<SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XIX </h3>
<p>Again Irene was going down into Cheshire, to visit the two old ladies,
her relatives. It was arranged that she should accompany Mrs. Hannaford
to Malvern, and spend a couple of days there. The travellers arrived on
a Friday evening. Before leaving town Mrs. Hannaford had written to
Piers Otway to give him the address of the house at Malvern in which
rooms had been taken for them.</p>
<p>On Saturday morning there was sunshine over the hills. Irene walked,
and talked, but it was evident with thoughts elsewhere. When they sat
down to rest and to enjoy the landscape before them, the rich heart of
England, with its names that echo in history and in song, Irene plucked
at the grass beside her, and presently began to strip a stem, after the
manner of children playing at a tell-fortune game. She stripped it to
the end; her hands fell and she heaved a little sigh. From that moment
she grew merry and talked without pre-occupation.</p>
<p>After lunch she wrote a short letter, and herself took it to the post.
Mrs. Hannaford was lying on the sofa, with eyes closed, but not in
sleep; her forehead and lips betraying the restless thoughts which
beset her now as always. On returning, Irene took a chair, as if to
read; but she gave only an absent glance at the paper in her hands, and
smiled to herself in musing.</p>
<p>"I'm sure those thoughts are worth far more than a penny," fell from
the lady on the couch, who had observed her for a moment.</p>
<p>"I may as well tell you them," was the gently toned reply, as Irene
bent forward. "I have just done something decisive."</p>
<p>Mrs. Hannaford raised herself, a sudden anxiety in her features; she
waited.</p>
<p>"You guess, aunt? Yes, that's it, I have written to Mr. Jacks."</p>
<p>"To—to——?"</p>
<p>"To answer an ultimatum. In the right way, I hope; any way, it's done."</p>
<p>"You have accepted him?"</p>
<p>"Even so."</p>
<p>Mrs. Hannaford tried to smile, but could not smooth away the uneasiness
which had come into her look. She spoke a few of the natural words, and
in doing so looked at the clock.</p>
<p>"There is something I have forgotten," she said, starting to her feet
hurriedly. "You reminded me of it—speaking of a letter; I must send a
telegram at once—indeed I must. No, no, I will go myself, dear. I had
rather!"</p>
<p>She hastened away, leaving Irene in wonder.</p>
<p>When they were together again, Mrs. Hannaford seemed anxious to atone
for her brevity on the all-important subject. She spoke with pleasure
of her niece's decision thought it wise; abounded in happy prophecy;
through the rest of the day she had a face which spoke relief, all but
contentment. The morning of Sunday saw her nervous. She made an excuse
of the slightly clouded sky for lingering within doors; she went often
to the window and looked this way and that along the road, as if
judging the weather, until Irene, when the church bells had ceased,
grew impatient for the open air.</p>
<p>"Yes, we will go," said her aunt. "I think we safely may."</p>
<p>Each went to her room to make ready. At Mrs. Hannaford's door, just as
she was about to come forth, there sounded a knock; the servant
announced that a gentleman had called to see her—Mr. Otway. Quivering,
death-pale, she ran to the sitting-room. Irene had not yet reappeared.
Piers Otway stood there alone.</p>
<p>"You didn't get my telegram?" broke from her lips, in a hurried
whisper. "Oh! I feared it would be too late, and all is too late."</p>
<p>"You mean——"</p>
<p>"The engagement is announced."</p>
<p>She had time to say no more. At that moment Irene entered the room,
dressed for walking. At first she did not seem to recognise the
visitor, then her face lighted up; she smiled, subdued the slight
embarrassment which had succeeded to her perplexity, and stepped
quickly forward.</p>
<p>"Mr. Otway! You are staying here?"</p>
<p>"A few hours only. I came down yesterday on business—which is
finished."</p>
<p>His voice was so steady, his bearing so self-possessed, that Irene
found herself relieved from the immediate restraint of the situation.
She could not quite understand his presence here; there was a mystery,
in which she saw that her aunt was involved; the explanation might be
forthcoming after their visitor's departure. For the moment, enough to
remark that the sun was dispersing the clouds, and that all were ready
to enjoy a walk. Mrs. Hannaford, glancing anxiously at Irene before she
spoke, hoped that Mr. Otway would return with them to lunch; Irene
added her voice to the invitation; and Piers at once accepted.</p>
<p>Talk suggested by the locality occupied them until they were away from
the houses; by that time Irene had thoroughly reassured herself, and
was as tranquil in mind as in manner. Whatever the meaning of Piers
Otway's presence, no difficulty could come about in the few hours he
was to spend with them. Involuntarily she found herself listening to
the rhythm of certain verses which she had received some months ago,
and which she still knew by heart; but nothing in the author's voice or
look indicated a desire to remind her of that romantic passage in their
acquaintance. If they were still to meet from time to time—and why
not?—common sense must succeed to vain thoughts in the poet's mind. He
was quite capable of the transition, she felt sure. His way of talking,
the short and generally pointed sentences in which he spoke on whatever
subject, betokened a habit of lucid reflection. Had it been
permissible, she would have dwelt with curiosity on the problem of
Piers Otway's life and thoughts; but that she resolutely ignored,
strong in the irrevocable choice which she had made only yesterday. He
was interesting, but not to her. She knew him on the surface, and cared
to know no more.</p>
<p>Business was a safe topic; at the first noticeable pause, Irene led to
it.</p>
<p>Piers laughed with pleasure as he began to describe Andre Moncharmont.
A man of the happiest vivacity, of the sweetest humour, irresistibly
amusing, yet never ridiculous—entirely competent in business, yet with
a soul as little mercantile as man's could be. Born a French Swiss, he
had lived a good deal in Italy, and had all the charm of Italian
manners; but in whatever country, he made himself at home, and by
virtue of his sunny temper saw only the best in each nationality. His
recreation was music, and he occasionally composed.</p>
<p>"There is a song of Musset's—you know it, perhaps—beginning '<i>Quand
on perd, par triste occurrence</i>'—which he has set, to my mind,
perfectly. I want him to publish it. If he does I must let you see it."</p>
<p>Irene did not know the verses and made no remark.</p>
<p>"There are English men of business," pursued Otway, "who would smile
with pity at Moncharmont. He is by no means their conception of the
merchant. Yet the world would be a vastly better place if its business
were often in the hands of such men. He will never make a large
fortune, no; but he will never fall into poverty. He sees commerce from
the human point of view, not as the brutal pitiless struggle which
justifies every form of ferocity and of low cunning. I never knew him
utter an ignoble thought about trade and money-making. An English
acquaintance asked me once, 'Is he a gentleman?' I was obliged to
laugh—delicious contrast between what <i>he</i> meant by a gentleman and
all I see in Moncharmont."</p>
<p>"I picture him," said Irene, smiling, "and I picture the person who
made that inquiry."</p>
<p>Piers flashed a look of gratitude. He had, as yet, hardly glanced at
her; he durst not; his ordeal was to be gone through as became a man.
Her voice, at moments, touched him to a sense of faintness; he saw her
without turning his head; the wave of her dress beside him was like a
perfume, was like music; part of him yielded, languished, part made
splendid resistance.</p>
<p>"He is a lesson in civilisation. If trade is not to put an end to human
progress, it must be pursued in Moncharmont's spirit. It's only
returning to a better time; our man of business is a creation of our
century, and as bad a thing as it has produced. Commerce must be
humanised once more. We invented machinery, and it has enslaved us—a
rule of iron, the servile belief that money-making is an end in itself,
to be attained by hard selfishness."</p>
<p>He checked himself, laughed, and said something about the beauty of the
lane along which they were walking.</p>
<p>"Don't you think," fell from Irene's lips, "that Mr. John Jacks is a
very human type of the man of business?"</p>
<p>"Indeed he is!" replied Piers, with spirit. "An admirable type."</p>
<p>"I have been told that he owed most of his success to his brothers, who
are a different sort of men."</p>
<p>"His wealth, perhaps."</p>
<p>"Yes, there's a difference," said Irene, glancing at him. "You may be
successful without becoming wealthy; though not of course in the common
opinion. But what would have been the history of England these last
fifty years, but for our men of iron selfishness? Isn't it a fact that
only in this way could we have built up an Empire which ensures the
civilisation of the world?"</p>
<p>Piers could not answer with his true thought, for he knew all that was
implied in her suggestion of that view. He bent his head and spoke very
quietly.</p>
<p>"Some of our best men think so."</p>
<p>An answer which gratified Irene more keenly than he imagined; she
showed it in her face.</p>
<p>When they returned to luncheon, and the ladies went upstairs, Mrs.
Hannaford stepped into her niece's room.</p>
<p>"What you told me yesterday," she asked, in a nervous undertone, "may
it be repeated?"</p>
<p>"Certainly—to anyone."</p>
<p>"Then please not to come down until I have had a few minutes' talk with
Mr. Otway. All this shall be explained, dear, when we are alone again."</p>
<p>On entering the sitting-room Irene found it harder to preserve a
natural demeanour than at her meeting with the visitor a couple of
hours ago. Only when she had heard him speak and in just the same voice
as during their walk was she able to turn frankly towards him. His look
had not changed. Impossible to divine the thoughts hidden by his smile;
he bore himself with perfect control.</p>
<p>At table all was cheerfulness. Speaking of things Russian, Irene
recalled her winter in Finland, which she had so greatly enjoyed.</p>
<p>"I remember," said Otway, "you had just returned when I met you for the
first time."</p>
<p>It was said with a peculiar intonation, which fell agreeably on the
listener's ear; a note familiar, in the permitted degree, yet
touchingly respectful; a world of emotion subdued to graceful
friendliness. Irene passed over the reminiscence with a light word or
two, and went on to gossip merely of trifles.</p>
<p>"Do you like caviare, Mr. Otway?"</p>
<p>"Except perhaps that supplied by the literary censor," was his laughing
reply.</p>
<p>"Now I am <i>intriguee</i>. Please explain."</p>
<p>"We call caviare the bits blacked out in our newspapers and
periodicals."</p>
<p>"Unpalatable enough!" laughed Irene. "How angry that would make me!"</p>
<p>"I got used to it," said Piers, "and thought it rather good fun
sometimes. After all, a wise autocrat might well prohibit newspapers
altogether, don't you think? They have done good, I suppose, but they
are just as likely to do harm. When the next great war comes,
newspapers will be the chief cause of it. And for mere profit, that's
the worst. There are newspaper proprietors in every country, who would
slaughter half mankind for the pennies of the half who were left,
without caring a fraction of a penny whether they had preached war for
a truth or a lie."</p>
<p>"But doesn't a newspaper simply echo the opinions and feelings of its
public?"</p>
<p>"I'm afraid it manufactures opinion, and stirs up feeling. Consider how
very few people know or care anything about most subjects of
international quarrel. A mere handful at the noisy centre of things who
make the quarrel. The business of newspapers, in general, is to give a
show of importance to what has no real importance at all—to prevent
the world from living quietly—to arouse bitterness when the natural
man would be quite different."</p>
<p>"Oh, surely you paint them too black! We must live, we can't let the
world stagnate. Newspapers only express the natural life of peoples,
acting and interacting."</p>
<p>"I suppose I quarrel with them," said Piers, once more subduing
himself, "because they have such gigantic power and don't make anything
like the best use of it."</p>
<p>"That is to say, they are the work of men—I don't mean," Irene added
laughingly, "of men instead of women. Though I'm not sure that women
wouldn't manage journalism better, if it were left to them."</p>
<p>"A splendid idea! All men to go about their affairs and women to report
and comment. Why, it would solve every problem of society! There's the
hope of the future, beyond a doubt! Why did I never think of it!"</p>
<p>The next moment Piers was talking about nightingales, how he had heard
them sing in Little Russia, where their song is sweeter than in any
other part of Europe. And so the meal passed pleasantly, as did the
hour or two after it, until it was time for Otway to take leave.</p>
<p>"You travel straight back to London?" asked Irene.</p>
<p>"Straight back," he answered, his eyes cast down.</p>
<p>"To-morrow," said Mrs. Hannaford, "we think of going to Stratford."</p>
<p>Piers had an impulse which made his hands tremble and his head throb;
in spite of himself he had all but asked whether, if he stayed at
Malvern overnight, he might accompany them on that expedition. Reason
prevailed, but only just in time, and the conquest left him under a
gloomy sense of self-pity, which was the worst thing he had suffered
all day. Not even Mrs. Hannaford's whispered words on his arrival had
been so hard to bear.</p>
<p>He sat in silence, wishing to rise, unable to do so. When at length he
stood up, Irene let her eyes fall upon him, and continued to observe
him, as if but half consciously whilst he shook hands with Mrs.
Hannaford. He turned to her, and his lips moved, but what he had tried
to say went unexpressed. Nor did Irene speak; she could have uttered
only a civil commonplace, and the tragic pallor of his countenance in
that moment kept her mute. He touched her hand and was gone.</p>
<p>When the house door had closed behind him, the eyes of the two women
met. Standing as before, they conversed with low voices, with troubled
brows. Mrs. Hannaford rapidly explained her part in what had happened.</p>
<p>"You will forgive me, Irene? I see now that I ought to have told you
about it yesterday."</p>
<p>"Better as it was, perhaps, so far as I am concerned. But he—I'm
sorry——"</p>
<p>"He behaved well, don't you think?"</p>
<p>"Yes," replied Irene thoughtfully, slowly, "he behaved well."</p>
<p>They moved apart, and Irene laid her hand on a book, but did not sit
down.</p>
<p>"How old is he?" she asked of a sudden.</p>
<p>"Six-and-twenty."</p>
<p>"One would take him for more. But of course his ways of thinking show
how young he is." She fluttered the pages of her book, and smiled. "It
will be interesting to see him in another five years."</p>
<p>That was all. Neither mentioned Otway's name again during the two more
days they spent together.</p>
<p>But Irene's mind was busy with the contrast between him and Arnold
Jacks. She pursued this track of thought whithersoever it led her,
believing it a wholesome exercise in her present mood. Her choice was
made, and irrevocable; reason bade her justify it by every means that
offered. And she persuaded herself that nothing better could have
happened, at such a juncture, than this suggestion of an alternative so
widely different.</p>
<p>An interesting boy—six-and-twenty is still a boyish age—with all
sorts of vague idealisms; nothing ripe; nothing that convinced; a
dreary cosmopolite, little likely to achieve results in any direction.
On the other hand, a mature and vigorous man, English to the core,
stable in his tested views of life, already an active participant in
the affairs of the nation and certain to move victoriously onward; a
sure patriot, a sturdy politician. It was humiliating to Piers Otway.
Indeed, unfair!</p>
<p>On Monday, when she returned from her visit to Stratford, a telegram
awaited her. "Thank you, letter tomorrow, Arnold." That pleased her;
the British laconicism; the sensible simplicity of the thing! And when
the letter arrived (two pages and a half) it seemed a suitable reply to
hers of Saturday, in which she had used only everyday words and
phrases. No gushing in Arnold Jacks! He was "happy," he was "grateful";
what more need an honest man say to the woman who has accepted him? She
was his "Dearest Irene"; and what more could she ask to be?</p>
<p>A curious thing happened that evening. Mrs. Hannaford and her niece,
both tired after the day's excursion, and having already talked over
its abundant interests, sat reading, or pretending to read. Suddenly,
Irene threw her book aside, with a movement of impatience, and stood up.</p>
<p>"Don't you find it very close?" she said, almost irritably. "I shall go
upstairs. Good-night!"</p>
<p>Her aunt gazed at her in surprise.</p>
<p>"You are tired, my dear."</p>
<p>"I suppose I am—Aunt, there is something I should like to say, if you
will let me. You are very kind and good, but that makes you, sometimes,
a little indiscreet. Promise me, please, never to make me the subject
of conversation with anyone to whom you cannot speak of me quite
openly, before all the world."</p>
<p>Mrs. Hannaford was overcome with astonishment, with distress. She tried
to reply, but before she could shape a word Irene had swept from the
room.</p>
<p>When they met again at breakfast, the girl stepped up to her aunt and
kissed her on both cheeks—an unusual greeting. She was her bright self
again; talked merrily; read aloud a letter from her father, which
proved that at the time of writing he had not seen Arnold Jacks.</p>
<p>"I must write to the Doctor to-morrow," she said, with an air of
reflection.</p>
<p>At ten o'clock they drove to the station. While Miss Derwent took her
ticket Mrs. Hannaford walked on the platform. On issuing from the
booking-office, Irene saw her aunt in conversation with a man, who, in
the same moment, turned abruptly and walked away. Neither she nor her
aunt spoke of this incident, but Irene noticed that the other was a
little flushed.</p>
<p>She took her seat; Mrs. Hannaford stood awaiting the departure of the
train. Before it moved, the man Irene had noticed came back along the
platform, and passed them without a sign. Irene saw his face, and
seemed to recognise it, but could not remember who he was.</p>
<p>Half an hour later, the face came back to her, and with it a name.</p>
<p>"Daniel Otway!" she exclaimed to herself.</p>
<p>It was five years and more since her one meeting with him at Ewell, but
the man, on that occasion, had impressed her strongly in a very
disagreeable way. She had since heard of him, in relation to Piers
Otway's affairs, and knew that her aunt had received a call from him in
Bryanston Square. What could be the meaning of this incident on the
platform? Irene wondered, and had an unpleasant feeling about it.</p>
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