<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>CATHERINE'S OPINION.</h3>
<p>It is not to be supposed that Harry's visits, which
made so much commotion at the Vernonry, could
have entirely escaped the keen observation of the
Grange. Catherine Vernon shared, with most sovereigns
and the ruling class in general, the peculiarity,
not indeed a very unusual one, of liking to know
everything that went on within her sphere. It was
not as gossip, nor, she would have said with some
reason, from curiosity alone. She had for so long
been all-powerful, and sure that the means were in
her hand to help those that wanted help, and to
regulate affairs in general for the benefit of the
world, that it had become a necessity, almost a duty
on her part, to keep herself informed of everything
that went on. When an individual feels capable of
performing the part of a visible Providence, it
becomes incumbent upon that person, so far as
possible, to know everything, to shut his eyes to no
detail, to note every little incident, and to encourage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</SPAN></span>
not only the confidences of his possible clients and
<i>protégés</i>, but the observations of all surrounding them,
and every hint as to their motives, their intentions
and purposes, that can be got at. The outside crowd,
knowing nothing of the meaning of these investigations,
is apt to mistake them altogether; but
Catherine did not care much about the outside world.
It was her wish that everything should be told her,
and she was perhaps too apt to think that those who
were not willing or able to open their hearts, were
people who had secrets in their life, and probably a
good deal that would not bear the light. She liked
her friends to bring her news, and never thought
anything too trivial to be added to the mass of
information which was in her hands. She knew the
habits of her neighbours, and the good and evil
fortune that befell them, better sometimes than they
did themselves. Parents, who were doubtful about
the proceedings of their sons, had they asked
Catherine, would have known all about them. So
the prince, in a little State, may often interest
himself graciously about the affairs of his subjects,
and monarchs are the best of genealogists, knowing
who married who all the world over, even outside of
the Almanach de Gotha. It is not a taste which can
be indulged without falling into an occasional appearance
of pettiness; but yet there is a great deal to be
said for this degree of interest in our fellow creatures,
and there is no way in which it can be kept up so
well as in a country town, where everybody knows
everybody else. This is perhaps rather an elaborate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</SPAN></span>
preface to introduce the simple fact that Catherine
Vernon from the very beginning had known of
Harry's visit to the Vernonry. Her own woman,
Meredith by name, shared her mistress's task, without
Catherine's fine reason for it, and carried it deeper
than Catherine, not refusing any garbage of the lanes
to satisfy her appetite. And she was a woman who
saw everything and knew everybody. It was no
more than Harry's second or third visit when she
pointed him out to her mistress, walking past in his
summer morning suit, which the long evenings
permitted a young man to retain while daylight
lasted and he could be about. Harry was very
carefully got up; he wore light clothes, and ties
of the most interesting description. He had always
the stick which was in fashion, the hat of the
moment; and a very pleasant sight he was striding
along in the summer evening, going where love
carried him, with honest intentions and a simple
heart. He was not perhaps capable of a very refined
or poetical sentiment. He had at that time no doubt
whatever that Hester would accept him gratefully,
not so much for himself (in which point he had an
instinctive humility), but for the good things he
could give her. The glamour and the thousand little
enchantments of love were not in him, but he was
honest and true, as Hester had said. He meant this
poor girl, whom most people, in Catherine's drawing-room
and elsewhere, passed by without notice, though
some thought her pretty—he meant her as his wife
to be a happy and much-honoured woman. And<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</SPAN></span>
what was more, he meant to be good to his mother-in-law.
He might have been a romantic paladin, or
a man of genius, and not have been so excellent, so
worthy of all admiration as that. It never occurred
to Harry to go another way, to conceal what he was
about from prying eyes. He was not ashamed of
what he was about. All the world might watch his
steps so far as he cared, and it must have required a
distinct effort on the part of any honest heart not to
like the sight of him as he went a-wooing, and wish
him a happy ending. Perhaps it would be too much
to say that Catherine made that effort; but she was
not favourable to Harry as to his cousin who was
under her own roof.</p>
<p>It is scarcely possible for any eyes but those of a
parent (and even the eyes of a parent are not always
impartial) to look upon two young candidates for
favour with exactly the same sentiments. If it is
too much to say that one will be loved and the other
hated, at least the balance will be unequal. Edward
had found means from the beginning to please his
patroness and relative. He had been—is not this
the grand reason?—so good: he had been ready at
her service when she wanted him, he had stayed at
home, he had been son and daughter to the lonely
woman. All that she knew of him was excellent,
and she had no reason to imagine there was anything
to know which was not equally good.</p>
<p>Catherine was one of the people who say that
they do not look for gratitude. If Edward had not
appreciated the kindness which picked him up as it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</SPAN></span>
were from the roadside, she would but have laughed;
she would not have shown either surprise or pain;
but the fact that he did feel her kindness, and devote
himself to her, touched her deeply. She was as well
off as if he had been her son, far better off than
many mothers with sons. But Harry was very
different. For a long time she had made up her
mind that Harry was her great failure. He and his
sister had never attempted to attach themselves to
Catherine. They had considered their elevation to
the White House, and the honours of the bank, as
owing to their own merits, and had set up a sort of
heir-apparent establishment always in opposition.
With the natural instinct of a woman, she had
concluded it all to be Ellen's fault; but Harry had
not the good sense to separate himself from his
sister, or even to imply that he did not support her
in her proceedings: far from that, he stood by her
with the utmost loyalty. Though he never was
anything but deferential and respectful in his dull
way to his benefactress, he never would allow it to be
supposed that he did not approve of his sister and
back her up. If Catherine saw the merit of this
faithfulness, it was in a grudging way; and, as a
matter of fact, she did not like Harry. There was
nothing in reality to find fault with in him. He was
very steady at his business, notwithstanding the
rival claims of cricket in summer and football in
winter. And when he was asked to dinner at the
Grange, he was as punctual as clockwork, with an
expanse of shirt front that would have been a credit<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</SPAN></span>
to any man. But he did not please Catherine. He
had given her a reproof which stung, on that occasion
when he "took down" Mrs. John, without waiting to
know what person of importance should have gone
before. Nothing that could have been said would
have stung Catherine so much as that good-natured
act, and it was all the more hard upon her that in
her heart (always a good and generous one) she
approved Harry. It was a reproach to her, and still
more, it was a reproach to Edward, who had never
taken the slightest notice of Mrs. John's presence,
but left her among the neglected ones. Catherine
had been doubly angry with Harry ever since that
evening. She would not allow even that he was a
handsome fellow.</p>
<p>"He is big enough," she would say, resenting the
fact that he was a head taller than Edward, and
twice as strong. "He is a fine animal, if you like:
but I don't see how a man with white eyelashes
can be considered handsome."</p>
<p>Edward did not oppose his aunt in this any more
than in other things. "I allow," he would say, "that
he is not clever." But he shook his head, as one
who would deprecate a too true accusation when
Miss Vernon held Harry up to ridicule. "No, he is
not clever; he will never set the Thames on fire,"
Edward said.</p>
<p>Miss Vernon saw Harry pass the third time he
went to the Vernonry, and afterwards she looked for
him regularly. "Who was it for?" she asked, with
an ardent feminine appreciation of the only motive<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</SPAN></span>
which could induce a man to hurry over his dinner
and get to the Vernonry in time for the humble
community's tea. This was a question not very hard
to answer, seeing that the next moment she added to
herself, "Who else could it be?" It could not be
Matilda, or Martha, who were neither young nor fair.
It was very unlikely to be Mrs. Reginald, though she
was young enough, and not without beauty. "But
Harry is not the man to burden himself with a lot
of children," said Catherine, with an unnecessary
scoff at the poor fellow who was not her favourite.
Thus there was only one person whom it could be.
It gave her a sort of pang of amusement when she
concluded upon this—Hester! that proud, troublesome
creature—she who would never give in, who
put on the airs of a princess in the Grange drawing-room,
and declined to go to supper—she with the
spirit of a revolutionary, and the temper of a—demon—(no,
no, this was perhaps too bad—the
temper of a—Vernon, Catherine said to herself with
a laugh)—she to fall to the lot of Harry! This was
so strangely funny, so paradoxical, so out of character,
that it amused Catherine altogether beyond description,
yet gave her a strange blow. What a ridiculous
combination! If the world had been ransacked for
two who ought not to come together, these two
would be that pair. What would they do with each
other? how could they ever pull together—the one
all eagerness and vigour, the other stolid and heavy?
Catherine was almost tempted to be sorry for the
girl, but the next moment she laughed again. Oh,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span>
it was easy to understand! Mrs. John must have
managed it all. She would see in it a way of
recovering all her lost glories, of getting back her
footing in that ridiculous White House, which had
been adapted to her silly taste from the beginning.
Oh, no doubt it was her doing! She would talk
the girl over; she would persuade her into it, "with
a host of petty maxims preaching down a daughter's
heart." And it was with a gleam of vindictive
amusement that Catherine assured herself that Mrs.
John would find herself mistaken. After she had
made the marriage she would be left in the lurch.
Harry was not a man to put up with a mother-in-law.
Thus Catherine Vernon, though she was a clever
woman, misconceived and misunderstood them all.</p>
<p>But yet it did give her a natural pang. That girl,
who compelled her attention somehow, though she
had no favour for her—who inspired her with a certain
respect, notwithstanding the consistent opposition
to herself which Hester had always shown—to
think of that ambitious creature, all fire and life
being quenched in the dulness of Harry, put out in
the heavy tranquillity of his athletic existence—to
score at cricket matches, and spend long wearisome
days out in the sun, watching for the runs he got!
But then, she would be well off, would have the
White House and all sorts of good things. Oh, no
occasion to be sorry for her. She would get her
compensation. And then Catherine thought, with a
jealous displeasure which she felt angry with herself
for entertaining, of the arrangements which Harry's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span>
marriage would make necessary. Up to this time he
had more or less held his position at her pleasure, but
she had no reason, she was aware, to refuse to satisfy
all her engagements, and make him actually independent,
as he had been virtually for a long time back.
She would not have the slightest excuse for doing it.
Everything had gone on perfectly well. There were
no complaints of him at the bank. The business
flourished and made progress. But the thought that
Hester would be thus immediately placed on a sort
of equality with herself, and Mrs. John reinstated,
vexed her. It was a mean sentiment, but she could
not help it. It vexed her in spite of herself.</p>
<p>The news had been, it is scarcely necessary to say,
communicated to Edward at a very early stage. Miss
Vernon had called him to her, after dinner, as soon
as he came up stairs to the drawing-room, to the
window from which the road was visible winding
along the side of the Common to the Vernonry.</p>
<p>"Do you see that?" she said, pointing his cousin
out.</p>
<p>What? He saw the Common lying in all its
sweetness, its roughness and undulations standing
out in the level sunset rays, every bush casting a
shadow. He was young, and he had at least a
scientific love of nature, and longed to be out poking
into those beds of herbage, feeling the fresh air on
his face; and it was with a secret grudge in his
heart that he realised the difference between the
light, strong figure moving along buoyant with life
and liberty, and he himself in his evening clothes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</SPAN></span>
in his aunt's drawing-room, seeing it all from within
four walls.</p>
<p>"What?" he said, thinking that he would rather
not see the fair out-door evening world since he could
have no share in it. "Why—is it Harry?" and
then he felt that he hated the fellow who was his
own master.</p>
<p>"He is going a-wooing," Miss Vernon said.</p>
<p>She was sitting in her favourite place which commanded
this prospect, the Common, the Vernonry,
the tall pines, and the red bars of the sunset behind.
The sunset was her favourite entertainment, and in
summer she always sat here. Edward stood behind,
looking out over her head. She did not see the
grimace with which he heard these words. And he
did not reply for some time. It gave him a shock
more sharp even than that with which Catherine
herself had heard it first, though to be sure there
was no reason why.</p>
<p>"Ah!" he said indifferently, "who can he find to
woo about here?" But he knew very well in his
heart what the answer would be.</p>
<p>"Only one person, so far as I can make out. It
must be that girl of Mrs. John's. I suppose she is
what you call pretty, though she has never been a
favourite of mine."</p>
<p>"But you can't confine prettiness to your favourites,
Aunt Catherine," said Edward, with a sharp
smile which he had sometimes.</p>
<p>"No, that's true. I deserved that you should hit
that blot. She is pretty I know. Poor Harry, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</SPAN></span>
will have his hands full, what with the mild mother
and the wild daughter. I wonder at the girl though.
She is an ambitious, energetic thing, and poor
dear Harry will never set the Thames on fire as
you say."</p>
<p>"Did I say it? No, I don't think he will; but he
has solid qualities."</p>
<p>"Very solid—the White House and his share in the
bank. Oh, there will be an equivalent! And to think
that little schemer, that soft little woman that looks
as if she could not harm a fly, should have managed
to secure herself in this cunning way and get her
daughter back to the point she started from! Who
would have thought it? There is nothing so astute
as simplicity."</p>
<p>Edward made no reply, and this was a thing Miss
Vernon did not like. She required a response.
Silence felt like disapproval, and as there was a
strong silent protest in her heart against everything
that was mean or petty in what she said,
she was apt to resent this want of acquiescence all
the more. She looked back at him when he did
not expect it, and was startled to see a look she
had never seen before, a look that astonished her,
on his face. It was something like a snarl of contempt
and despite, but it disappeared in a moment
and she could not believe her eyes.</p>
<p>"Are you so sure that Hester will marry him?"
was all that Edward said.</p>
<p>"Marry him! Why how could he have so much
as looked that way without encouragement? To be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</SPAN></span>
sure she will marry him. Where could she find any
one who had so much to offer? The girl is not a fool.
Besides, her mother would not let her if she wished
it; and of course she would not wish it, an ambitious
girl to whom her present position is intolerable. Don't
you remember her look on the Thursdays, which we
both remarked?"</p>
<p>Edward had remarked it, not exactly in the same
way as Catherine had done. Hester's look had made
him ashamed of himself, but he had not had the
strength to go and display himself by her side as
Harry had done. It made him furious to think of
Harry standing there by her in the corner, not caring
what their patroness might think. It was a courage
of which he was not capable.</p>
<p>"Don't you think," he said, softly, "that we are
going too fast, Aunt Catherine, in every way?
Harry's visit may be a chance one. There may be
no purpose at all in it, or it may have some other
purpose."</p>
<p>"He was there last night and on last Saturday and
Wednesday, and I don't know how many evenings
besides. Oh no, there can be no doubt on the subject.
It will be a great amusement for the Vernonry;
the dear old ladies want something to amuse
them."</p>
<p>This was said of the Ridgways and Mr. Mildmay,
who were all younger than Catherine, and one of
them a man. But that fact increased the pleasantry
all the more.</p>
<p>The curious thing was, that through all this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</SPAN></span>
Catherine was aware that what she was saying was
unworthy of her, and in reality was disgusted with
herself, and kept a mental reckoning of all the meannesses
of which she had been guilty. There were first
her remarks upon Mrs. John, which indeed might be
true enough, but which she ought not to have made;
and her certainty that scheming and "encouragement"
must have been used to entrap Harry, and
that Hester would marry him for an equivalent. No
moralist would have noted these faults more clearly
than she did herself, yet somehow she went on with
them all the same. But it vexed and annoyed her
to find Edward so constrained. He said, "Will you
come and have a turn in the garden?" but not in
his usual tone. That turn in the garden had been
doubly pleasant to her, because he had made it
appear that it was pleasant to him too.</p>
<p>"I think not to-night," she said.</p>
<p>"There is a new moon. It is a lovely evening,"
said he. "I think you ought to go. The sunset on
one side, and that clear, pale shining in the east on
the other, make such a beautiful contrast. Come,
Aunt Catherine, it will do you good."</p>
<p>"You think it will blow the ill-natured thoughts
out of my head," she said with a laugh.</p>
<p>"Have you ill-natured thoughts? I was not
aware of it," said Edward; and then as she did not
move he added—"If you will not come I think I
must go and give a little attention to some papers
I brought home with me. I had not time to look at
them during the day."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"What papers?" she said quickly.</p>
<p>"Oh, only some prospectuses and details about
investments," he said with a careless air, and left
her: to her great surprise.</p>
<p>He had been in the habit of telling her of any
work he had, all about it, and of sitting with her for
an hour or two at least. Catherine was surprised,
but as is natural in a first shock of this kind, having
got over the momentary prick of it, assured herself
that it was accidental and meant nothing: yet was
a little more vexed with <i>that</i> girl and with Harry,
because in the same way their concerns had brought
about this little, little break, this momentary lapse
in the continuance. She could not any longer amuse
herself with the prospect of the Vernonry, and the
little excitement of this dawning story. There were
a great many pricks about the story altogether,
sentiments and sensations of which, when left alone
and without the support of any moral backer up,
of Meredith's stimulating disclosures or Edward's
assent, she felt ashamed. It was wrong to speak as
she had done about the astuteness of Mrs. John's
simplicity. Why should not the mother wish to
place her child in the position which she, after all
by no fault of her own, poor creature! had lost?
Catherine escaped from the tingling of shame at her
own pettiness which had gone through her, by considering
the final arrangements which she would
have to make in view of Harry's marriage. Practically
she was always magnanimous; she would
have scorned a petty cutting off, a restraint of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</SPAN></span>
liberality, a condition to her gifts. Her givings
were always large, and if her mind was warped by
the sense of benefactions unappreciated, or kindness
unprized, of reaping envy and resentment where she
should have got gratitude and love, was it not the
fault of her pensioners more than her own, the fault
of human nature, which she had been forced to
believe she saw through, and which—in order not
to break her heart over it—she was obliged to laugh
at and despise?</p>
<p>It would have given Catherine Vernon a sharper
shock still if she had seen into Edward's mind as he
went away from her, bitterly feeling that while other
men could taste the sweetness of freedom and of
love, he was attached to an old woman's apron-strings,
and had to keep her company and do her
pleasure, instead of taking the good of his youth
like the rest. It was a sudden crisis of this bitterness
which had made it impossible for him to bear
the yoke which he usually carried so patiently, and
which she, deceived in this instance, believed to be
pleasant to him, the natural impulse of a tranquil
and home-loving disposition. Had she known how
he regarded it, how violently he suppressed and
subdued himself, the shock would have been a
terrible one; for she was slow to put faith in those
around her, and she clung to the one who had been
able to impress her with a sense of trustworthiness,
with a double tenacity. Edward breathed more
freely when he got out of that drawing-room where
he always seemed so entirely at home. The library<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</SPAN></span>
in which he sat when he was alone was a little less
oppressive in so far that he was alone in it, but the
recollection of Harry going lightly along in his freedom,
going a-wooing, had raised a ferment in the
breast of the other which it was very difficult to
quiet down. Since the morning when he made her
acquaintance first, Hester had been an interest to
the self-sufficing young man. Perhaps it was only a
little warmer than the interest he felt in his botany,
in a new specimen, but it had continued through
all those years. When he spoke that little aside to
her at the party, with his eyebrows and shoulders
in a suppressed and confidential attitude which
placed himself and her in the same category of compelled
assistants at a lugubrious merrymaking where
neither of them "got on"—he felt her in her poor
little muslin frock and her high indignation to be
far the most interesting person in the room, and
he resented the necessity which made it impossible
to him as the official host to separate himself from
the more important people, and show the opinion he
had of her. Here again the disabilities of his good
fortune weighed upon Edward. He was the host;
he was the first person there next to Catherine,
her representative, the master of all her wealth.
Harry was not of any authority in the house; so he
could do as he pleased, and earn the gratitude of
Hester; but Edward could neither go to her side in
her corner, nor set out of a lovely evening in his
pleasantest clothes to woo her, as a free man might.
He was not sure that he wanted to woo her, any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</SPAN></span>
more than as a fine specimen; but he could not
bear the impudence of the other fellow who thought
himself good enough to go after her, and whom
Catherine thought so sure to win. Edward could
not contemplate with any self-possession the idea
that Harry might win. It made him angry, it made
him furious; it made him for the moment too much
a natural man, too sincere and real to be capable of
his usual self-suppression. Harry would have an
equal share with himself of the bank; they were
equal there in power and authority, and in the
profits they drew. Why then was it that Harry
should be his own master and Edward the slave of
an old woman! This was the utterance of his
passion, of the sincerity which was forced upon him
by the enticements of the summer night, the freedom
in the air, and the sight of all the privileges
which Harry exercised so easily without knowing
they were privileges at all. No doubt the fellow
thought himself good enough for Hester, perhaps
believed that she would jump at him, and was encouraging
him, and ready to accept his proffered
hand as soon as ever he should hold it out. This
thought made Edward's blood boil, and the confinement
of the Grange became so oppressive to him
that he did not know how to bear it. He indemnified
himself by plunging into the midst of the
bundle of papers which he had not chosen to
describe to Catherine. In these papers lay far more
excitement than all Harry's privileges had yet
supplied. A battery of artillery planted in front of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</SPAN></span>
this peaceful Grange with all its matches alight
would scarcely have been more full of danger.
There was enough in the packet to tear the house
up by its roots, and send its walls flying in a whirlwind
of ashes and ruin. Edward sat down to
examine it as another man might have flown to
brandy or laudanum. Dreams were in it of sudden
successes, of fortunes achieved in a moment. Castles
in the air more dazzling than ever rose in a fairy
tale. He revenged himself on his bonds, on the
superior happiness of his rival, on Catherine above
all, the unconscious cause of his imprisonment, by
this—Here was enough, all ready and in his hands,
to ruin them all.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />