<SPAN name="chap10"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER X </h3>
<p class="intro">
This night is my departing night,<br/>
For here nae longer must I stay;<br/>
There's neither friend nor foe of mine<br/>
But wishes me away.<br/>
What I have done through lack of wit,<br/>
I never, never can recall:<br/>
I hope ye're all my friends as yet.<br/>
Good night, and joy be with you all.<br/>
Armstrong's Good Night<br/></p>
<br/>
<p>The storm had blown over, but heavy flakes of cloud still cumbered the
air, and gusts of wind portended that it might gather again.</p>
<p>Henry Ward took this opportunity of giving his first dinner party. He
said it was a necessary return for the civilities they had received;
and to Averil's representation that it transgressed the system of rigid
economy that so much tormented her, he replied by referring her to Mrs.
Pugh for lessons in the combination of style and inexpensiveness.</p>
<p>Averil had almost refused, but the lady herself proffered her
instructions, and reluctance was of no avail; nothing but
demonstrations from which her conscience shrank, could have served to
defend her from the officious interference so eagerly and thankfully
encouraged by the master of the house. Vainly did she protest against
pretension, and quote the example of the Grange; she found herself
compelled to sacrifice the children's lessons to learn of Mrs. Pugh to
make the paper flowers that, with bonbons and sweetmeats, were to save
the expense of good food on the dinner-table, and which she feared
would be despised by Miss May, nay, perhaps laughed over with 'Mr. Tom!'</p>
<p>She hated the whole concern, even the invitation to Dr. and Miss May,
knowing that it was sent in formal vanity, accepted in pure
good-nature, would bring them into society they did not like, and
expose her brother's bad taste. Only one thing could have added to her
dislike, namely—that which all Stoneborough perceived excepting
herself and Leonard—that this dinner was intended as a step in Henry's
courtship, and possibly as an encouragement of Harvey Anderson's liking
for herself. Averil held her head so high, and was so little popular,
that no one of less assurance than Mrs. Ledwich herself would have
dared approach her with personal gossip; and even Mrs. Ledwich was
silent here; so that Averil, too young and innocent to connect second
marriages with recent widowhood, drew no conclusions from Henry's
restless eagerness that his household should present the most imposing
appearance.</p>
<p>While the bill of fare was worrying Averil, Leonard was told by Aubrey,
that his father had brought home a fossil Tower of Babel, dug up with
some earth out of a new well, three miles off, with tidings of other
unheard-of treasures, and a walk was projected in quest of them, in
which Leonard was invited to join. He gladly came to the early dinner,
where he met reduced numbers—the Ernescliffes being at Maplewood, Tom
at Cambridge, and Harry in the Channel fleet; and as usual, he felt the
difference between the perfect understanding and friendship in the one
home, and the dread of dangerous subjects in the other. The expedition
had all the charms of the Coombe times; and the geological discoveries
were so numerous and precious, that the load became sufficient to break
down the finders, and Ethel engaged a market-woman to bring the baskets
in her cart the next morning.</p>
<p>That morning a note from Richard begged Ethel to come early to
Cocksmoor to see Granny Hall, who was dying. Thus left to their own
devices, Aubrey and Gertrude conscientiously went through some of their
studies; then proceeded to unpack their treasury of fossils, and
endeavour to sort out Leonard's share, as to which doubts arose. Daisy
proposed to carry the specimens at once to Bankside, where she wanted
to see Leonard's prime echinus; and Aubrey readily agreed, neither of
the young heads having learnt the undesirableness of a morning visit in
a house preparing for a dinner-party too big for it.</p>
<p>However, Leonard made them extremely welcome. It was too foggy a day
for rifle practice, and all the best plate and china were in the
school-room, his only place of refuge; Ave was fluttering about in
hopes of getting everything done before Mrs. Pugh could take it out of
her hands, and the energies of the household were spent on laying out
the dining-table. It was clearly impossible to take Gertrude anywhere
but into the drawing-room, which was in demi-toilette state, the
lustres released from their veils, the gayer cushions taken out of
their hiding-places, and the brown holland covers half off. This was
the only tranquil spot, and so poor little Mab thought, forbidden
ground though it was. Even in her own home, the school-room, a strange
man had twice trod upon her toes; so no wonder, when she saw her own
master and his friends in the drawing-room, that she ventured in, and
leaping on a velvet cushion she had never seen before, and had never
been ordered off, she there curled herself up and went to sleep, unseen
by Leonard, who was in eager controversy upon the specimens, which
Gertrude, as she unpacked, set down on floor, chair, or ottoman,
unaware of the offence she was committing. So, unmolested, the young
geologists talked, named, and sorted the specimens, till the clock
striking the half-hour, warned the Mays that they must return; and
Leonard let them out at the window, and crossed the lawn to the side
gate with them to save the distance.</p>
<p>He had just returned, and was kneeling on the floor hastily collecting
the fossils, when the door opened, and Henry Ward, coming home to
inspect the preparations, beheld the drawing-room bestrewn with the
rough stones that he had proscribed, and Mab, not only in the room, but
reposing in the centre of the most magnificent cushion in the house!</p>
<p>His first movement of indignation was to seize the dog with no gentle
hand. She whined loudly; and Leonard, whom he had not seen, shouted
angrily, 'Let her alone;' then, at another cry from her, finding his
advance to her rescue impeded by a barricade of the crowded and
disarranged furniture, he grew mad with passion, and launched the stone
in his hand, a long sharp-pointed belemnite. It did not strike Henry,
but a sound proclaimed the mischief, as it fell back from the surface
of the mirror, making a huge star of cracks, unmarked by Leonard, who,
pushing sofa and ottoman to the right and left, thundered up to his
brother, and with uplifted hand demanded what he meant by his cruelty.</p>
<p>'Is—is this defiance?' stammered Henry, pointing to the disordered
room.</p>
<p>'Look here, Averil,' as she appeared at the sounds, 'do you defend this
boy now he has very nearly killed me?'</p>
<p>'Killed you!' and Leonard laughed angrily; but when Henry held up the
elf-bolt, and he saw its sharp point, he was shocked, and he saw horror
in Averil's face.</p>
<p>'I see,' he said gravely. 'It was a mercy I did not!' and he paused.
'I did not know what I was about when you were misusing my dog, Henry.
Shake hands; I am sorry for it.'</p>
<p>But Henry had been very much frightened as well as angered, and
thought, perhaps, it was a moment to pursue his advantage.</p>
<p>'You treat things lightly,' he said, not accepting the hand.</p>
<p>'See what you have done.'</p>
<p>'I am glad it was not your head,' said Leonard. 'What does it cost?
I'll pay.'</p>
<p>'More than your keep for a year,' moaned Henry, as he sighed over the
long limbs of the starfish-like fracture.</p>
<p>'Well, I will give up anything you like, if you will only not be sulky
about it, Henry. It was unlucky, and I'm sorry for it; I can't say
more!'</p>
<p>'But I can,' said Henry with angry dignity, re-inforced by the sight of
the seamed reflection of his visage in the shivered glass. 'I tell
you, Leonard, there's no having you in the house; you defy my
authority, you insult my friends, you waste and destroy more than you
are worth, and you are absolutely dangerous. I would as soon have a
wild beast about the place. If you don't get the Randall next week,
and get off to the University, to old Axworthy's office you go at once.'</p>
<p>'Very well, I will,' said Leonard, turning to collect the fossils, as
if he had done with the subject.</p>
<p>'Henry, Henry, what are you saying?' cried the sister.</p>
<p>'Not a word, Ave,' said Leonard. 'I had rather break stones on the
road than live where my keep is grudged, and there's not spirit enough
to get over a moment's fright.'</p>
<p>'It is not any one individual thing,' began Henry, in a tone of
annoyance, 'but your whole course—'</p>
<p>There he paused, perceiving that Leonard paid no attention to his
words, continuing quietly to replace the furniture and collect the
fossils, as it no one else were in the room, after which he carried the
basket up-stairs.</p>
<p>Averil hurried after him. 'Leonard! oh, why don't you explain? Why
don't you tell him how the stones came there?'</p>
<p>Leonard shook his head sternly.</p>
<p>'Don't you mean to do anything?'</p>
<p>'Nothing.'</p>
<p>'But you wanted another year before trying for the scholarship.'</p>
<p>'Yes; I have no chance there.'</p>
<p>'He will not do it! He cannot mean it!'</p>
<p>'I do then. I will get my own living, and not be a burthen, where my
brother cannot forgive a broken glass or a moment's fright,' said
Leonard; and she felt that his calm resentment was worse than his
violence.</p>
<p>'He will be cooler, and then—'</p>
<p>'I will have no more said to him. It is plain that we cannot live
together, and there's an end of it. Don't cry, or you won't be fit to
be seen.'</p>
<p>'I won't come down to dinner.'</p>
<p>'Yes, you will. Let us have no more about it. Some one wants you.'</p>
<p>'Please, ma'am, the fish is come.'</p>
<p>'Sister, sister, come and see how I have done up the macaroons in green
leaves.'</p>
<p>'Sister, sister, do come and reach me down some calycanthus out of the
greenhouse!'</p>
<p>'I will,' said Leonard, descending; and for the rest of the day he was
an efficient assistant in the decorations, and the past adventure was
only apparent in the shattered glass, and the stern ceremonious
courtesy of the younger brother towards the elder.</p>
<p>Averil hurried about, devoid of all her former interest in so doing
things for herself as to save interference; and when Mrs. Ledwich and
Mrs. Pugh walked in, overflowing with suggestions, she let them have
their way, and toiled under them with the sensation of being like 'dumb
driven cattle.' If Leonard were to be an exile, what mattered it to
her who ruled, or what appearance things made?</p>
<p>Only when she went to her own room to dress, had she a moment to
realize the catastrophe, its consequences, and the means of averting
them. So appalled was she, that she sat with her hair on her shoulders
as if spell-bound, till the first ring at the door aroused her to speed
and consternation, perhaps a little lessened by one of her sisters
rushing in to say that it was Mrs. Ledwich and Mrs. Pugh, and that
Henry was still in the cellar, decanting the wine.</p>
<p>Long before the hosts were ready, Dr. May and Ethel had likewise
arrived, and became cognizant of the fracture of the mirror, for,
though the nucleus was concealed by a large photograph stuck into the
frame, one long crack extended even to the opposite corner. The two
ladies were not slow to relate all that they knew; and while the aunt
dismayed Ethel by her story, the niece, with much anxiety, asked Dr.
May how it was that these dear, nice, superior young people should have
such unfortunate tempers—was it from any error in management? So
earnest was her manner, so inquiring her look, that Dr. May suspected
that she was feeling for his opinion on personal grounds, and tried to
avert the danger by talking of the excellence of the parents, but he
was recalled from his eulogium on poor Mrs. Ward.</p>
<p>'Oh yes! one felt for them so very much, and they are so religious, so
well principled, and all that one could wish; but family dissension is
so dreadful. I am very little used to young men or boys, and I never
knew anything like this.'</p>
<p>'The lads are too nearly of an age,' said the Doctor.</p>
<p>'And would such things be likely to happen among any brothers?'</p>
<p>'I should trust not!' said the Doctor emphatically.</p>
<p>'I should so like to know in confidence which you think likely to be
most to blame.'</p>
<p>Never was the Doctor more glad that Averil made her appearance! He
carefully avoided getting near Mrs. Pugh for the rest of the evening,
but he could not help observing that she was less gracious than usual
to the master of the house; while she summoned Leonard to her side to
ask about the volunteer proceedings, and formed her immediate court of
Harvey Anderson and Mr. Scudamour.</p>
<p>The dinner went on fairly, though heavily. Averil, in her one great
trouble, lost the sense of the minor offences that would have
distressed her pride and her taste had she been able to attend to them,
and forgot the dulness of the scene in her anxiety to seek sympathy and
counsel in the only quarter where she cared for it. She went
mechanically through her duties as lady of the house, talking
commonplace subjects dreamily to Dr. May, and scarcely even giving
herself the trouble to be brief with Mr. Anderson, who was on her other
side at dinner.</p>
<p>In the drawing-room, she left the other ladies to their own devices in
her eagerness to secure a few minutes with Ethel May, and disabuse her
of whatever Mrs. Ledwich or Mrs. Pugh might have said. Ethel had been
more hopeful before she heard the true version; she had hitherto
allowed much for Mrs. Ledwich's embellishments; and she was shocked and
took shame to her own guiltless head for Gertrude's thoughtlessness.</p>
<p>'Oh no!' said Averil, 'there was nothing that any one need have minded,
if Henry had waited for explanation! And now, will you get Dr. May to
speak to him? If he only knew how people would think of his treating
Leonard so, I am sure he would not do it.</p>
<p>'He cannot!' said Ethel. 'Don't you know what he thinks of it himself?
He said to papa last year that your father would as soon have sent
Leonard to the hulks as to the Vintry Mill.'</p>
<p>'Oh, I am so glad some one heard him. He would care about having that
cast up against him, if he cared for nothing else.'</p>
<p>'It must have been a mere threat. Leonard surely has only to ask his
pardon.'</p>
<p>'No, indeed, not again, Miss May!' said Averil. 'Leonard asked once,
and was refused, and cannot ask again. No, the only difficulty is
whether he ought not to keep to his word, and go to the mill if he does
not get the Randall.'</p>
<p>'Did he say he would?'</p>
<p>'Of course he did, when Henry threatened him with it, and talked of the
burden of his maintenance! He said, "Very well, I will," and he means
it!'</p>
<p>'He will not mean it when the spirit of repentance has had time to
waken.'</p>
<p>'He will take nothing that is grudged him,' said Averil. 'Oh! is it
not hard that I cannot get at my own money, and send him at once to
Cambridge, and never ask Henry for another farthing?'</p>
<p>'Nay, Averil; I think you can do a better part by trying to make them
forgive one another.'</p>
<p>Averil had no notion of Leonard's again abasing himself, and though she
might try to bring Henry to reason by reproaches, she would not
persuade. She wished her guest had been the sympathizing Mary rather
than Miss May, who was sure to take the part of the elder and the
authority. Repentance! Forgiveness! If Miss May should work on
Leonard to sue for pardon and toleration, and Mrs. Pugh should
intercede with Henry to take him into favour, she had rather he were at
the Vintry Mill at once in his dignity, and Henry be left to his
disgrace.</p>
<p>Ethel thought of Dr. Spencer's words on the beach at Coombe, 'Never
threaten Providence!' She longed to repeat them to Leonard, as she
watched his stern determined face, and the elaborately quiet motions
that spoke of a fixed resentful purpose; but to her disappointment and
misgiving, he gave her no opportunity, and for the first time since
their sea-side intercourse, held aloof from her.</p>
<p>Nor did she see him again during the week that intervened before the
decision of the scholarship, though three days of it were holidays.
Aubrey, whom she desired to bring him in after the rifle drill,
reported that he pronounced himself sorry to refuse, but too busy to
come in, and he seemed to be cramming with fiery vehemence for the mere
chance of success.</p>
<p>The chance was small. The only hope lay in the possibility of some
hindrance preventing the return of either Forder or Folliot; and in the
meantime the Mays anxiously thought over Leonard's prospects. His
remaining at home was evidently too great a trial for both brothers,
and without a scholarship he could not go to the University. The evils
of the alternative offered by his brother were duly weighed by the
Doctor and Ethel with an attempt to be impartial.</p>
<p>Mr. Axworthy, though the mill was the centre of his business, was in
fact a corn merchant of considerable wealth, and with opportunities of
extending his connection much farther. Had his personal character been
otherwise, Dr. May thought a young man could not have a better opening
than a seat in his office, and the future power of taking shares in his
trade; there need be no loss of position, and there was great
likelihood both of prosperity and the means of extensive usefulness.</p>
<p>Ethel sighed at the thought of the higher aspirations that she had
fostered till her own mind was set on them.</p>
<p>'Nay,' said the Doctor, 'depend upon it, the desk is admirable training
for good soldiers of the Church. See the fearful evil that befalls
great schemes intrusted to people who cannot deal with money matters;
and see, on the other hand, what our merchants and men of business have
done for the Church, and do not scorn "the receipt of custom."'</p>
<p>'But the man, papa!'</p>
<p>'Yes, there lies the hitch! If Leonard fails, I can lay things before
Henry, such as perhaps he may be too young to know, and which must
change his purpose.'</p>
<p>Mr. Axworthy's career during his youth and early manhood was guessed at
rather than known, but even since his return and occupation of the
Vintry Mill, his vicious habits had scandalized the neighbourhood, and
though the more flagrant of these had been discontinued as he advanced
in age, there was no reason to hope that he had so much 'left off his
sins, as that his sins had left him off.' His great-nephew, who lived
with him and assisted in his business, was a dashing sporting young man
of no good character, known to be often intoxicated, and concerned in
much low dissipation, and as dangerous an associate as could be
conceived for a high-spirited lad like Leonard. Dr. May could not
believe that any provocation of temper, any motive of economy, any
desire to be rid of encumbrances to his courtship, could induce a man
with so much good in him, as there certainly was in Henry Ward, to
expose his orphan brother to such temptations; and he only reserved his
remonstrance in the trust that it would not be needed, and the desire
to offer some better alternative of present relief.</p>
<p>One of the examiners was Norman's old school and college friend,
Charles Cheviot, now a clergyman and an under-master at one of the
great schools recently opened for the middle classes, where he was
meeting with great success, and was considered a capital judge of boys'
characters. He was the guest of the Mays during the examination; and
though his shy formal manner, and convulsive efforts at young lady
talk, greatly affronted Gertrude, the brothers liked him.</p>
<p>He was in consternation at the decline of Stoneborough school since Mr.
Wilmot had ceased to be an under-master; the whole tone of the school
had degenerated, and it was no wonder that the Government inquiries
were ominously directed in that quarter. Scholarship was at a low ebb,
Dr. Hoxton seemed to have lost what power of teaching he had ever
possessed, and as Dr. May observed, the poor old school was going to
the dogs. But even in the present state of things, Leonard had no
chance of excelling his competitors. His study, like theirs, had been
mere task-work, and though he showed more native power than the rest,
yet perhaps this had made the mere learning by rote even more difficult
to an active mind full of inquiry. He was a whole year younger than
any other who touched the foremost ranks, two years younger than
several; and though he now and then showed a feverish spark of genius,
reminding Mr. Cheviot of Norman in his famous examination, it was not
sustained—there were will and force, but not scholarship—and besides,
there was a wide blurred spot in his memory, as though all the
brain-work of the quarter before his illness had been confused, and had
not yet become clear. There was every likelihood that a few years
would make him superior to the chosen Randall scholar, but at present
his utmost efforts did not even place him among the seven whose names
appeared honourably in the newspaper. It was a failure; but Mr.
Cheviot had become much interested in the boy for his own sake, as well
as from what he heard from the Mays, and he strongly advised that
Leonard should at Easter obtain employment for a couple of years at the
school in which he himself was concerned. He would thus be maintaining
himself, and pursuing his own studies under good direction, so as to
have every probability of success in getting an open scholarship at one
of the Universities.</p>
<p>Nothing could be better, and there was a perfect jubilee among the Mays
at the proposal. Aubrey was despatched as soon as breakfast was over
to bring Leonard to talk it over, and Dr. May undertook to propound it
to Henry on meeting him at the hospital; but Aubrey came back looking
very blank—Leonard had started of his own accord that morning to
announce to his uncle his acceptance of a clerk's desk at the Vintry
Mill!</p>
<p>Averil followed upon Aubrey's footsteps, and arrived while the
schoolroom was ringing with notes of vexation and consternation. She
was all upon the defensive. She said that not a word had passed on the
subject since the dinner-party, and there had not been a shadow of a
dispute between the brothers; in fact, she evidently was delighted with
Leonard's dignified position and strength of determination, and thought
this expedition to the Vintry Mill a signal victory.</p>
<p>When she heard what the Mays had to propose, she was enchanted, she had
no doubt of Henry's willing consent, and felt that Leonard's triumph
and independence were secured without the sacrifice of prospects, which
she had begun to regard as a considerable price for his dignity.</p>
<p>But Dr. May was not so successful with Henry Ward. He did not want to
disoblige his uncle, who had taken a fancy to Leonard, and might do
much for the family; he thought his father would have changed his views
of the uncle and nephew had he known them better, he would not accept
the opinion of a stranger against people of his own family, and he had
always understood the position of an usher to be most wretched, nor
would he perceive the vast difference between the staff of the middle
school and of the private commercial academy. He evidently was pleased
to stand upon his rights, to disappoint Dr. May, and perhaps to gratify
his jealousy by denying his brother a superior education.</p>
<p>Yet in spite of this ebullition, which had greatly exasperated Dr. May,
there was every probability that Henry's consent might be wrung out or
dispensed with, and plans of attack were being arranged at the
tea-table, when a new obstacle in the shape of a note from Leonard
himself.</p>
<br/>
<p class="letter">
'My Dear Aubrey,</p>
<p class="letter">
'I am very much obliged to Dr. May and Mr. Cheviot for their kind
intentions; but I have quite settled with Mr. Axworthy, and I enter on
my new duties next week. I am sorry to leave our corps, but it is too
far off, and I must enter the Whitford one.</p>
<p class="letter">
'Yours,<br/>
'L. A. Ward.'<br/></p>
<br/>
<p>'The boy is mad with pride and temper,' said the Doctor.</p>
<p>'And his sister has made him so,' added Ethel.</p>
<p>'Shall I run down to Bankside and tell him it is all bosh?' said
Aubrey, jumping up.</p>
<p>'I don't think that is quite possible under Henry's very nose,' said
Ethel. 'Perhaps they will all be tamer by to-morrow, now they have
blown their trumpets; but I am very much vexed.'</p>
<p>'And really,' added Mr. Cheviot, 'if he is so wrong-headed, I begin to
doubt if I could recommend him.'</p>
<p>'You do not know how he has been galled and irritated,' said the
general voice.</p>
<p>'I wonder what Mrs. Pugh thinks of it,' presently observed the Doctor.</p>
<p>'Ah!' said Ethel, 'Mrs. Pugh is reading "John of Anjou".'</p>
<p>'Indeed!' said the Doctor; 'I suspected the wind was getting into that
quarter. Master Henry does not know his own interest: she was sure to
take part with a handsome lad.'</p>
<p>'Why have you never got Mrs. Pugh to speak for him?' said Mary. 'I am
sure she would.'</p>
<p>'O, Mary! simple Mary, you to be Ave's friend, and not know that her
interposition is the only thing wanting to complete the frenzy of the
other two!'</p>
<p>Ethel said little more that evening, she was too much grieved and too
anxious. She was extremely disappointed in Leonard, and almost
hopeless as to his future. She saw but one chance of preventing his
seeking this place of temptation, and that was in the exertion of her
personal influence. His avoidance of her showed that he dreaded it,
but one attempt must be made. All night was spent in broken dreams of
just failing to meet him, or of being unable to utter what was on her
tongue; and in her waking moments she almost reproached herself for the
discovery how near her heart he was, and how much pleasure his devotion
had given her.</p>
<p>Nothing but resolution on her own part could bring about a meeting, and
she was resolute. She stormed the castle in person, and told Averil
she must speak to Leonard. Ave was on her side now, and answered with
tears in her eyes that she should be most grateful to have Leonard
persuaded out of this dreadful plan, and put in the way of excelling as
he ought to do; she never thought it would come to this.</p>
<p>'No,' thought Ethel; 'people blow sparks without thinking they may burn
a house down.'</p>
<p>Ave conducted her to the summer-house, where Leonard was packing up his
fossils. He met them with a face resolutely bent on brightness. 'I am
to take all my household gods,' he said, as he shook hands with Ethel.</p>
<p>'I see,' said Ethel, gravely; and as Averil was already falling out of
hearing, she added, 'I thought you were entirely breaking with your old
life.'</p>
<p>'No, indeed,' said Leonard, turning to walk with her in the paths; 'I
am leaving the place where it is most impossible to live in.'</p>
<p>'This has been a place of great, over-great trial, I know,' said Ethel,
'but I do not ask you to stay in it.'</p>
<p>'My word is my word,' said Leonard, snapping little boughs off the
laurels as he walked.</p>
<p>'A hasty word ought not to be kept.'</p>
<p>His face looked rigid, and he answered not.</p>
<p>'Leonard,' she said, 'I have been very unhappy about you, for I see you
doing wilfully wrong, and entering a place of temptation in a dangerous
spirit.'</p>
<p>'I have given my word,' repeated Leonard.</p>
<p>'O, Leonard, it is pride that is speaking, not the love of truth and
constancy.'</p>
<p>'I never defend myself,' said Leonard.</p>
<p>Ethel felt deeply the obduracy and pride of these answers; her eyes
filled with tears, and her hopes failed.</p>
<p>Perhaps Leonard saw the pain he was giving, for he softened, and said,
'Miss May, I have thought it over, and I cannot go back. I know I was
carried away by passion at the first moment, and I was willing to make
amends. I was rejected, as you know. Was it fit that we should go on
living together?'</p>
<p>'I do not ask you to live together.'</p>
<p>'When he reproached me with the cost of my maintenance, and threatened
me with the mill if I lost the scholarship, which he knew I could not
get, I said I would abide by those words. I do abide by them.'</p>
<p>'There is no reason that you should. Why should you give up all your
best and highest hopes, because you cannot forgive your brother?'</p>
<p>'Miss May, if I lived with you and the Doctor, I could have such aims.
Henry has taken care to make them sacrilege for me. I shall never be
fit now, and there's an end of it.'</p>
<p>'You might—'</p>
<p>'No, no, no! A school, indeed! I should be dismissed for licking the
boys before a week was out! Besides, I want the readiest way to get on
in the world; I must take care of my sisters; I don't trust one moment
to Henry's affection for any of them. This is no home for me, and it
soon may be no home for them!' and the boy's eyes were full of tears,
though his voice struggled for firmness and indifference.</p>
<p>'I am very sorry for you, Leonard,' said Ethel, much more
affectionately, as she felt herself nearer her friend of Coombe. 'I am
glad you have some better motives, but I do not see how you will be
more able to help them in this way.'</p>
<p>'I shall be near them,' said Leonard; 'I can watch over them. And
if—if—it is true what they say about Henry and Mrs. Pugh—then they
could have a cottage near the mill, and I could live with them. Don't
you see, Miss May?'</p>
<p>'Yes; but I question whether, on further acquaintance, you will wish
for your sisters to be with their relations there. The other course
would put you in the way of a better atmosphere for them.'</p>
<p>'But not for six years,' said Leonard. 'No, Miss May; to show you it
is not what you think in me, I will tell you that I had resolved the
last thing to ask Henry's pardon for my share in this unhappy
half-year; but this is the only resource for me or my sisters, and my
mind is made up.'</p>
<p>'O, Leonard, are you not deceiving yourself? Are the grapes ever so
sour, or the nightshade below so sweet, as when the fox has leapt too
short, and is too proud to climb?'</p>
<p>'Nightshade! Why, pray?'</p>
<p>'My father would tell you; I know he thinks your cousin no safe
companion.'</p>
<p>'I know that already, but I can keep out of his way.'</p>
<p>'Then this is the end of it,' said Ethel, feeling only half justified
in going so far, 'the end of all we thought and talked of at Coombe!'</p>
<p>There was a struggle in the boy's face, and she did not know whether
she had touched or angered him. 'I can't help it,' he said, as if he
would have recalled his former hardness; but then softening, 'No, Miss
May, why should it be? A man can do his duty in any state of life.'</p>
<p>'In any state of life where God has placed him; but how when it is his
own self-will?'</p>
<p>'There are times when one must judge for one's self.'</p>
<p>'Very well, then, I have done, Leonard. If you can conscientiously
feel that you are acting for the best, and not to gratify your pride,
then I can only say I hope you will be helped through the course you
have chosen. Good-bye.'</p>
<p>'But—Miss May—though I cannot take your advice—' he hesitated, 'this
is not giving me up?'</p>
<p>'Never, while you let me esteem you.'</p>
<p>'Thank you,' he said, brightening, 'that is something to keep my head
above water, even if this place were all you think it.'</p>
<p>'My father thinks,' said Ethel.</p>
<p>'I am engaged now; I cannot go back,' said Leonard. 'Thank you. Miss
May.'</p>
<p>'Thank you for listening patiently,' said Ethel. 'Good-bye.'</p>
<p>'And—and,' he added earnestly, following her back to the house, 'you
do not think the Coombe days cancelled?'</p>
<p>'If you mean my hopes of you,' said Ethel, with a swelling heart, 'as
long as you do your duty—for—for the highest reason, they will only
take another course, and I will try to think it the right one.'</p>
<p>Ethel had mentally made this interview the test of her regard for
Leonard. She had failed, and so had her test; her influence had not
succeeded, but it had not snapped; the boy, in all his wilfulness, had
been too much for her, and she could no longer condemn and throw him
off!</p>
<p>Oh! why will not the rights and wrongs of this world be more clearly
divided!</p>
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