all descrip- tions. Among them I descried my friend the young farmer. He too was buying stamps. As he turned from the counter we were face to face, and it pleased me to see the warm color rise in his own, the flash of pleasure in his eyes. He lifted his cap and wished me "Good evening." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 83 "I am waiting to get some stamps," I said. ''Can I get them for you? There's rather a crowd." "If you will," I said, handing him a shilling. In a few moments he was back with the purchase. "Is that all ?" he inquired. "Yes, I've no housekeeping to look after." "It's a bit late for you to be out alone," he re- marked as we left the shop. "What's to harm me?" I asked carelessly. "A quiet place like this is as safe as the kitchen at home. And I wanted to get rid of an hour, so I ran out to post a letter." "I'm late returning to Woodcote," he said; "but mother gave me a lot of commissions to do for her. I'm going to a friend's presently to call for my sis- ters. Can I have the pleasure of seeing you a bit of the way home ?" "Oh if you like," I said indifferently. "Do you often come into the town?" "Yes, when things are wanted. Father or I have to ; and he doesn't care much about it now." "What a lovely night," I said, glancing skyward. "Do you know the sky looks clearer here than it did at Salisbury." "We're much higher up, and the air is fine and rare on these hills. Cold enough in winter time though. This is a wonderful mild night for the time o' year." "I think it cold enough," I said. "There's frost on the fields." "We'll be having skating if it lasts. There's a fine pond nigh our farm, the Mere Pond it's called. A couple o' nights like this and the ice will bear fine. Do you skate, Miss Trent ?" 84 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "No. I'd like to, but I've never had a chance of learning." "I'd be proud to teach you, if you'll let me." "I should think I would !" I said eagerly. "Why s I'm thankful for anything to lighten these long, dull days." He looked up again at the brilliant sky. "I think we're in for a spell o' cold. Could you find your way out to the farm supposing the frost lasted? It's a goodish bit to walk." "Oh ! I'm not afraid of a walk," I said. "And I can bring my maid to show me the way. By the way, she's what do you call it ? keeping company with a young man on your farm. Gregory some- thing I forget the name." "There's two Gregorys," he said, and I saw him smile. "Can't be the old one, Miss Trent, though he's a rare favorite with the women. Quite a char- acter is old Blox." "Ah, that's the name! It's the young one, but the fame of the father has reached me already." Again he smiled. "The old rascal's got into mischief sometimes," he said. "It's odd that the son should be so staid and proper, and the old one, who ought to know better, such a Lothario." We were out of the town now, and the road lay before us, a white straight line in the moon- light. I stopped suddenly. "You really need not come further," I said. "I'm taking you out of your way, and there's no necessity for it." "I'd rather see you safe back if you don't mind. There are not many bad characters about, I know, but now and then a tramp or a laborer, carrying a A JILT'S JOURNAL. 85 drop too much, have been known to molest stran- gers. Please let me." "Oh, if you wish. I don't mind," I said. "I'd go home more easy in my mind," he an- swered, and again we walked on. All the quiet country, shut in by those ever-cir- cling hills, lay in a profound and beautiful peace about us. There was no sound save the occasional sharp interrogation of a dog, the echo of our own footsteps on the frozen road. "How beautiful night always is," he said. "Yes; but I like the summer nights best." "You would," he answered. "Being young and a woman, and full of the poetry of things." "But don't you prefer June to December?" "Maybe not," he answered slowly. "There's things can make our summer-time for us though the snow's on the ground, and never a bird to sing ; and there's a cold that comes to heart and soul that never a June sun can warm." "You've lived those things, and I suppose you understand them. I haven't." "I'd be sorry to know you had, Miss Trent. 'Tis a beautiful time coming for you. Youth and beloved womanhood. When I look at a young girl on the threshold of life, so to say, it seems to me al- ways as if she had her hands full of pearls; pure thoughts, pure dreams, pure hopefulness. And it's hard on her that the world's so full of other greedy hands snatching them for sport o' the thing, and mostly throwing them into the mud and trampling them so that she never can pick them up as they were." "That's very pretty," I said, "but very fanciful. You're more like a poet than a farmer." S9 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Am I ? Then 'tis because I love it so. Poetry's an education of the soul; 'tis the finest sort o' re- ligion, I often think." I remembered "Extracts for the Use of Schools" ; the reciting- of "Casabianca," and "Excelsior," and "The May Queen." And I demurred. "Have you ever read Shelley?" he asked. "No. We weren't allowed to read poetry at school." "My ! What strange ways they do have of edu- cating girls young ladies, I mean." "Perhaps they're afraid of making us' romantic." "Beautiful thoughts put into beautiful words couldn't harm anyone," he answered. "It has come to me often while reading that the world isn't half grateful enough to its authors. They give us, in their way, what God gave in His. For a thought must have words to clothe it, and 'tis the words make it comprehensible and comforting. He couldn't speak save by the voice of the flesh, so He clothed His thought with life and set it, a man amongst men, to speak of His glory. And 'twas only a few could read that book, but see what a power it held. For the world can't ever forget it, till it ceases to be a world." I thought how well he spoke when he was moved to eloquence. It might have been better for me to have rested content with that thought instead of pursuing its reason, and giving it a motive power. But the newly discovered Paula was waking rap- idly to a sense of feminine importance, and her na- ture, as it awakened, spread eager wings for further flight to realms of enchanting discoveries. A man's nature, at once so simple, and earnest, 87 and plain-spoken as was Adam Herivale's, seemed to afford an excellent region for exploration. Propriety, as instilled into the virgin mind, has a certain falseness about it that soon clamors for banishment. Once out of leading strings, the claims of conventionality are more likely to be cut asunder, than treated as a curb. I sent my hamper- ing guardian galloping down the hill of freedom on this occasion, and talked and was talked to by a wholesome, manly tongue, as I had never been by governesses and teachers. It seemed to brace and refresh me. But I saw no dangers ahead, and the discovery that I was worth talking to was exhilarating. Afterward, when I taxed memory to recall his words, when I thought them over in solitude, I found myself asking would anyone else in Paula Trent's place have served equally well as Adam Herivale's listener. I might have believed it, in a sudden fit of humility, but for two things. One was a look in those clear blue eyes, as he shook hands; the other his parting words "How I shall pray for this frost to continue, Miss Trent !" The look held a certain lingering admiration that spoke something more than a homage to sex. The words a hardly suppressed desire for future meet- ings. To me neither meant more than a self-revelation eminently flattering, and a promise of further triumphs. CHAPTER IX. A SUNBEAM fluttering into my room next morn- ing laid a light, awakening touch on my eyelids, and I opened them to its dancing welcome. For a few moments I lay quietly content with warmth, and the brightness of the outer world, and the thrice-blessed knowledge that I was no longer compelled to rise at a given moment, face the cold of the atmosphere as well as the water jug, and de- scend with half-frozen fingers to a meal of porridge, thick bread, and weak tea. "Life is getting very pleasant," I said compla- cently, and let my thoughts stray to and fro over the eventfulness of three apparently uneventful days. By that simple number I alone counted my free- dom. Yet they had been full enough of import- ance to lend a tinge of excitement to memory as I passed them in review. "And to-day," I thought to myself, "I shall see him again." Remembering there were two "hims" now con- cerned in my destiny, I particularized this special one by the name my mind had given him "Captain Jim!" What a pity he was going away! How nice it would have been to be taught skating by him. Did those hothouse exotics at Quinton Court skate? I wondered. They looked so useless, with their tight-fitting gowns, and tiny waists and high- 88 A JILT'S JOUKNAL. 89 heeled shoes and marvelously coiffured hair, that I could not picture them doing anything requiring natural exertion. Well, I should soon know. Merry's entrance aroused me from sleepy content. My first inquiry was as to the weather. "Freezing hard, miss, and cold fit to bite your nose off," was her answer. "Good for skating?" I said. "Maybe to those as have liberty. That's not a sort of playment as often comes my way." "I'm going to learn," I said, stretching a hand for the cup of tea she had brought. " 'Tis only right you should do aught that will pleasure you, miss, being so young and frolicsome as* you are." I laughed gayly. "Don't you feel like that too, Merry? You're not so much older." "Save in the ways o' knowledge, miss. A differ- ent sort o' knowledge to your book learning, 'tis true, but it doesn't seem to leave the heart as young as it might be." I dressed, and went downstairs to find the pro- fessor looking very pinched and cold, warming his coat tails at the fire as usual. To him I also confided my views on skating. He knew nothing of the Mere Pond, though he had some acquaintance with the Herivale's history. "A good old yeoman family," .he said. "Date back to the sixteenth century. You'll find them mentioned in old chronicles of the county." "Oh, then, there's no harm in my knowing them?" "Harm," he repeated, and pushed back his spec- tacles to regard me. "How could there be harm, child? What do you mean?" 90 A JILT'S JOUKNAL. "I have met Adam Herivale, the son, two or three times, and he has offered to teach me skating." "A fine healthy exercise and one to be encour- aged," said the professor, looking out at the bright sunshine. "I regret it is beyond my power to ac- company you ; but" his brow cleared, he removed his glasses ''there's Graddage," he said; "she'd go with you as ah as chaperon." "Thank you," I said, laughing. "I fancy I see her face while waiting about for me at the pond's side this weather. Oh, no ! professor. There's no need for her to martyrize herself. I'm all right. Very probably some of the people staying with Lord St. Ouinton will be skating also. I told you I lunched there and had a general introduction yester- day." "So you did, my dear, so you did. A first intro- duction to society you called it. Was it a pleasant one?" "Not at all," I said indifferently. "I didn't enjoy it. They all seemed so heartless and frivolous. Not a man spoke as sensibly as Adam Herivale does." "I have often found," he said, "that the cultured classes rarely display an intelligent interest in ah subjects that should appeal to intelligence." I laughed. "If you could have listened to the conversation at that luncheon table yesterday your opinion would have been confirmed. They only talked of themselves and their acquaintances, and all the idiotic things they did at least they seemed idiotic to me." He regarded me with grave interest. "It occurs to me, Paula, that I have another duty to perform with regard to you. I I confess I hardly know how to set about it. You will natural- A JILT'S JOURNAL. M ly look for pleasures and amusements suitable ah to your years years I have left such a long way behind. I I must consider the matter. Parties and dances I imagine come into the category of a young girl's expectations. Things quite out of my line, you must allow. But because I am an old bookworm it does not follow that your youth should be ah ostracized. The matter must be duly con- sidered. Perhaps Lady St. Quinton would assist me. She has always seemed a very agreeable woman, and ah fairly intelligent." I looked at him in some surprise. "That is what the girls called 'coming out.' But, dear professor, am I in a position to move in London society such society as those people at Quinton Court represent ? You have no adequate idea of their extravagance. Why the women talked of paying twenty-five guineas for a simple morning frock, as I would of as many shillings." "Did they?" he said absently. "But you have money, Paula, and so have I. Frocks can be bought." I laughed. "I know that, professor, but out of my allowance of a hundred a year I hardly see how I could buy them at twenty-five guineas each? That wouldn't leave much for boots and shoes, and hats and jack- ets, and all the other things constituting a well- Iressed woman. No such extravagances are not " r me. With my friend Lesley Heath it is a differ- ent matter. She will go to Drawing-rooms, and be introduced into the proper set, and probably marry a title. That is what her mother expects, so I was told by her mother's friends. But who is Paula Trent that she should entertain such ambitions? 93 A JILT'S JOURNAL. They called me 'country mouse,' and I think I had better remain that." "It is for you to decide, my dear," he said, and I fancied I saw relief in his face. "The position you would take in the world would not be that of a titled nor wealthy young lady. But there are possibilities of success in in other ways." "We will leave them at possibilities," I said, "for the present. Let me look on at life for a little while, professor, before I plunge into it." Again he regarded me gravely, with natural vision unobscured by glasses. "I daresay you will find it interesting," he said. "You seem to possess a considerable amount of sense and discrimination. To the observer of life nothing is insignificant. The smallest idiosyncrasy possesses a claim on the attention and may serve as a clue to the character." "Oh! I don't anticipate writing books," I said, "though I should like to. By the way, professor, there's one favor I'd like to ask of you. I spent a great deal of time at school on music. It seems a great pity not to keep it up. Can I have a piano?" "By all means, my dear. Order one as soon as you please." "Thank you," I said heartily. "But I hope the sound won't disturb you ?" "Oh ! I think not. I think not. When I am en- grossed in study, my ah outer senses are quite impervious to any intrusion from other sources. And I used to be very fond of music," he added. He left the table and went to the window and looked out for a moment. When he came back and stood by the fire, there was that look in his face I had learned to know. JILT'S JOURNAL. 93 "She used to play and sing," he said. His voice had taken a lower key, there was a reminiscent sad- ness in it. "How long ago it all seems! But the old music book is still in my possession. You shall have it, my dear. Perhaps you will give me the pleasure now and then of hearing the old tunes the old songs. There was one I specially liked. I sup- pose you have heard of it. It would be old fash- ioned now, of course. It was about a wreath of roses. Foolish words, but there was a pathetic meaning in them when she sang; and once, in her laughing, girlish way, she curled her hair and put on a wreath of flowers like the the picture on the title-page of the song. But that night I remember she refused to sing the last verse." "What was the last verse ?" I asked, intensely in- terested in all these traits of that unknown mother of mine. "I think," he said thoughtfully, "that the girl is first crowned with roses in the beauty and gayety of youth. Then she wears the orange blossoms, the circlet of the bride; and at last the widow's cap, emblem of loss and broken-heartedness. All very sentimental, my dear, and absurd, no doubt, but sometimes in the after years one looks back on such trifles, and sentiment seems less foolish than it sounds." I could never remember having kissed the profes- sor in all my memories of our life together. Now, moved by some inexplicable impulse, I went swiftly across the room and put my arms about his neck. "How fond you were of her!" I said impulsively. "How well you remember!" He stroked my hair as my head lay against the shoulder of his shabby old coat. "You have found 94 A JILT'S JOURNAL. that out, my dear," he said gently. "I think I was very fond of her. She made my life such a dif- ferent thing while she was in it." "If I were like her perhaps you would be fond of me, too," I said. "It's very lonely to have no home love when one's young." My face was hidden, but I seemed to feel the surprise of his look, even as I felt the check of his pausing hand. "Poor little girl," he said softly. "Poor little Paula. Has it seemed like that to you? I must try and remember " "Oh, no. I don't want you to alter your life or your habits only to feel that I'm not in your way, that you don't mind if I tell you all the things that interest or happen to me." "I shall be pleased if you will," he said. "Young life has a certain charm in its very ignorance and freshness. It is so illogical and romantic, and yet so vivid. My dear, never fancy I don't love you because I I don't express it. My tongue has lost its trick of pretty words grown rusty for want of use. You must charm it back, Paula." He lifted my head and looked at me closely. "Her eyes," he said, in a strangely quiet voice. "Her eyes looking back at me as I remember she used to look. Heaven grant, child, they may never hold what I have seen in hers." CHAPTER X. I SPENT the rest of the morning rearranging the stiff drawing-room; altering the position of furni- ture, deciding where my piano should go, and won- dering whether such things as palms or screens or drapery could possibly make it in any sort of sem- blance to one of the rooms at Quinton Court. Fortunately it had some good points. The paper was a plain, deep-toned terra-cotta, and the lace cur- tains were supported either side by heavy velvet ones rich in hue and texture. I foresaw a new ar- rangement of draping them, and I called in Merry to help, and bring the steps. We were both engrossed in work, and chattering like two magpies, when the sound of wheels at- tracted our attention. I sprang down from my perch and surveyed a flushed face, dusty hands, and tumbled hair with horror. "It's Captain Jim, of course. I'd quite forgotten. You must ask him in, Merry. He's on his way to the station, so I can't keep him waiting." She ushered him in, and I displayed my dusty hands by way of greeting. "Consider we've shaken 'how d'ye do/ Look at this dust ! I've been energetically trying to alter this room into something more artistic. It doesn't look very promising, does it?" "I think it looks charming," he said, but I noticed his eyes went no farther than my head. "It may some day," I answered gleefully. "I'm 95 96 A JILT'S JOURNAL. to have a piano, and when I get books and flowers and a screen or two I think it will be presentable." "I have a lot of odds and ends in my rooms in town," he said eagerly. "Bits of Algerian and In- dian drapery, pottery, and all that. I wish you'd do me the favor to accept some. They're no earthly good to me, for I'll be at least three years in Egypt and they're just the sort of things you could never pick up here, or even in town." "Thank you very much," I said. "But really, Captain Conway, I am your debtor already for a very charming gift, and I cannot afford to be under any more obligations." "Obligations stuff! It's only useless lumber to me. If I leave it behind, I'll never see it again. Why shouldn't you give me such a simple pleasure as knowing the stuff was where you are?" "You put it very nicely," I said. "But I don't feel I ought to accept presents in this lavish fashion Oh ! you have brought my book back !" "Yes, here it is. I found one of the women had got hold of it and was reading out the marked passages. They're wonderfully clever. Didn't you say your mother wrote it?" "Yes. I'm very glad you think it clever. I I suppose those people made fun of it?" "Oh, no! On the contrary, it hit the nail too straight. Cynicism is quite the fashion now. I really think they were sorry when I insisted on bringing it back to you. Some of them are to ask for it in the next box from Mudie's. "I hardly think they'll get it," I said, glancing at the date. "My mother died thirteen years ago, and this book was published the same year." "You have neither father nor mother?" A JILT'S JOURNAL. 97 "No. My guardian is my father's brother, and the only relative I have heard of. I was left to his care." "Lord St. Quinton mentioned other relatives of yours, I believe." "I have never heard of them," I said indifferently. Then I glanced at the clock. "Your train is almost due," I said. "What a broad hint ! Well, I suppose it must be good-by this time. Never mind the dusty hands, Miss Paula. (I never think of you by any other name.) There are many white ones less clean!" He took both of them in his own. "Little girl," he said earnestly, "I'd like to think I should come back some day and meet you as I leave you now. But I know that's impossible. Only if it's your fate ever to get into that world of which you've seen one specimen yesterday, don't let them corrupt you. They will if they can. A laugh or a sneer makes any good, pure feeling seem ridiculous, and one gets ashamed, and lets it fall into the mire. It's a pity but I've seen it so often, with men and women both. We're such fools! We'd rather be called wicked than odd !" He pressed my hands warmly once more, and looked down into my upraised eyes with strange earnestness. "Again good-by I hope you'll be happy I hope life will be kind to you; very kind. I should hate to know you had made acquaintance with sor- row." "But I suppose I shall," I said involuntarily. "Everyone does." "Yes, you're right. Everyone does. But I hope your day's a long way off. Good-by again. I shall 98 A JILT'S JOURNAL. send you that stuff. If you don't want it, pitch it into the fire but if you like me ever so little give it place about your home for my sake." Then he went ; and I watched him drive off, feel- ing a little bewildered, and yet not at all displeased. ****** Merry and I eagerly watched the weather and the chance of the wind lasting. When she came up to brush my hair for me the last thing, she informed me the frost still held out. Then I remembered I had no skates. But she reassured me by the information that there were "lots at Herivale's. More than they need," she added. I fell to studying my face in the glass before me with a new consciousness. I was used to it, having known it for my own these past seventeen years. Besides, I think girls are no judges of beauty. At school Lesley had been acknowledged our prettiest girl. Claire ran her closely in some opinions. I had never inquired about my own share in such opinions generally, or individually. Merry energetically plying the brush caught sight of my intent eyes. "You've a wonderful fine head o' hair, miss," she observed. "There's plenty of it," I said. "But I'm doubtful of the color, Merry. Would you call it red ?" "Bless your heart, no, miss. 'Tis a warm color, I grant, but run through with streaks o' gold. Just look, when the light falls on it!" She held up a strand, which certainly did glitter. " 'Tis a sort o' livin' fire," she went on. "I never seed such a color, and it do go with your skin and the warmth o' cheek, just as if Natur' had meant it A JILT'S JOURNAL. 9* should. Were you considerin' o* your looks, miss, when you were so grave-like? I shouldn't trouble if I were you." "Oh, I'm not troubling," I said. "Only I wish I knew if they were pleasing. At school I never bothered, but when I was among all those grand people at the Court I felt they were criticising every- thing about me my hair, my face, my dress, my manners. It was horrid!" "Perhaps they was envying o' them, miss. Not so onlikely. For the ladies' maids let out a lot ; and what with buttermilk to wash their faces in, and stuff to make their hair golden, and color to put on their cheeks instead o' what Natur' puts into 'em, well, maybe they was a-wonderin' how you came by such pure flesh and blood as you've got. The gentlemen's eyes told you so, or I'm no judge." I thought of Captain Conway, but flattering as had been his looks I could not tell if they were ap- preciative. All country girls had good complexions and clear skins. There was nothing unusual in my possession. For my own part I admired Lesley's dark hair and pale creamy skin and violet eyes a thousand times more than my own red and white tints, and coppery locks. However, as no amount of thought or skill could alter them, I knew I must be satisfied. So after making Merry give an extra long brush to that strange hair by way of making it shine on the morrow, I dismissed her and went to bed. I read a few chapters more of Fenella before I slept, and then put the book under my pillow by way of having something of her close to me in my hours of sleep. 100 A JILT'S JOURNAL. When I awoke my first thought was of the weather, and I rushed to the window. Crisp hard frost still reigned. The cold was in- tense. I returned to bed to await Merry and my morning tea with a delightful knowledge of forth- coming excitement. Her face was also beaming. " 'Tis just as you wanted, miss," she informed me when she entered the room. "But terrible cold. It's to be hoped you have some sort o' furs for wrappage as is the way o' the quality generally speaking, otherwise stand- ing about by that Mere Pond will be the sort o' thing to freeze your very marrow." "Oh, I've a warm coat," I said, thinking of a cer- tain tailor-made costume of dark-blue cloth and sable that I had been measured for before leaving school, and as yet unworn. It would come in use- ful now, and so would the little dark-blue velvet toque that went with it. I put on the dress for breakfast. I was in radiant spirits. I babbled nonsense during the meal to an extent that must have tried the professor's patience, though he was considerate enough to put up with it. As soon as it was over Merry and I set off to the dispiriting croaks of Mrs. Graddage and her pro- verbs. They could not affect our spirits, however. The air was keen as a knife, but the sun shone brightly over the hard, white road. Everything sparkled. A gossamer ripple of webs spanned the bushes, the robins chirped from the hedge-rows. Flocks of sheep munched the swedes cut and scat- tered in the fields. Above our heads the sky was blue as a sapphire. My feet danced along; I could have laughed aloud for sheer joy of living. It was, as Adam Herivale had said, a long walk A JILT'S JOURNAL. 101 to the Mere Pond, but I felt capable of one twice its length on that morning. Merry took me by many short cuts and twisting lanes, and at last I caught sight of the old farmhouse. It stood in a dip of the valley, the hills sheltering it to north and east. The house itself was built of stone, gray and lichen cov- ered, as was the slate roof. The square porch was like a deep recess, and ivy grew around it and the latticed windows. The fields that stretched on every side were of course but dull brown patches at this time of year, but their extent surprised me, as did the farmsteads and barns and cottages which be- longed, so Merry told me, to the farm acreage. As we came into the road again we saw a figure before us engaged in driving a cow and calf into an enclosure. Merry touched my arm. " 'Tis he I told you of, miss," she said. "The old ancient man that claims fathership to my Gregory." I looked at the queer old yokel with wondering interest. He had got the animals through a field gate, and closed it. He turned toward us as he heard our steps. An old, wrinkled face of natural rusty red, a pair of deep-set, twinkling eyes, a thatch of gray, wiry hair under a battered old hat, these repre- sented the famous lady-killer of whom I had heard. "Good morning, father," said Merry, gaily. "A fine day, isn't it?" He fixed his eyes on me, and touched the brim of his battered hat. "The sun be shining fair," he said in a cracked, piping voice. "Come down out o' heaven, I should say, in form o' a maiden. A rare beauty, Merrieless, and puts you aside same as a extinguisher does a 103 A JILT'S JOURNAL. light. Not o' your sort, neither. Why comes it you're in company?" "This is my young lady whom I wait upon," said Merry, proudly. "Miss Trent up to Scarffe yonder. Surely you've heerd o' her by now ?" "Not to my remembrancing," said the old man. "But if this be her, she'll pass as a fine, handsome piece even among her betters!" "Betters !" snorted Merry, in indignation. "What betters should she have, being a lady in her own right, by birth and breeding and family?" The old man hung his head, but his eyes leered knowingly under the shadow of his hat. "You were allays a talkative female, Merrieless Hibbs," he said. "And if so be you'd 'a' given the young lady a proper introducing, I might ha' made her my compliments in better style. She's a dandy bit and no mistake. Be ye a-goin' to the farm, miss?" "We are going to the pond," I answered. "Will the ice bear?" "Fine. The young maister's been up t'ot this hour o' more, with stable lads to broom for him. And I do hear a carriage load o' quality be comin' down noontide. I reckon they'll not pass your young ladyship for merit in the way o' looks." I laughed. And so pleased was he by that appre- ciation that he gave his old hat a jaunty twist, and pulled at his waistcoat until it threatened to reach his ankles as well as his knees. "Trust my judgment as a man o' ripe years," he went on. "And not a shy one, neither. 'Tis a good- ish bit o' mischief I've done in my day, but a bright eye and a rosy cheek were allays o' that seducin* natur', I couldn't but play to them." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 103 "It's cold standin' here," interrupted Merry. "We'd better be gettin' on, miss." "Hsh hsh !" chuckled the ancient sinner. " 'Tis afeared she be o' I makin' a loose speech hurtful to the feelin's o' modest females. But I knows my place where ladies is concerned, and I wouldn't cause the blush o' bashfulness to rise i' that comely cheek, so there's no need to haste away." "You must think you're mortal entertainin', if we've naught better to do than stand listenin' to your rubbage!" exclaimed Merry. "Come along, Miss Paula !" "You're but a second-best poor sort o' girl," snapped the ancient, with a display of one unprepos- sessing tooth, left, like a forlorn wreck of better things, in his upper jaw. "And forward, too. For 'tis the young lady should give you her orders, not t'other way about." "It is cold, though," I said. "So good morning, Mr. Blox. I daresay I shall see you again." "Nawt a doubt o' that," he assured me emphati- cally. "A face like living sunshine, leave alone such a finely grawed figger, b'ain't the sort o' things as Gregory Blox forgets." "You're an old sinner," said Merrieless, "and ought to be readin' your Bible, and thinkin' o' your latter end, 'stead o' talkin' onmeaning words. If my young lady was same way o' thinkin' as myself, she'd clout your old ears for your forwardness, but then I suppose 'tis your age makes things excus- able." I slipped a shilling into the wrinkled old hand, and laughed another good morning at sight of his astonished face and dropped lip. He had a great deal more to say, but he said it to 104 A JILT'S JOURNAL. our backs as we hurried off to the pond, skirting the quaint old garden that surrounded the farmhouse. Another quarter of an hour brought us to the pond. Several figures were moving about. Adam Heri- vale's stalwart form and broad shoulders were con- spicuous among them. He saw us directly and came forward. I shook hands with him. "You see I've come," I said. "What about the skating?" "The ice will bear fine," he answered. "I've heard that the Quinton Court folk are coming down presently. This is the best skating place the coun- try round. It's a sort of lake, though we call it a pond. But you've no skates, Miss Trent !" he added suddenly. "No; I never thought of them, or I suppose I could have bought some in the village. It was very stupid of me." "I'll run to the house and get you a pair of my sister's." "But won't they require them for themselves?" "There's extra ones," he said, "and an hour or two will put you into the way of it before the great folks come." He turned swiftly and was off. I stood watch- ing his rapid strides, when a piping voice at my elbow startled me. "Ladyship," it said, "I've made bould to bring you these skatey-irons. I seed you'd none in your hands, nor that brazen lass o' yours, neither." I looked round and beheld the ancient Gregory once again. He was holding out a pair of lady's skates, polished and sharpened, and evidently ready for use. A JILT'S JOURNAL. 105 "Oh, thank you," I said. "But Mr. Herivale has just gone to fetch me a pair from the house." He chuckled feebly. "Like eno' these be the ones. Aye, aye, I seed him. 'Twas a most ungodly haste he was in. Not a 'good mornin',' or a 'fine day' in his breath. Don't be perplexin' your pretty head wi' any manner o' thought as to trouble taken for your sake, miss. Tis in the nat'ral way o' man to render service to woman, and when she's a handsome piece o' flesh and blood as makes a pictur' for eyes to behold, then the service is honorarry, so to say. Honorarry," he repeated, as if the ready-coined syllable pleased his ear. "You here again, you old piece!" broke in Mer- ry's voice. "What manner o' business can you have with idleness ? 'Tain't your play-time yet." "I'm tired o' work, lass, and it would be a true comfort to watch the sportin' as goes on with the superior class. And the pretty ladies a-glidin' and a-slidin' to and fro, with their petticoats a-flyin' and their ankles twinkling. Warms the blood again, it does, Merrieless, and no harm because it do run a trifle quicker." "Where did you get them skates ?" she demanded abruptly. Again he chuckled. "Found 'em," he said. "And borrowed the loan o' usage for her ladyship, your mistress." "You'll get into trouble if you don't take care. The young master be just gone to get some o' the same." "I can wait," said the ancient man, complacently. "There'll maybe come need o' me for the screw- work o' her ladyship's foot" his eyes sought the 108 A JILT'S JOURNAL. ground "seein' as how machines o' this sort don't take nat'ral to the ways o' balance." "Well, I can see Mr. Herivale and his sisters comin' along now," said Merry. "And you'll have to explain how you came by those skates. Such foolishness! For you can't put them on for my young lady, and even if you could, she wouldn't know the use o' them or how to stand." "What are you going to do yourself, Merry?" I asked abruptly. "Oh, if you won't take it as a liberty, miss, I was goin' for a turn with Gregory. He's found me a pair o' skates, and we'll keep out o' the way o' the gentry, miss." "But can you skate?" I asked. "Yes, miss, since I was a child. Though 'tisn't often I have the chance, bein' kept close in service, but a short time o' practice gives it back again." "I'm very glad," I said heartily; "for you can keep yourself warm and have some fun on your own account." "Hear that now !" exclaimed the old man. "There's kindliness o' spirit ! Take it to heart, lass," he added, fixing a warning glance on Merrie- less, "and offer your thanksgiving for such a sweet, unparticular mistress. You don't pick 'em up none too often these parts !" CHAPTER XL ADAM HERIVALE brought his sisters to me for introduction. Pleasant, bright-faced country girls of twenty and twenty-four years of age. The borrowing of the skates was explained and excused, and they were duly fixed, and I tottered forth, supported by Adam's strong arm. I managed to stand and move about quicker than I had anticipated, but my instructor was very pains- taking, and very patient, and, fortunately, I was lithe and active, and had no sort of mauvaise honte whatever. By the time the Quinton Court party arrived I could glide along quite respectably, hold- ing Adam's hand. He looked somewhat disconcerted as the wag- onettes drove up, and a flock of chattering, gaily- dressed women got out with their attendant cavaliers. "I suppose you'll join them?" he said, bringing me to a standstill on our quiet bit of the broad sheet of ice. "Indeed I won't," I answered. "I want to learn to skate, not idle my time away with these people." He gave me a quick glance. "Some of the gen- tlemen would doubtless be glad enough to take my place," he observed. "Oh," I said huffily, "if you're tired and bored pray say so. I forgot I was keeping you from your own share of enjoyment." 107 108 A JILT'S JOURNAL. He readjusted the hand I had pettishly snatched from his arm. "My enjoyment," he said, "can never exceed the present moment, or the honor you are doing me. It was of yourself I thought." "Don't trouble about me," I said carelessly. "I'm perfectly happy." I had no need to ask whether he shared the feel- ing. His face spoke for him. "There is a quieter bit up yonder," he said pres- ently, as dots of scarlet and blue, and sealskin and sable, began to flit and skim over the polished surface. "Up yonder" was a divergence or dip of the pond, fed by some minor stream. A narrow slip, hard-frozen like the rest, beneath leafless alders. He guided me there even as he spoke. One or two of the Court party flashed by us as we slowly moved. No one seemed to recognize me, however. The high collar of my cloth jacket came over my ears and round my face, the close-fitting toque left little of my audacious hair visible. I was glad when we reached the stream and were moving to and fro, he giving me less and less of his aid, I growing confident and surer of balance as the time passed. We spoke very little, but I think he was in a mood of serene content. "You make an excellent master," I said, after a pause of silence. "And you a most creditable pupil," he answered. "I want you to try by yourself now. Don't be afraid. I shall keep quite close, if you should fall. I don't think you will. You've got your balance." I tried, and being absolutely indifferent to slips and jerks and the usual accomrjaniment of any new r A JILT'S JOURNAL. 109 physical exercise, I had the gratification of being able to make some progress. It was very far from being that "swallow flight" and embodiment of grace described in books, but it was promising, and I began to feel my feet more under the control of my will than I had been of theirs. "You must be tired," said Adam at last. "Let us go back now and I will take you to the house for luncheon. There's always a meal ready these times. The grand folk mostly bring their own things, but mother sends them tea, or soup, or ale if they want it. I promised for you that you'd come in and see my people." I thought of the professor's words, "A good old yeoman family," and concluded it would be interest- ing to make their acquaintance. I sat down on the bank, and he unfastened my skates. Just then I heard a gay voice hailing me by name. "Paula!" it cried, "Paula Trent?" I looked ug and saw Lady Brancepeth hovering near us. "So you are here," she said, as she glided swiftly across the dividing space. "I thought you would be. Where have you hidden yourself?" "I've been having my first lesson in skating. This," I explained, blushing stupidly, "is Mr. Adam Herivale of the farm there." Her eyes swept over his broad shoulders and stal- wart figure, then rested a moment on his face, as he lifted his cap. "I think we have met before, or at least I've seen you riding, wasn't it ?" I caught an odd flash in his eyes, but I was igno- rant of its meaning. 110 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Yes," he said ; "the day you lost your whip." "Of course ! I thought I remembered your face. Well, Paula, how did you get on?" "Not very well, I'm afraid," I said, rising to my feet, and feeling numbed and dazed after the skates had been removed. "But it's lovely. I hope I shall soon learn." "Are you going home?" she asked. "Oh, no! I shall stay here all day. I've been invited to lunch," I added, laughing. "What! in the farmhouse? How charming! Mr. Herivale, couldn't your hospitality extend itself a little further? I'm absolutely starving." "I should be only too honored," he answered somewhat stiffly. "But I thought your party were always provided " "With luncheon baskets? So we are. I'm not going to inflict you with any others of the party. I'll chaperon Paula, and see your famous old house at the same time. I've heard something of its history." He made no remark. I fancied he was somewhat discourteous to this lovely butterfly, but put it down to bashfulness. She asked him to take off her skates, and I thought such feet and ankles might have made a conquest of any male heart. She chat- tered away to me much as she had done on the castle hill, but an even greater sense of the incon- gruity of the world with these primitive scenes came over me, and I felt cross at its intrusion. As for Adam, he gave only curt monosyllables to her airy banter. We found luncheon awaiting us in a lovely old room, wainscoted with oak, and having a huge fire of blazing logs to give kindly welcome, from a great A JILT'S JOURNAL. Ill open fireplace. Steaming soup was brought in by a neat serving-maid. The table was liberally spread with cold joints, turkey, ham and meat pies. Lady Brancepeth babbled delight. It was all so homely and unconventional. She ate so daintily, with such airy grace of finger touches, and move- ments of head or lips, that I watched her with a sort of fascination. I wondered if Adam felt the same. It was impossible to tell from his face. It had grown expressionless, and his words, though studi- ously polite, were curt as tongue could make them. Lady Brancepeth demanded the history of the farm, and he gave it her in the same formal fashion. He was a revelation to me in this new attitude of stiffness, and I longed to ask its meaning. From time to time his eyes rested uneasily upon me, and then turned to the door as if expecting someone to enter. "I hoped I should see your father and mother," I said at last. "They seldom intrude on company," he an- swered. "But if you wish it, Miss Trent, my mother would be very pleased to make your ac- quaintance. She has known of you for some time. I think your uncle mentioned your coming home for good." I opened my eyes wide. "Oh, did he? I wonder w hy " Then I crimsoned to the temples, conscious of a foolish speech. "When you have finished your luncheon," con- tinued Adam, "I will show you over some of the old rooms, and my mother's parlor. She sits there a great deal. Her health is not good, and my father 112 A JILT'S JOURNAL. is careful of her. They are truly fond of one an- other my father and mother," he went on more rapidly. " 'Twas a love match at first and 'twill be that to the last. There's no one in the world for him like 'wife.' He never calls her aught but that." He looked suddenly straight at the lovely face and lifted, insolent eyes of the fashionable lady at his board. "It sounds foolish, I suppose, to your ladyship. But we commoner folks have very simple ways, and love and duty mean a great deal to us." She laughed with evident amusement. "So I have heard; but pray, my dear man, do not call a family like yours 'common folk.' You are of the stuff that made England what it is. I wish a little of your blood could be infused into our effete nobility. We would be the gainers, I assure you. If it carried a few of your primitive virtues with it so much the better. The word 'wife,' as you said it, has a delicious, old-fashioned flavor about it that almost makes one believe in Lubin and Chloe, and eternal constancy. I wonder if you take after your father?" That little pause on the pronoun and the half- mocking, half -amused expression of those lovely turquoise eyes gave the question a second meaning. He colored in an embarrassed, stupid fashion that made me angry with him. Why couldn't he speak to this woman as he spoke to me? "I hope I shall never do worse," he said at last. And again she laughed, that cold, little laugh I was learning to know. "You look as if you held all the primitive vir- tues," she said. "Love and constancy are part of A JILT'S JOUKNAL. 113 them. I foresee a second edition of Darby and Joan when it comes to your turn to make of life a pastoral idyl." She rose from the table. At the same moment some more people entered, ushered in by the fine old white-haired man I had seen in church, and whose likeness proclaimed his relationship to Adam. He seated his guests and shook hands with me, and then bustled about, waiting on them and carving, and pressing hospitality in a manner that was de- lightful, because it was so evidently the outcome of genuine feeling. Adam approached me under cover of the con- fusion. "If you would come away, Miss Trent, I should like to introduce you to my mother." I glanced at him deprecatingly. "What of Lady Brancepeth ?" "We do not want her, I fancy. Surely she will go back to her own friends." "She will expect you to escort her." He resumed the old air of courteous indifference. "I will do so after I have left you in the parlor." "Very well," I said, "I'll tell her that." But when I had told her I was surprised at the sudden anger in her face. "Of course you can do as you please," she said. "But I expect your farmer friend to take me back to the pond first." "Can't you find your way?" I asked. "I am not as at home among pig-styes and cow- sheds as you seem to be," she said sharply. I was puzzled at her tone and apparent ill-humor. She had been so radiant and smiling a short time before. 114 A JILT'S JOUKNAU "I saw no pig-styes. You cross that paved walk, and then go through the garden." "Thank you for troubling to explain, but I've no doubt Colin will be my guide when you can spare him." "Colin?" I said stupidly, and then, understand- ing, grew scarlet with sudden shame and indig- nation. "One name is as good as another in Arcadia," she said, with her little, chill smile. "And I have a fancy for Colin." I moved away. Adam Herivale was standing in the same place. "I think I will not see your mother to-day," I said. "Lady Brancepeth is eager to get back to the pond, and indeed so am I." There was something proud and hurt, yet in- finitely gentle, in those surprised eyes of his, but he only said, "As you wish, Miss Trent. Of course I am at your service." I remembered the first time he had used those words, and had the grace to feel a little ashamed of myself. But it was too late to retract. I left the room, and heard Lady Brancepeth's clear voice be- hind me. "I'll take your pupil off your hands," she was saying. "It is too bad to spoil your sport, and I think a girl gets on better skating with one of her own sex." What he answered I could not hear, but when we were once more at the pond he brought my skates and put them on, and then, lifting his cap, left me with Lady Brancepeth. Of course I could not get on at all, and I felt she took a malicious pleasure in making me look awk- A JILT'S JOURNAL. 115 ward. Finally I lost my temper. "I wish you'd leave me to myself," I said. "I believe I'd do a great deal better alone." "Poor little maid!" she said mockingly. "And is it Colin she wants?" I snatched my hand angrily from her own. "What makes you torment me so ?" I asked fool- ishly. "You've quite spoilt my day." She turned her brilliant eyes on my angry face and laughed. "You baby !" she said. "Do you know no better than to give yourself away like that 'spoilt your day' because I took you away from a farm lout who, to my thinking, is decidedly presumptuous. Pray forgive me for not appreciating your bucolic tastes. Shall I go after him and bring him back?" Again I flushed scarlet ; the tears of mortification and pride rushed to my eyes. "When you are a little older," went on my tor- mentor, "you'll know better than to display prefer- ences so openly. Colin is very handsome, I grant, but scarcely a desirable parti for Professor Trent's niece. I've tried to prevent you from making your- self remarkable. You ought to be grateful, not angry. Your worldly experience is as yet nil. Be glad that anyone is interested enough in you to show you the ropes to handle, and the way to handle them. There is no mistake in life so disastrous as a false step on the threshold. I must call and have a chat with the professor about you, my dear. Meanwhile adieu. I'm going to catch up Colin. Shall I tell him you are disconsolate?" She skimmed off, graceful as a swallow, her airy laugh ringing on the air, where it seemed the sting of her echoing words still lingered. CHAPTER XII. I POTTERED about in a blundering, aimless fash- ion when left to myself. I was conscious of intense humiliation and in- tense anger. Everyone else seemed to be flitting about in the enjoyment of various stages of ability, but I felt a fool. No one offered me a helping hand, and I was in mortal terror of falling. This was altogether a different experience from my previous ventures, supported by Adam Herivale's strong arm and skilful aid to balance. "Hullo!" said a voice suddenly, so close that I started and would have fallen but for a hand that caught my arm. "Near a cropper that time. Thought I remem- bered you. Don't seem enjoying yourself. Let me lend a hand I'll get you along." It was Lord "Bobby" who spoke, and for a mo- ment the relief of a friendly voice was so welcome that I cared very little who was the speaker. "Oh, ivill you?" I said eagerly. "This is the first time I've ever tried to skate, and I'm so stupid." He took both hands crossways and we moved over the ice together. "Wasn't there anyone to teach you?" he asked. "Yes, but he's gone." "Oh, must have been a damned ass ! I beg your pardon slipped out. But why did he go till you'd found your legs?" "Oh, I don't know," I said pettishly. "I do wish 116 A JILT'S JOURNAL. 117 I could do it. It seems so easy, and when anyone helps me I feel all right, but the instant I try by myself I can't even slide forward." He chuckled. "Yes, 'tis a shaky sort of feeling till you get used to it. But you'll soon be all right. When we get out of the ruck you must try one hand." "You're awfully kind to help me," I said pres- ently. "Not a bit. Deuced pretty girl oughtn't to want for help, you know." "Your wife," I said, "skates beautifully. Do you see her over there doing figures ?" "Oh, she's Ai at that runs 'em up, too! No paying, though. Don't suit her book." This being Greek to me, I made no response. "We drive separate teams, you know. Most peo- ple do. Ask no questions, told no lies; that sort. How surprised you look ! Bet there isn't a girl in London don't know what that means. Tries it on, too, on her own, when her time comes. The women all said what a jolly innocent you were when you left the other day. By the way, Lorry (that's my wife) got hold of that book you left behind and read us out some eye-openers. Demn'd clever it was. If that's your sort o' reading you oughtn't to be so green." I stopped my face one burning flush of anger. "That was my mother's book. She wrote it. I'm sure there's nothing wrong in it." His pale, watery eyes met mine with unmistak- able surprise. "Wrong! Who said it was wrong? D d clever, that's all." "You spoke of it as if it had quite another mean- ing to to what it seems to me to have !" 118 A JILT'S JOURNAL. "Didn't mean that assure you. Jolly queer girl you are, conscience and all that, I suppose. Take my tip throw it aside and face the world on your own. It hates goody-goodies. You're awfully fetching, but you'll never get on till you've thrown all that moral ballast overboard and taken life for no better than it is!" I was speechless from indignation, and he guided me on and up to the spot where his wife was doing the outside edge and other mysterious devices, watched by a crowd of admirers. She saw me with her husband and paused a mo- ment to laugh. "Why, Bobby," she said, "what's this? A new line?" He grinned. "Shame to let Miss Trent stumble about and no one to lend her a hand. Besides good example." Her eyes flashed. "You never seem to want for male escort, Paula," she said. "It's odd how pleas- ant boredom can be made if one has long eye- lashes." "Come along, Paula," said Lord Brancepeth, audaciously. "Don't mind her; she's in a wax about something. Let's have another try." He bore me off, whether I would or no; but my face was tingling, and the smart of hot, indignant tears lay behind those lashes that Lady Brancepeth had alluded to so mockingly. When self-control returned, I asked him to take me back to the chairs. I was tired and wanted my skates off. I glanced about for Adam, but he seemed to have disappeared. I caught sight of Mer- rieless, however, and signaled her to accompany me. "What's made you freeze up so sudden?" asked A JILT'S JOURNAL. Ill) Lord Brancepeth, as we neared the bank. "Not a word but 'yes' or 'no.' Surely you don't mind what Lorry said. She's got a nasty sting to her tongue, but, bless you, no one cares for that. I expect she's envying the color of your hair, if the truth were known. It's the shade every smart woman's mad about. But I defy all the hair stuffs in Christendom to do what Nature's done for you !" "As I'm never likely to go into your smart world, Lord Brancepeth, there's not much advantage in having the fashionable shade of hair," I said. "And I'm sure your wife is lovely enough, and admired enough, to envy no one." "Oh, she's no angel," he said, "and, by Jove ! she makes me sing small. Life ain't all skittles, my dear, take my word. On the whole I think you quiet country folk get the best of it. No debts, no show, no worries. We're sponged on, spied on, im- posed on every way. Got to keep up in the race or be knocked under. All we do known. All we spend, only good to other people ; half ruined by ex- travagances, that aren't a ha'porth o' use to our- selves. Afraid of our servants, our tradespeople; all the beggarly, rotten pack who spy out our secrets and fatten on our incomes. Lord! how sick I get of it all sometimes." "Then why do it?" I asked. His laugh rang harshly on the frosty air. "Why? Because we're fools. Because we must be in the swing. Because it's bred in our bones. Because we're like sheep and must follow on one an- other's heels ! Oh ! there's no end to the reasons once one starts on 'em. Why even you, country innocent as you are, if you married into the set and went through a season, would turn out just like the 120 A JILT'S JOURNAL. others. You must. There's no help for it. It's been set a-goin' and it'll go as long as vice and gold and vanity are in the world. How Lorry would laugh if she heard me talk and well she might. I'm one of the worst o' the lot, and I've never cared who knew it or what was said of it. Oh, here we are. What a rum old card! Who the deuce is he?" The ancient was standing guard over a chair. He must have seen me coming up, and was prepar- ing to remove the skates. "That's one of our celebrities," I said, laughing. "He's on the farm, and his years number fourscore and something." "Jove! Fancy living to that. Jolly sick he must be of it. Shall I take off your skates for you?" "I won't trouble you," I answered. "The old man can do it, and here is my maid also. I'm very much obliged to you, Lord Brancepeth, for your kindness and," I added, "your valuable informa- tion. Perhaps some day I may need it." "I hope to God you won't," he said earnestly. "Well, if I can't do anything more, good-by." I stepped up on the bank and seated myself. The ancient Gregory became garrulous, and was just about to divest me of my skates when Adam Herivale flashed into sight and bore down. "Let me do that," he urged. In some surprise I consented. "How did you get on?" "Oh, very badly. It seemed no use trying." "You really should not leave off until you have mastered it," he said. "Unless, of course, you're tired." A JILT'S JOURNAL. 121 I was not tired, but I had lost all inclination to go on the pond again. "If you would take me in to see your mother now?" I said hesitatingly. He looked up quickly and his face flushed with emotion. "Do you mean it?" he said huskily. "I thought all these grand people had made you ashamed?" "What nonsense! Pray don't think such a thing." "I should be very proud, very happy," he went on, as he loosened the straps. "I wish you'd stay a bit longer. We could give you tea, and then I'll take you on again if you'll let me. And we'll be skating by torchlight. That's a pretty sight. You'd like to see it?" I hesitated. "My uncle," I said "might be uneasy " "Oh, if that's all, one of the farm boys could take a message." My face cleared. I did so want to be able to skate. "If you're sure it's no trouble," I began. "I wish you wouldn't keep on saying that. I'm a plain, homely man, and what I say I mean. If you've forgotten that night on the ruins, I haven't !" I ignored any other meaning than that I chose to give his speech. "Very well," I said, "I'll stay." As Merrieless came up at the same moment I told her my intention, and saw from her radiant face that it suited well enough with her inclinations. Then Adam slung my skates over his arm and we went back to the farmhouse. He led me into the beautiful old kitchen, and then across a stone passage into a wide room quaintly 122 A JILT'S JOURNAL. but comfortably furnished, and having a large bow window looking into the old-fashioned garden. The fireplace was wide and open like that in the room where luncheon had been spread. Seated on a carved oak settle, beside the blazing logs, was a woman. White-haired, dark-eyed, with a sweet, placid face a face that bore some dim likeness to Adam's enough to show that she was mother to this stalwart, handsome man, even had not the soft welcome of love looked out so uncon- sciously from her uplifted eyes. "Mother," he said simply, "I've brought Miss Trent to see you." She rose and came to meet me, her hand out- stretched. "I am very pleased," she said, in a soft, gentle-pitched voice. "Very pleased. I know your uncle, my dear. He has sometimes honored us with his company. Come and sit by the fire, and tell me how you like Scarffe." Adam slipped away and left us together. I felt so at home, so charmed with her kindly, natural ways that I chatted of all and everything concerning my yet unimportant life. It is only now, to-night, in looking back on the interview that I seem to realize how interested she was, and how gently she dealt with much of my foolish boastings and efforts at importance. Her great pity for me centred in the fact of my mother- lessness. "Men folks are very well," she said ; "but it needs a woman to understand a girl's nature in its open- ing years a woman who loves her." Then all my foolish babble ceased, and I grew silent and listened to her, and was the better for it. The same tranquillity that brooded over those A JILT'S JOURNAL". 123 quiet hills and held the quaint old town in a charmed peace seemed to have found another resting-place here, in this old room, with this placid, tender presence. It did me good to hear her talk. To hear of her youth and her first coming to this dear old home, and her husband's goodness and faithful love, and the smooth, unrippled surface of their wedded lives, which to this day had known no cross, or shame, or division. A different story this from that I had heard from the lips of a worldly woman ; a different standpoint this gentle faith and honor from that where disillusion viewed its social wrecks. Paula's self-importance shrunk away abased Paula's vanity, of whose dawn none was more con- scious than herself, fell suddenly off like a discarded garment. Her foolish pride hid a shamed head be- fore the simple, godly honesty of a peasant woman. And Paula sits here to-night reviewing all the events of this eventful day, and knows that chief and more important than Lady Brancepeth's satires, or Lord "Bobby's" attentions, or Adam Herivale's kindness, or the delicious enjoyment of the skating by torchlight successfully accomplished at last was that quiet talk in the old-fashioned parlor of Woodcote. All or any of these things may be means to an end, may have a future bearing on character, but for her own good, her mental and moral education, Paula must acknowledge that in that old parlor she heard higher wisdom, better, nobler things than life had yet taught her. As I write this, I look up and see my face in the glass opposite. 124 A JILT'S JOURNAL. Has Paula two faces ? The one I know the one I don't. I have to lay down my pen and consider this point. Something stirs in me as the sap stirs in bough and bud. Spring's miracle of wakening life is not more marvellous than the miracle of wakening Nature. My mind has taken an excursion into new realms; I see before me one hard, beaten path, but others diverge from it to right and left, and the signal-posts to each name only the paths, but not their destination. A strange sense of bewilderment, of isolation, comes over me. What has touched this hidden spring? What has brought to the surface of my own knowledge the vague and unspoken possibilities which lie slumber- ing in my soul ? ****** Beside me, close at hand, lies my precious book. A hurried impulse to dip into its pages brought forth this pearl of thought. Tired as I am I write it as footnote to my own confessions, and the day's adventures. "When the moral force awakens, question its rea- son for so doing. It is a slumbering giant whose disturbance threatens all your future peace. Hence- forth your warfare is a double one. You are at- tacked from within and without. Keep clear vision fixed upon one issue; there is only one of impor- tance. The others are but side lines, to lead you astray, or leave you irresolute." Oh, wise writer, why have you left me alone to clamber as best I can the steep sides of the hill Diffi- 'A 1 JILT'S JOURNAL. 125 culty? Why are you not here to aid me by your helping hand, your wonderful wisdom ? Did you make of your life as perfect and beauti- ful a thing as your words say it can be made ? Do you, by some spiritual prescience, know aught of mine, and will those pages guide me ? Your living thoughts though brain and voice are dumb? The great, white, silent world lies all around me. In all the silent house I hear no sound. I know now how lonely I am! CHAPTER XIII. I WOKE up to a world of dazzling whiteness. Snow had laid its pure enchantment over the hills and fields, and turned the castle ruins into a thing of magic beauty. The sky was gray and heavy. All hopes of skat- ing were at an end for that day, and with a sigh of disappointment I resigned myself to life indoors. I awaited the post eagerly. Surely one of the girls might send me a decent budget by this time. But the weather had affected even postal deliver- ies, and it was nearly noon before the letters arrived. To my delight there was one from Lesley a thing of many sheets, and promising joy enough to atone for the disappointment brought by the weather. I read it by the drawing-room fire. "You wonderful Paula! How did you contrive to get so much interest out of such a brief space of time? And a man already to write about, and to make interesting! I believe you are the one and only person who could answer the proverb about a silk purse and a sow's ear. You have the alchemy of imagination, as we always said. Do you know, Claire and I could see you reading that book in the train, speaking to that handsome yeoman (don't fall in love with him, my dear), and feel introduced to your grim old housekeeper and the dear old absent-minded professor ! 126 'A JILT'S JOURNAL. 127 "Is that a compliment ? Take it how you please, but believe we are eager for more news of your sur- roundings. I wonder if you will go to the Court while they have that house party? I almost envy you your freedom. I get lectured from morning till night, and am obliged to imbibe perpetual doses of worldly wisdom and be drilled into the ways of society. We are going to the Riviera soon. My stepmother (Lady 'Archie,' as everyone calls her) and I. We are to stay with some friends of hers who have a villa at Nice. So, my dear old chum, I don't know when we shall meet, unless I can have you for a week or two before the season begins. I'm to be presented at one of the March Drawing- rooms. My dress is ordered already. In fact, I hear so much and see so much of the bustle and im- portance of fashionable life that I get bewildered. But I haven't your trick of presenting things, my Paula, so you must imagine them. We had a lot of people to dinner on Christmas Day. Some were relatives, some friends. But they were all very grand and very fashionable, and Claire and I were quite at sea among them. The women seem to think a great deal of dress. Most of those I have met are on the wing to the Riviera, or Rome, or Cairo. It seems no more to them to flit from one place to another than to cross the street. What a self-imposed treadmill society appears! Yet, though I heard people abuse it, they all declare they must go on with the exercise! I wonder if I shall like it when I too 'am in the swing' ? "Dear it's too horrid not to be able to speak to you. I seem to have hundreds of things to say, but they won't stand being written down. However, I promise to write you long yarns from Nice, and tell 128 'A JILT'S JOURNAL. you all about the life there. Lady Archie says my great fault is that I'm so dreadfully young. I've a small step-brother here, but he's so hemmed in by nurses and rules that I scarcely get a glimpse of him. But he's a darling cherub, and, of course, his father's idol. As for Lady A. Well, it's im- possible to say what she thinks of him. She accepts maternity as another role she must play, and I sup- pose she plays it according to the best rules of soci- ety. I wonder what she's like when she's really natural. I'd like to ask father, but I daren't. He seems always in a haze of business and company promoting, and he's director on goodness knows how many boards if you know what that means? I confess I don't. And Lady A. grumbles because Stanhope Gate is the wrong side of the Park, as if that can matter when one has horses and carriages at command. "Now, my dearest dear, good-by. Keep on writ- ing. I love to know how your days go on. Address here till you get my Riviera letter. Your loving and devoted old chum, LESLEY." I put the letter back in its envelope and sat gaz- ing into the fire. I had a budget upstairs ready to send off, so there was no need to write a reply. I employed myself in measuring the distance be- tween us that these few days of emancipation had created. It seemed to show that life was a very different thing from books. That the study of in- dividuals was the real education. That mind re- acted upon mind, and nature magnetized, repelled, or attracted nature. I thought of Lesley as I had known her my girl friend and confidante. All that was fresh and simple and natural was, in her A JILT'S JOURNAL. 129 new life, decreed foolish. That lovely youth, so eager, so pure, so unabashed, was to be put in lead- ing strings, and dragged hither and thither at the bidding of worldly wisdom. I pictured her among such women as Lady Brancepeth, such men as "Bobby." I did not like the picture at all. But I consoled myself by think- ing that all the men and women in the fashionable world could not be like those specimens, though they were well born and well connected, and might be Duke and Duchess of Dorchester one day. From the "Lorely," with her fascination, her insolence, her curious recklessness as to what she said or did, my thoughts turned to Captain Jim. He had seemed her special property; she had bitterly re- sented his attentions to myself. Why? What business had a married woman to exact the homage of any other man? Why couldn't she be content with the husband she had won? Was it vanity or wickedness that drove her from the obligations of duty and decency? I could only surmise as yet. When I grew tired of my thoughts I went over to the window, and stood watching the snow which was falling thickly. I thought dismally of the pros- pect of being shut indoors, and wondered what oc- cupation I could find. I could do nothing more to the room, and again I felt the miss of a piano. That set me thinking as to how I should get one. Such a thing as a musical or piano warehouse did not exist in Scarffe. The next town of any importance was Wareham. But I could only get there by train, and must wait for a change in the weather. I began to wish the professor would not shut 130 A JILT'S JOURNAL. himself up so persistently in his study. I should have loved to talk to him. From the professor to my mother, from my mother to her book, was a perfectly natural sequence of thought. I had not half read the book. I re- solved to fetch it and give the rest of the day to its perusal. ****** I brought Fenella downstairs and began the sixth chapter of her confessions. I had an odd fancy that I should get at the individuality of the author by studying the book. The speeches put into the mouths of the characters must surely be the things she would have said herself outcome of the thoughts she had thought. How, otherwise, would they have seemed so natural? Yet there was an occasional refutation of this theory in the self-mock- ery of some words. And Fenella, whoever she was meant to represent, was eminently heartless. To experiment with every nature she met seemed an absolute necessity. Then when she had learnt their depths or shallows, their capacity or inferiority, she would cast them aside. She could make herself so interesting, could seem to feel so deeply, that she deceived others into believing her the reality she appeared. One man alone had had the courage to tell her his opinion, to strip her bare of all the flimsy pre- tences and coquetries that veiled what was really cold-heartedness. "You want to be loved," he said, "yet you've none to give. Your vanity has to feed on something. It matters nothing to you if that something be a man's very life. Go your way I'll have none of you. You're naught but a jilt !" Of course Fenella was indignant. Of course she A JILT'S JOURNAL. 131 moralized and theorized, and vindicated herself to herself. She hated the man for using that ugly word. She threw cold insult in his face. She for- bade him ever to seek, or speak to her again. But it seemed to me that he, of all the men who loved her, was the only one for whom she really cared. He was not a gentleman in the accepted term. He did not move in the society she fre- quented. He was lowly born, but had raised him- self to an accepted station by reason of wonderful inventive gifts. She appreciated her power over a nature that had hitherto been cold to feminine charm, but she was quite unable to respond to a deep, imperative passion. She had played with, tormented, allured him, till the whole rough energy of the man broke the filmy chains of polite endur- ance and he spoke to her face what others kept in their hearts. It was curious to trace the effect those words had upon her, even while she still pur- sued her career of triumph. Curious but painful. I found myself praying that that experience had not been the writer's not my unknown mother's. Yet such vitality breathed in the words, the con- fessions were so absolutely real in their naked truth and scorn, that I grew sick with the fear they roused in me. If this had been her life, if like this she had lived and suffered, and grown heart-desolate at last I closed the book. I could not bear to read more of it just then. CHAPTER XIV. "MERRY/' I said, "bring the tea to the drawing- room at five o'clock. I'll try and persuade my uncle to come in and have some with me. He hasn't seen the alteration in the room, and it looks quite respectable in the fire-light." "Respectable! 'Tis most uncommon butiful, miss," said my handmaiden with enthusiasm. "That I do say with all my heart, though Aunt Graddage she's done naught but grumble of vanities and 'puffed up with their own conceits,' every morn- ing when we be a-dusting the furnishings. But the only word in my mind, miss, is 'Butiful' !" I laughed, well pleased, for a kindly magician in the shape of "Captain Jim" had helped out my scheme in marvellous fashion. He had wired that a piano would come down from London selected by himself. This was followed by a letter in which he hoped my uncle and myself would excuse the liberty of his choice. Of course that was the only obliga- tion, as he dared not ask permission to present it. A friend of his giving up housekeeping had had the piano from an eminent London firm for the short space of a year. The captain had selected it origi- nally and thought it a pity it should go back to the warehouse or be sold for a quarter its value. (I had mentioned forty pounds as the price my uncle would pay.) So the piano had come, and my uncle gave me a check, and I dispatched it joyfully to my kind as- 132 A JILT'S JOUKNAL. 133 sistant. There arrived also a huge case of lovely and wonderful things. A Japanese screen, Turkish embroideries, quaint little folding tables, silk-frilled cushions, and bales of tapestry and cretonne. These were the odds and ends of "rubbish" for which he had no use. Treasures they were indeed, and with the memory of the Court rooms in my head, I set to work on my own drawing-room. This had all happened during a week of snow and bitter cold and biting winds that kept me indoors. I blessed Captain Jim with a full heart for the de- lights of occupation. To-day everything was com- plete. A bright fire burnt in the grate. The cold, white marble of the mantelpiece was draped with rich-hued Oriental stuff. Bits of china and photo- graphs relieved its former stiffness. The lamps had shades of crimson and deep orange. The piano a semi-grand of Bechstein's relieved the hard outline of the room, and cushions and draperies made couch and chairs presentable and ornamental. Flowers and plants I could not, of course, pro- cure, owing to the weather. But the lovely glow of light atoned for much, and I was very proud of my handiwork. One of the little tables was laid with a snowy, embroidered cloth, and Merry brought the silver tray and china service, and retired for hot cakes and bread and butter, while I went to fetch the pro- fessor. As I entered the study in response to his bidding, I saw him sitting by the fire in his old leather chair. The room was almost dark. "Oh! you're not working! I'm so glad!" I ex- claimed. 134 A JILT'S JOURNAL. He peered at me through the gloom. "Is it you, Paula? No, my dear I'm not ah working. I sit passive sometimes to think out my subjects and facts and data." "I want you to work out some very important data for me," I said cheerfully. "Not here, though. I'm going to take you to my part of the house and give you a cup of tea. Come along, professor." I saw his hand ruffle up his hair till it stood on end like a cockatoo's crest. "Tea, my dear? Graddage usually brings me a cup when she lights ah my lamp." "Which you usually allow to stand till it gets cold. I'm beginning to know your little ways. Now, please, just to oblige me, make a tiny change for once. The piano came to-day, and I've had the audacity to alter your scheme of furnishing." "Mine," he said. "Oh, no! my dear. I had nothing to do with any furnishing. Except the ah arrangements of my study." "Oh, then it was Graddage. I wonder why re- ligion always associates itself with ugliness! She evidently made the drawing-room up out of lamen- tations and backslidings, and the eschewing of worldly vanities. The result was a success in hide- ousness. I've altered all that, and I want your ap- proval. Do come." He rose almost, I thought, with alacrity. I slipped my hand into his arm, led him along the hall and threw open the drawing-room door with a tri- umphant air. I was greeted on the threshold by Graddage. She turned on us, bristling like an aggressive eagle. "I hope, sir," she exclaimed, "that you're not goin' to encourage such sinful vanity as Miss Paula A JILT'S JOUKNAL. 135 seems bent on showing. 'He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind,' as the wise man said." "If he could say that after seeing this room he'd prove himself an extremely foolish one," I answered audaciously. "Do get along, Graddy. I want to show my uncle what improvements I've made, and give him a hot cup of tea for once." "I take my orders, miss," she snorted, "from my master and no one else." "Then give them, professor," I said, squeezing his arm gently. "And let us have a quiet, happy half hour before you go back to work." He looked at Graddage, at the room, at me. His eyes grew wonderfully soft. "By all means, my dear," he said. "The invitation sounds tempting. My good Graddage, we will dispense with you for ah the present ; the present. If you will be good enough to light the lamp in my study, I shall ah feel obliged." I chuckled to myself. Graddy was not going to have everything her own way. She tossed her head with its quaint cap, and dart- ing a most unchristian-like glance at me, left the room. I led the old man up to the easy chair by the fire, and seated myself opposite, beside the tea-table. "We're going to be quite nice, fashionable peo- ple," I said, as I poured out the tea. "No one now- adays has tea in the dining-room on a table. It's always served like this. How do you like it?" "It is charming," he said, glancing round. Then he settled himself against the big, frilled cushions. "Charming," he repeated, "and very feminine." 136 A JILT'S JOURNAL. I laughed. "What else should it be, professor? A woman's touch seems an introduction to frivoli- ties, but she has a knack of making the frivolities comfortable and pleasing, hasn't she ?" "In the present instance," he said, "I feel bound to ah agree. ' ' "That's an old dear/' I said. "I was half afraid you'd scold me." He held his cup poised half way to his lips, and looked at me with sudden wonder. "Scold!" he repeated. "I scold you! Surely, Paula, I never have done ah that ?" "Indirectly," I said; "only indirectly, professor. Perhaps disapproval would express your attitude better. You have seemed to disapprove of me sometimes." "It was unintentional," he said. "I you see, my dear, you have not on previous visits revealed your- self to me as a ah personality. You seemed careless, reckless, illogical. All faults of youth. They may have had the effect of hindering my ap- preciation of better qualities." He finished his tea and put down the cup. "Better qualities," he repeated. I brought him one of Graddy's hot tea-cakes,