<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>A FIRST MEETING.</h3>
<p>Catherine Vernon had come to see with her own
eyes that her guests or tenants had arrived, and that
they were comfortable. They were relations, which
justified the want of ceremony; but, perhaps, if
they had not been poor, and she had not been their
benefactor, she would scarcely, in so very easy a way,
with a shawl over her cap, and at an hour not
adapted for visits, have made the first call upon
them. She would have been more indignant than
any one at such a suggestion; but human motives
are very subtle, and, no doubt, though she was not
in the least aware of it, this was true. To be sure,
there were circumstances in which such a visit would
have seemed, of all things, the most kind, but not,
perhaps, with persons so little in sympathy as
Catherine Vernon and Mrs. John. She knew she
had been substantially kind. It is so much easier
to be substantially kind than to show that tender
regard for other people's feelings which is the only
thing which ever calls forth true gratitude; and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span>
perhaps Catherine had not altogether escaped the
deteriorating influences of too much prosperity. In
her solitude she had become a great observer of men—and
women: and was disposed to find much
amusement in this observation. Miss Vernon was
half aware that other motives than those of pure
benevolence affected her mind as she went that
evening to the Vernonry. Curiosity was in it. She
could not but wonder how Mrs. John was feeling,
what she thought of all these changes. She was
glad that her cousin's widow had come home where
she could be looked after, and where it would be
seen that nothing happened to her; but she had
wondered above measure when her offer of shelter
and a home had been accepted, not knowing, of
course, anything about that very active factor in
Mrs. John's affairs, who was known to the people in
Redborough only as "the little girl." Catherine
Vernon thought that she herself, in Mrs. John's
position, would have starved or worked her fingers
to the bone rather than have come back in such a
humiliated condition to the neighbourhood where
she had held so different a place. She was rather
glad to feel herself justified in her contempt of her
cousin's wife by this failure in her of all "proper
pride"; and she allowed curiosity and a sense of
superiority and her low estimate of Mrs. John's
capacity of feeling, to carry the day over her natural
sense of courtesy. What so natural, she said to
herself, as that she should run out and see whether
they had arrived, and if they were comfortable, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span>
establish friendly, easy relations at once, without
waiting for formalities? <i>Qui s'excuse s'accuse.</i> Miss
Vernon certainly knew, at the bottom of her heart,
that sorrow and downfall merited a more respectful
accost; but then Mrs. John had none of those
delicacies of feeling, or it was not in nature that she
would have come at all. And nothing could be more
substantially kind than Catherine knew she had
been. She had engaged an excellent servant for
them—a woman who had been in her own house,
and who was a capital cook, and capable of taking
a kind of charge as housekeeper if Mrs. John still
remained incapable as of old; and, no doubt, Miss
Vernon thought, there would be a foreign <i>bonne</i> of
some sort or other to take care of "the little girl."
Her own maid accompanied her to the gate, then went
round to the humbler entrance while Miss Vernon
walked through the garden to the pretty verandah
newly put up (but in excellent taste and keeping,
everybody said), which was intended to form a sort
of conservatory in a sunny corner, and give the
inhabitants a little more elegance and modern
prettiness than the other houses afforded. She
had done this on purpose for Mrs. John, who had
got used, no doubt, to foreign ways, sitting out of
doors, and indulgences of that kind. Could anything
have been more kind? And yet, at the bottom of
her heart, Miss Vernon was aware that if she had
resisted her impulse to come and spy upon the poor
traveller this first night, and investigate her feelings,
and how she was supporting the change, and all the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span>
recollections to be called forth by her return, she
would have been far more really kind. She felt
this, yet she came. What is there in the human
bosom more strong than the desire to see how the
gladiators die? Poor Mrs. John was no gladiator,
but she was upon the point of that sword of suffering
which some writhe and struggle upon, and some
allow themselves to be wounded by, in silence. Miss
Vernon was very anxious to know how she was
bearing it. The daylight, which had come to an
end altogether in the dark wainscoted rooms inside,
was still lingering without. Behind the trees there
was a golden clearness upon the horizon, against
which every branch stood out. The stars were only
half visible in the faint blue. The walk had been
delightful. It was the time she preferred to be
abroad, her mind undisturbed by those cares which
pursue less peaceful people, yielding itself up entirely
to the spell of universal tranquillity and repose.</p>
<p>But when Miss Vernon, opening the glass door
of the verandah, suddenly came in sight of a figure
which was quite unexpected, which she could not
identify or recognise, she was, for the moment, too
much startled to speak. A tall girl of fourteen, in
that large development which so many girls attain
at that early age, to be "fined down" into slim
grace and delicacy afterwards—with rather high
shoulders, increased by the simple form of her dress;
hair of a chestnut colour, cut short, and clustering
in natural rings and twists—not curled in the
ordinary sense of the word; a complexion in which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</SPAN></span>
white predominated, the creamy whiteness of a
sanguine temperament, with but little of the rose;
and two large, eager brown eyes, full of curiosity,
full of life, evidently interrogating everything,
coming out, even upon the twilight and the tears
of departing day, with her lighted candle and all-questioning
eyes. There was so much warmth of
life and movement about Hester, that it was difficult
not to feel a certain interest in her; and there was
something wonderfully characteristic in her attitude,
arrested, as she stepped out, like an explorer, with
her candle in her hand.</p>
<p>"I don't know you," said Catherine Vernon, who,
from her general popularity and the worship administered
to her all round, had, perhaps without
knowing it, acquired the familiar ease of expression
which belonged to kind and well-intentioned despots.
The tone of her voice, Hester thought, who was
accustomed to that distinction, was as if she said
"<i>tu</i>." And it depends a great deal upon circumstances
whether it is affection or insult to <i>tutoyer</i> a
stranger. "I don't know you," she said, coming in
without any invitation, and closing the glass door
behind her. "I suppose you must have come with
Mrs. John Vernon. It is not possible," she cried a
moment after, "that you are the little girl?"</p>
<p>"I am all the girl there is. I am Hester: but I
don't know you either," the girl said, determined
not to show any poltroonery or to veil her pretensions
for any one. "Are you Cousin Catherine?" she
added after a moment, with a quick drawn breath.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Yes, I am Cousin Catherine. I came to see how
you have got through your journey, and how your
mother is. I suppose she is your mother? It is
quite astonishing to me to see you look almost like a
grown up young woman, you whom I have always
thought of as the little girl."</p>
<p>"I am fourteen," said Hester. "I never was
very little since I can remember;" and then they
stood and looked at each other under the glass
roof, which still let in some light among the flowers,
their two faces lit up by the flame of the candle.
Hester stood in front of the door which led into
the house, and, indeed, had something the aspect
of a guardian of the house preventing the visitor
from going in. There was a sort of resemblance
to each other in their faces and somewhat
largely developed figures; but this, which
ought to have been a comfortable and soothing
thought, did not occur to either. And it cannot
be denied that the first encounter was hostile on
both sides.</p>
<p>"I should like to see your mother: to—welcome
her—home."</p>
<p>"She has gone to bed. She was—tired," Hester
said; and then, with an effort—"I do not suppose it
is quite happy for her, just the first night, coming
back to the place she used to live in. I made her
go to bed."</p>
<p>"You take good care of her," said Miss Vernon;
"that is right. She always wanted taking care of."
Then, with a smile, she added, "Am I not to go in?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span>
I came to see if you were comfortable and had
everything you want."</p>
<p>"Mother will be much obliged," said Hester,
stiffly. She did not know any better. She was not
accustomed to visitors, and was altogether at a loss
what to do—not to speak of the instinct of opposition
which sprang up in her mind to this first new
actor in the new life which lay vaguely existing and
unknown before her feet. It seemed to her, she
could scarcely tell how, that here was an enemy,
some one to be held at arm's length. As for
Catherine Vernon, she was more completely taken
aback by this encounter than by anything which had
happened for years. Few people opposed her or met
her with suspicion, much less hostility; and the
aspect of this girl standing in the doorway, defending
it, as it were, preventing her from entering, was
half comic, half exasperating. Keeping her out of
her own house! It was one of the drawbacks of
her easy beneficence, the <i>defauts de ses qualités</i>, that
she felt a little too distinctly that it was her own
house, which, seeing she had given it to Mrs. John,
was an ungenerosity in the midst of her generosity.
But she was human, like the rest of us. She began
to laugh, bewildered, half angry, yet highly tickled
with the position, while Hester stood in front of her,
regarding her curiously with those big eyes. "I
must rest here, if I am not to go in," she said.
"I hope you don't object to that; for it is as much
as I can do to walk from the Grange here."</p>
<p>Hester felt as if her lips were sealed. She could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span>
not say anything; indeed she did not know what she
ought to say. A vague sense that she was behaving
badly made her uncomfortable; but she was not
going to submit, to yield to the first comer, to let
anybody enter who chose. Was she not the guardian
of her mother, and of her quiet and repose? She
shifted her position a little as Miss Vernon sat down
on one of the creaking basket chairs, but did not
even put her candle out of her hand, or relax in her
defensive attitude. When her visitor laughed again,
Hester felt a flush of hot anger, like a flame, going
over her. To be ludicrous is the last thing a girl
can bear: but even for that she would not give in.</p>
<p>"You are a capital guardian," Catherine said,
"but I assure you I am not an enemy. I shall have
to call my maid Jennings, who has gone to the
kitchen to see Betsey, before I go home, for I am not
fond of walking alone. You must try and learn that
we are all friends here. I suppose your mother
has told you a great deal about the Vernons—and
me?"</p>
<p>"I don't know about any Vernons—except ourselves,"
Hester said.</p>
<p>"My dear," said Miss Vernon, hastily, "you must
not get it into your little head that you are by any
means at the head of the house, or near it. Your
grandfather was only the second son, and you are
only a girl—if you had been a boy it might have
been different; and even my great-grandfather, John
Vernon, who is the head of our branch, was nothing
more than a cadet of the principal family. So don't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span>
give yourself any airs on that score. All your
neighbours here are better Vernons than you——"</p>
<p>"I never give myself any airs—I don't know what
you mean," said Hester, feeling a wish to cry, but
mastering herself with all the strength of passion.</p>
<p>"Don't you, my poor child? I think you do.
You are behaving in a silly way, you know, meeting
me like this. Your mother should have taught you
better manners. I have no desire but to be kind to
you. But never mind, I will not say anything about
it, for I dare say you are all put the wrong way with
fatigue and excitement; otherwise I should think
you were excessively uncivil, do you know," Miss
Vernon said.</p>
<p>And Hester stood, fiery-red, and listened. If she
had spoken she must have cried—there was no
alternative. The candle flickered between the two
antagonists. They were antagonists already, as
much as if they had been on terms of equality.
When Miss Vernon had rested as long as she
thought necessary, she got up and bade her young
enemy good-night. "Tell your mother that I have
done my duty in the way of calling, and that it is
she now who must come to me," she said.</p>
<p>Hester stood at the door of the verandah, with her
candle flaring into the night, while Catherine went
round to the other door to call Jennings, her maid,
and then watched the two walking away together
with a mixture of confused feeling which filled her
childish soul to overflowing. She wanted to cry, to
stamp with her feet, and clench her fists, and grind<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span>
her teeth. She was like a child in the unreasoning
force of her passion, which was bitter shame as well.
She had behaved like a savage, like a fool, she knew,
like a little silly, ill-tempered child. She ought to
be whipped for her rudeness, and—oh, far worse!—she
would be laughed at. Does not every one
remember the overwhelming, intolerable shame and
mortification which envelope a young creature like a
sudden flame when she perceives that her conduct
has been ludicrous as well as wrong, and that she has
laid herself open to derision and laughter? Oh, if
she could but wipe that hour out of her life! But
Hester felt that never, never could it be wiped out
of her life. She would remember it if she lived to
be a hundred, Miss Vernon would remember it, and
tell everybody what a senseless, rude, ignorant being
she was. Oh, if the earth would open and swallow
her up! She did not wish to live any longer with
the consciousness of this mistake. The first time,
the first time she had been tried—and she had made
herself ridiculous! The tears came pouring from
her eyes like hail-drops, hot and stinging. Oh, how
she stamped upon the floor! Never more could she
hold up her head in this new place. She had covered
herself with shame the very first hour. All the
self-restraint she could exercise was to keep herself
from flying up stairs and waking her mother in order
to tell her all that had happened. She was not what
people call unselfish—the one quality which is supposed
to be appropriate to feminine natures. She
was kind and warm-hearted and affectionate, but she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span>
was not without thought of herself. Her own little
affairs naturally bulked more largely to her than
everything else in the world. She could scarcely
endure to keep all this to herself till to-morrow.
She had indeed flown up stairs with a cry of
"Mother, mother!" open-mouthed: and then it had
occurred to her that to wake her mother would be
cruel. She was very tired, and she had been more
"upset" than Hester had ever seen her. Probably
she would be still upset in the morning if she were
disturbed now in her slumber. Hester's fortitude
was not sufficient to make her go to bed quietly.
She was almost noisy in her undressing, letting her
hair-brush fall, and pushing the furniture about,
hoping every moment that her mother would wake.
But Mrs. John was very tired, and she was a good
sleeper. She lay perfectly still notwithstanding this
commotion; and Hester, with her heart swelling,
had to put herself to bed at last, where she soon fell
asleep too, worn out with passion and pain—things
which weary the spirit more than even a day on the
railway or crossing the Channel when there are
storms at sea.</p>
<p>Miss Vernon went home half amused, but more
than half angry. Edward Vernon had not very long
before taken up his abode at the Grange, and he was
very attentive to Aunt Catherine, as many of the
family called her. He came out to meet her when
she appeared, and blamed her tenderly for not calling
him when she went out.</p>
<p>"I do not think you would have been the worse<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>
for my arm," he said. He was a slim young man
with a black beard, though he was still quite young,
and a gentle expression in his eyes. He was one of
those of whom it is said he never gave his parents
an anxious hour; but there was something in his
face which made one wonder whether this was from
genuine goodness, or because he had never yet come
under temptation. This doubt had passed through
Catherine Vernon's mind when she heard all that
his enthusiastic family had to say of him; but it had
worn away in beholding the sweetness of his disposition,
and his gentle, regular life. To see him so
dutiful and gentle was a relief and comfort to her
after the encounter she had just had.</p>
<p>"It would have given you a sensation," she said,
"I promise you, if you had come with me, Edward.
I have just had a meeting with a little spitfire, a
little tiger-cat."</p>
<p>"Who is that, Aunt Catherine?"</p>
<p>Miss Vernon threw her shawl off her cap, and sat
down on the sofa to take breath. She had walked
home faster than usual in the excitement of the
moment.</p>
<p>"If you will believe me," she said, "I don't even
know her name—except of course that it is Vernon,
John Vernon's daughter. I suppose she must have
been warned against me, and instructed to keep me
at arm's length."</p>
<p>"To keep <i>you</i> at arm's length? That is not
possible."</p>
<p>"Well, it does not look likely, does it?" she said,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span>
somewhat mollified. "People are not generally
afraid of Catherine Vernon: but it is singular sometimes
how you will find your own family steeled
against you, when everybody else likes you well
enough. They see you too near at hand, where
there is no illusion possible, I suppose; but that
could not be the case with this little thing, who
never set eyes on me before. She let me know that
her mother was not to be disturbed, and even refused
me admission—what do you think?—to my
own house."</p>
<p>"Are you quite sure there is no mistake?" said
Edward; "it seems incomprehensible to me."</p>
<p>"Oh, I do not find it incomprehensible. She is
Mrs. John's daughter, and there never was any love
lost between us. I always felt her to be a vacant,
foolish creature; and no one can tell what a venturesome,
ridiculous hoyden she thought me."</p>
<p>Here Catherine Vernon felt herself grow hot all
over, as Hester had done, bethinking herself of an
encounter not altogether unlike the present, in which
she had enacted Hester's part, and exposed herself
to the ridicule of Mrs. John. Though this was
nearly half a century ago, it had still power to move
her with that overwhelming sense of mortification.
There are things which no one ever forgets.</p>
<p>"When I heard of that woman coming home, I
knew mischief would come of it," Miss Vernon said.</p>
<p>"But forgive me, Aunt Catherine, was it not you
that asked her to come?"</p>
<p>Catherine Vernon laughed.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"You have me there," she said. "I see you are
quick, and I see you are honest, Edward. Most
people hearing me say that would have been bewildered,
and thought it not possible. No, I did
not bring her. I only said to her, if you are coming,
there is a house here which you are welcome to if
you please. What else could I do?"</p>
<p>"She is not penniless, I suppose. You might
have let her settle where she pleased."</p>
<p>"She is not penniless, but she is heedless and
heartless," said Miss Vernon with a sigh; "and as
for settling where she pleased, of course anyhow she
would have come here. And then, I never expected
she would take it."</p>
<p>"You thought she would come here, and yet you
never expected she would take it; and you knew she
would make mischief, yet you invited her to come.
That is a jumble. I don't make head or tail of it."</p>
<p>"Nor I," cried Miss Vernon, with another laugh.
"You shall carry the problem a little further, if you
please. I feared that her coming would disturb us
all, and yet I am half pleased in my heart, being
such a bad woman, that she is going to make a
disturbance to prove me right. You see I don't
spare myself."</p>
<p>"It amuses you to make out your own motives
as well as other people's: and to show how they
contradict each other," Edward said, shaking his head.</p>
<p>This little bit of metaphysics refreshed Miss
Vernon. She became quite herself again, as she
told him her story.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The little firebrand!" she said, "the little spitfire!
facing me on my own ground, defying me,
Catherine Vernon, in the very Vernonry, my own
creation!"</p>
<p>"I wonder what the child could mean by it; it
must have been ignorance."</p>
<p>"Very likely it was ignorance: but it was more;
it was opposition, firm, healthy, instinctive opposition,
without any cause for it; that is a sort of thing
which it refreshes one to see. It must have been
born in her, don't you see? for she didn't know me,
never set eyes on me. The little wild cat! She
felt in every nerve of her that we were in opposition,
she and I."</p>
<p>"Don't you think you give too much importance
to the nonsense of a girl? I know," said Edward,
with a very serious nod of his head, "what girls are.
I have six sisters. They are strange beings. They
will go all off at a tangent in a moment. Pull a
wrong string, touch a wrong stop, and they are all
off—in a moment."</p>
<p>"You forget that I was once a girl myself."</p>
<p>"It is a long time ago, Aunt Catherine," said the
ruthless young man. "I dare say you have forgotten:
whereas I, you know, have studied the subject up
to its very last development."</p>
<p>Miss Vernon shook her head at him with a playful
menace, and then the tea was brought in, and lights.
As he went on talking, she could not refrain from a
little self-congratulation. What a wise choice she
had made! Many young men hurried out in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span>
evenings, made acquaintances that were not desirable,
involved themselves in indifferent society.
Edward seemed to wish for nothing better than this
soft home atmosphere, her own company, his books
and occupations. What a lucky choice! and at the
same time a choice that reflected much credit on
herself. She might just as well have chosen his
brother, who was not so irreproachable. As she sat
on the sofa and took her tea, her eyes sought the
figure of the young man, pacing quietly up and
down in the dim space, filling the house and the
room and her mind with a sensation of family completeness.
She was better off with Edward than
many a mother with her son. It was scarcely possible
for Miss Vernon to divest herself of a certain
feeling of complacency. Even the little adventure
with the stranger at the Heronry enhanced this.
Mrs. John, to whom she had been so magnanimous,
to whom she had offered shelter, had always been
against her; she had foreseen it, and if not content
with this incident, was so with herself.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />