<p><SPAN name="c31" id="c31"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XXXI</h3>
<h3>Frank Greystock's Second Visit to Portray<br/> </h3>
<p>On this occasion Frank Greystock went down to Portray Castle with the
intention of staying at the house during the very short time that he
would remain in Scotland. He was going there solely on his cousin's
business,—with no view to grouse-shooting or other pleasure, and he
purposed remaining but a very short time,—perhaps only one night.
His cousin, moreover, had spoken of having guests with her, in which
case there could be no tinge of impropriety in his doing so. And
whether she had guests, or whether she had not, what difference could
it really make? Mr. Andrew Gowran had already seen what there was to
see, and could do all the evil that could be done. He could, if he
were so minded, spread reports in the neighbourhood, and might,
perhaps, have the power of communicating what he had discovered to
the Eustace faction,—John Eustace, Mr. Camperdown, and Lord Fawn.
That evil, if it were an evil, must be encountered with absolute
indifference. So he went direct to the castle, and was received
quietly, but very graciously, by his cousin Lizzie.</p>
<p>There were no guests then staying at Portray; but that very
distinguished lady, Mrs. Carbuncle, with her niece, Miss Roanoke, had
been there; as had also that very well-known nobleman, Lord George de
Bruce Carruthers. Lord George and Mrs. Carbuncle were in the habit of
seeing a good deal of each other, though, as all the world knew,
there was nothing between them but the simplest friendship. And Sir
Griffin Tewett had also been there, a young baronet who was supposed
to be enamoured of that most gorgeous of beauties, Lucinda Roanoke.
Of all these grand friends,—friends with whom Lizzie had become
acquainted in London,—nothing further need be said here, as they
were not at the castle when Frank arrived. When he came, whether by
premeditated plan or by the chance of circumstances, Lizzie had no
one with her at Portray,—except the faithful Macnulty.</p>
<p>"I thought to have found you with all the world here," said
Frank,—the faithful Macnulty being then present.</p>
<p>"Well,—we have had people, but only for a couple of days. They are
all coming again, but not till November. You hunt;—don't you,
Frank?"</p>
<p>"I have no time for hunting. Why do you ask?"</p>
<p>"I'm going to hunt. It's a long way to go,—ten or twelve miles
generally; but almost everybody hunts here. Mrs. Carbuncle is coming
again, and she is about the best lady in England after hounds;—so
they tell me. And Lord George is coming again."</p>
<p>"Who is Lord George?"</p>
<p>"You remember Lord George Carruthers, whom we all knew in London?"</p>
<p>"What,—the tall man with the hollow eyes and the big whiskers, whose
life is a mystery to every one? Is he coming?"</p>
<p>"I like him, just because he isn't a ditto to every man one meets.
And Sir Griffin Tewett is coming."</p>
<p>"Who is a ditto to everybody."</p>
<p>"Well;—yes; poor Sir Griffin! The truth is, he is awfully smitten
with Mrs. Carbuncle's niece."</p>
<p>"Don't you go match-making, Lizzie," said Frank. "That Sir Griffin is
a fool, we will all allow; but it's my belief he has wit enough to
make himself pass off as a man of fortune, with very little to back
it. He's at law with his mother, at law with his sisters, and at law
with his younger brother."</p>
<p>"If he were at law with his great-grandmother, it would be nothing to
me, Frank. She has her aunt to take care of her, and Sir Griffin is
coming with Lord George."</p>
<p>"You don't mean to put up all their horses, Lizzie?"</p>
<p>"Well, not all. Lord George and Sir Griffin are to keep theirs at
Troon, or Kilmarnock, or somewhere. The ladies will bring two apiece,
and I shall have two of my own."</p>
<p>"And carriage-horses and hacks?"</p>
<p>"The carriage-horses are here,—of course."</p>
<p>"It will cost you a great deal of money, Lizzie."</p>
<p>"That's just what I tell her," said Miss Macnulty.</p>
<p>"I've been living here, not spending one shilling, for the last two
months," said Lizzie, "and all for the sake of economy; yet people
think that no woman was ever left so rich. Surely I can afford to see
a few friends for one month in the year. If I find I can't afford so
much as that, I shall let the place, and go and live abroad
somewhere. It's too much to suppose that a woman should shut herself
up here for six or eight months and see nobody all the time."</p>
<p>On that, the day of Frank's arrival, not a word was said about the
necklace, nor of Lord Fawn, nor of that mutual pledge which had been
taken and given down among the rocks. Frank, before dinner, went out
about the place, that he might see how things were going on, and
observe whether the widow was being ill-treated and unfairly eaten up
by her dependants. He was, too, a little curious as to a matter as to
which his curiosity was soon relieved. He had hardly reached the
out-buildings which lay behind the kitchen-gardens on his way to the
Portray woods, before he encountered Andy Gowran. That faithful
adherent of the family raised his hand to his cap and bobbed his
head, and then silently, and with renewed diligence, applied himself
to the job which he had in hand. The gate of the little yard in which
the cow-shed stood was off its hinges, and Andy was resetting the
post and making the fence tight and tidy. Frank stood a moment
watching him, and then asked after his health. "'Deed am I nae that
to boost about in the way of bodily heelth, Muster Greystock. I've
just o'er mony things to tent to, to tent to my ain sell as a prudent
mon ought. It's airly an' late wi' me, Muster Greystock; and the
lumbagy just a' o'er a mon isn't the pleasantest freend in the
warld." Frank said that he was sorry to hear so bad an account of Mr.
Gowran's health, and passed on. It was not for him to refer to the
little scene in which Mr. Gowran had behaved so badly and had shaken
his head. If the misbehaviour had been condoned by Lady Eustace, the
less that he said about it the better. Then he went on through the
woods, and was well aware that Mr. Gowran's fostering care had not
been abated by his disapproval of his mistress. The fences had been
repaired since Frank was there, and stones had been laid on the road
or track over which was to be carried away the under-wood which it
would be Lady Eustace's privilege to cut during the coming winter.</p>
<p>Frank was not alone for one moment with his cousin during that
evening, but in the presence of Miss Macnulty all the circumstances
of the necklace were discussed. "Of course it is my own," said Lady
Eustace, standing up,—"my own to do just what I please with. If they
go on like this with me, they will almost tempt me to sell it for
what it will fetch,—just to prove to them that I can do so. I have
half a mind to sell it, and then send them the money, and tell them
to put it by for my little Flory. Would not that serve them right,
Frank?"</p>
<p>"I don't think I'd do that, Lizzie."</p>
<p>"Why not? You always tell me what not to do, but you never say what I
ought!"</p>
<p>"That is because I am so wise and prudent. If you were to attempt to
sell the diamonds they would stop you, and would not give you credit
for the generous purpose afterwards."</p>
<p>"They wouldn't stop you if you sold the ring you wear." The ring had
been given to him by Lucy after their engagement, and was the only
present she had ever made him. It had been purchased out of her own
earnings, and had been put on his finger by her own hand. Either from
accident or craft he had not worn it when he had been before at
Portray, and Lizzie had at once observed it as a thing she had never
seen before. She knew well that he would not buy such a ring. Who had
given him the ring? Frank almost blushed as he looked down at the
trinket, and Lizzie was sure that it had been given by that sly
little creeping thing, Lucy. "Let me look at the ring," she said.
"Nobody could stop you if you chose to sell this to me."</p>
<p>"Little things are always less troublesome than big things," he said.</p>
<p>"What is the price?" she asked.</p>
<p>"It is not in the market, Lizzie. Nor should your diamonds be there.
You must be content to let them take what legal steps they may think
fit, and defend your property. After that you can do as you please;
but keep them safe till the thing is settled. If I were you I would
have them at the bankers."</p>
<p>"Yes;—and then when I asked for them be told that they couldn't be
given up to me, because of Mr. Camperdown or the Lord Chancellor. And
what's the good of a thing locked up? You wear your ring;—why
shouldn't I wear my necklace?"</p>
<p>"I have nothing to say against it."</p>
<p>"It isn't that I care for such things. Do I, Julia?"</p>
<p>"All ladies like them, I suppose," said that stupidest and most
stubborn of all humble friends, Miss Macnulty.</p>
<p>"I don't like them at all, and you know I don't. I hate them. They
have been the misery of my life. Oh, how they have tormented me! Even
when I am asleep I dream about them, and think that people steal
them. They have never given me one moment's happiness. When I have
them on I am always fearing that Camperdown and Son are behind me and
are going to clutch them. And I think too well of myself to believe
that anybody will care more for me because of a necklace. The only
good they have ever done me has been to save me from a man who I now
know never cared for me. But they are mine;—and therefore I choose
to keep them. Though I am only a woman I have an idea of my own
rights, and will defend them as far as they go. If you say I ought
not to sell them, Frank, I'll keep them; but I'll wear them as
commonly as you do that gage d'amour which you carry on your finger.
Nobody shall ever see me without them. I won't go to any old
dowager's tea-party without them. Mr. John Eustace has chosen to
accuse me of stealing them."</p>
<p>"I don't think John Eustace has ever said a word about them," said
Frank.</p>
<p>"Mr. Camperdown, then;—the people who choose to call themselves the
guardians and protectors of my boy, as if I were not his best
guardian and protector! I'll show them at any rate that I'm not
ashamed of my booty. I don't see why I should lock them up in a musty
old bank. Why don't you send your ring to the bank?" Frank could not
but feel that she did it all very well. In the first place she was
very pretty in the display of her half-mock indignation. Though she
used some strong words, she used them with an air that carried them
off and left no impression that she had been either vulgar or
violent. And then, though the indignation was half mock, it was also
half real, and her courage and spirit were attractive. Greystock had
at last taught himself to think that Mr. Camperdown was not justified
in the claim which he made, and that in consequence of that unjust
claim Lizzie Eustace had been subjected to ill-usage. "Did you ever
see this bone of contention," she asked;—"this fair Helen for which
Greeks and Romans are to fight?"</p>
<p>"I never saw the necklace, if you mean that."</p>
<p>"I'll fetch it. You ought to see it, as you have to talk about it so
often."</p>
<p>"Can I get it?" asked Miss Macnulty.</p>
<p>"Heaven and earth! To suppose that I should ever keep them under less
than seven keys, and that there should be any of the locks that
anybody should be able to open except myself!"</p>
<p>"And where are the seven keys?" asked Frank.</p>
<p>"Next to my heart," said Lizzie, putting her hand on her left side.
"And when I sleep they are always tied round my neck in a bag, and
the bag never escapes from my grasp. And I have such a knife under my
pillow, ready for Mr. Camperdown should he come to seize them!" Then
she ran out of the room, and in a couple of minutes returned with the
necklace hanging loose in her hand. It was part of her little play to
show by her speed that the close locking of the jewels was a joke,
and that the ornament, precious as it was, received at her hands no
other treatment than might any indifferent feminine bauble.
Nevertheless within those two minutes she had contrived to unlock the
heavy iron case which always stood beneath the foot of her bed.
"There," she said, chucking the necklace across the table to Frank,
so that he was barely able to catch it. "There is ten thousand
pounds' worth, as they tell me. Perhaps you will not believe me when
I say that I should have the greatest satisfaction in the world in
throwing them out among those blue waves yonder, did I not think that
Camperdown and Son would fish them up again."</p>
<p>Frank spread the necklace on the table, and stood up to look at it,
while Miss Macnulty came and gazed at the jewels over his shoulder.
"And that is worth ten thousand pounds," said he.</p>
<p>"So people say."</p>
<p>"And your husband gave it you just as another man gives a trinket
that costs ten shillings!"</p>
<p>"Just as Lucy Morris gave you that ring."</p>
<p>He smiled, but took no other notice of the accusation. "I am so poor
a man," said he, "that this string of stones, which you throw about
the room like a child's toy, would be the making of me."</p>
<p>"Take it and be made," said Lizzie.</p>
<p>"It seems an awful thing to me to have so much value in my hands,"
said Miss Macnulty, who had lifted the necklace off the table. "It
would buy an estate; wouldn't it?"</p>
<p>"It would buy the honourable estate of matrimony if it belonged to
many women," said Lizzie,—"but it hasn't had just that effect with
me;—has it, Frank?"</p>
<p>"You haven't used it with that view yet."</p>
<p>"Will you have it, Frank?" she said. "Take it with all its
encumbrances and weight of cares. Take it with all the burthen of
Messrs. Camperdown's lawsuits upon it. You shall be as welcome to it
as flowers were ever welcomed in May."</p>
<p>"The encumbrances are too heavy," said Frank.</p>
<p>"You prefer a little ring."</p>
<p>"Very much."</p>
<p>"I don't doubt but you're right," said Lizzie. "Who fears to rise
will hardly get a fall. But there they are for you to look at, and
there they shall remain for the rest of the evening." So saying, she
clasped the string round Miss Macnulty's throat. "How do you feel,
Julia, with an estate upon your neck? Five hundred acres at twenty
pounds an acre. Let us call it five hundred pounds a year. That's
about it." Miss Macnulty looked as though she did not like it, but
she stood for a time bearing the precious burthen, while Frank
explained to his cousin that she could hardly buy land to pay her
five per cent. They were then taken off and left lying on the table
till Lady Eustace took them with her as she went to bed. "I do feel
so like some naughty person in the 'Arabian Nights,'" she said, "who
has got some great treasure that always brings him into trouble; but
he can't get rid of it, because some spirit has given it to him. At
last some morning it turns into slate stones, and then he has to be a
water-carrier, and is happy ever afterwards, and marries the king's
daughter. What sort of a king's son will there be for me when this
turns into slate stones? Good night, Frank." Then she went off with
her diamonds and her bed-candle.</p>
<p>On the following day Frank suggested that there should be a business
conversation. "That means that I am to sit silent and obedient while
you lecture me," she said. But she submitted, and they went together
into the little sitting-room which looked out over the sea,—the room
where she kept her Shelley and her Byron, and practised her music and
did water-colours, and sat, sometimes, dreaming of a Corsair. "And
now, my gravest of Mentors, what must a poor ignorant female
Telemachus do, so that the world may not trample on her too heavily?"
He began by telling her what had happened between himself and Lord
Fawn, and recommended her to write to that unhappy nobleman,
returning any present that she might have received from him, and
expressing, with some mild but intelligible sarcasm, her regret that
their paths should have crossed each other. "I've worse in store for
his lordship than that," said Lizzie.</p>
<p>"Do you mean by any personal interview?"</p>
<p>"Certainly."</p>
<p>"I think you are wrong, Lizzie."</p>
<p>"Of course you do. Men have become so soft themselves, that they no
longer dare to think even of punishing those who behave badly, and
they expect women to be softer and more fainéant than themselves. I
have been ill-used."</p>
<p>"Certainly you have."</p>
<p>"And I will be revenged. Look here, Frank; if your view of these
things is altogether different from mine, let us drop the subject. Of
all living human beings you are the one that is most to me now.
Perhaps you are more than any other ever was. But, even for you, I
cannot alter my nature. Even for you I would not alter it if I could.
That man has injured me, and all the world knows it. I will have my
revenge, and all the world shall know that. I did wrong;—I am
sensible enough of that."</p>
<p>"What wrong do you mean?"</p>
<p>"I told a man whom I never loved that I would marry him. God knows
that I have been punished."</p>
<p>"Perhaps, Lizzie, it is better as it is."</p>
<p>"A great deal better. I will tell you now that I could never induce
myself to go into church with that man as his bride. With a man I
didn't love I might have done so, but not with a man I despised."</p>
<p>"You have been saved, then, from a greater evil."</p>
<p>"Yes;—but not the less is his injury to me. It is not because he
despises me that he rejects me;—nor is it because he thought that I
had taken property that was not my own."</p>
<p>"Why then?"</p>
<p>"Because he was afraid the world would say that I had done so. Poor
shallow creature! But he shall be punished."</p>
<p>"I do not know how you can punish him."</p>
<p>"Leave that to me. I have another thing to do much more difficult."
She paused, looking for a moment up into his face, and then turning
her eyes upon the ground. As he said nothing, she went on. "I have to
excuse myself to you for having accepted him."</p>
<p>"I have never blamed you."</p>
<p>"Not in words. How should you? But if you have not blamed me in your
heart, I despise you. I know you have. I have seen it in your eyes
when you have counselled me, either to take the poor creature or to
leave him. Speak out, now, like a man. Is it not so?"</p>
<p>"I never thought you loved him."</p>
<p>"Loved him! Is there anything in him or about him that a woman could
love? Is he not a poor social stick;—a bit of half-dead wood, good
to make a post of, if one wants a post? I did want a post so sorely
then!"</p>
<p>"I don't see why."</p>
<p>"You don't?"</p>
<p>"No, indeed. It was natural that you should be inclined to marry
again."</p>
<p>"Natural that I should be inclined to marry again! And is that all?
It is hard sometimes to see whether men are thick-witted, or
hypocrites so perfect that they seem to be so. I cannot bring myself
to think you thick-witted, Frank."</p>
<p>"Then I must be the perfect hypocrite,—of course."</p>
<p>"You believed I accepted Lord Fawn because it was natural that I
should wish to marry again! Frank, you believed nothing of the kind.
I accepted him in my anger, in my misery, in my despair, because I
had expected you to come to me,—and you had not come!" She had
thrown herself now into a chair, and sat looking at him. "You had
told me that you would come, and you had stayed away. It was you,
Frank, that I wanted to punish then;—but there was no punishment in
it for you. When is it to be, Frank?"</p>
<p>"When is what to be?" he asked, in a low voice, all but dumb-founded.
How was he to put an end to this conversation, and what was he to say
to her?</p>
<p>"Your marriage with that little wizened thing who gave you the
ring—that prim morsel of feminine propriety who has been clever
enough to make you believe that her morality would suffice to make
you happy."</p>
<p>"I will not hear Lucy Morris abused, Lizzie."</p>
<p>"Is that abuse? Is it abuse to say that she is moral and proper? But,
sir, I shall abuse her. I know her for what she is, while your eyes
are sealed. She is wise and moral, and decorous and prim; but she is
a hypocrite, and has no touch of real heart in her composition. Not
abuse her when she has robbed me of all—all—all that I have in the
world! Go to her. You had better go at once. I did not mean to say
all this, but it has been said, and you must leave me. I, at any
rate, cannot play the hypocrite;—I wish I could." He rose and came
to her, and attempted to take her hand, but she flung away from him.
"No!" she said—"never again; never, unless you will tell me that the
promise you made me when we were down on the sea-shore was a true
promise. Was that truth, sir, or was it a—lie?"</p>
<p>"Lizzie, do not use such a word as that to me."</p>
<p>"I cannot stand picking my words when the whole world is going round
with me, and my very brain is on fire. What is it to me what my words
are? Say one syllable to me, and every word I utter again while
breath is mine shall be spoken to do you pleasure. If you cannot say
it, it is nothing to me what you or any one may think of my words.
You know my secret, and I care not who else knows it. At any rate, I
can die!" Then she paused a moment, and after that stalked steadily
out of the room.</p>
<p>That afternoon Frank took a long walk by himself over the mountains,
nearly to the Cottage and back again; and on his return was informed
that Lady Eustace was ill, and had gone to bed. At any rate, she was
too unwell to come down to dinner. He, therefore, and Miss Macnulty
sat down to dine, and passed the evening together without other
companionship. Frank had resolved during his walk that he would leave
Portray the next day; but had hardly resolved upon anything else. One
thing, however, seemed certain to him. He was engaged to marry Lucy
Morris, and to that engagement he must be true. His cousin was very
charming,—and had never looked so lovely in his eyes as when she had
been confessing her love for him. And he had wondered at and admired
her courage, her power of language, and her force. He could not quite
forget how useful would be her income to him. And, added to this,
there was present to him an unwholesome feeling,—ideas absolutely at
variance with those better ideas which had prompted him when he was
writing his offer to Lucy Morris in his chambers,—that a woman such
as was his cousin Lizzie was fitter to be the wife of a man thrown,
as he must be, into the world, than a dear, quiet, domestic little
girl such as Lucy Morris. But to Lucy Morris he was engaged, and
therefore there was an end of it.</p>
<p>The next morning he sent his love to his cousin, asking whether he
should see her before he went. It was still necessary that he should
know what attorneys to employ on her behalf if the threatened bill
were filed by Messrs. Camperdown. Then he suggested a firm in his
note. Might he put the case into the hands of Mr. Townsend, who was a
friend of his own? There came back to him a scrap of paper, an old
envelope, on which were written the names of Mowbray and
Mopus;—Mowbray and Mopus in a large scrawling hand, and with pencil.
He put the scrap of paper into his pocket, feeling that he could not
remonstrate with her at this moment, and was prepared to depart, when
there came a message to him. Lady Eustace was still unwell, but had
risen; and if it were not giving him too much trouble, would see him
before he went. He followed the messenger to the same little room,
looking out upon the sea, and then found her, dressed indeed, but
with a white morning wrapper on, and with hair loose over her
shoulders. Her eyes were red with weeping, and her face was pale, and
thin, and woe-begone. "I am so sorry that you are ill, Lizzie," he
said.</p>
<p>"Yes, I am ill;—sometimes very ill; but what does it matter? I did
not send for you, Frank, to speak of aught so trivial as that. I have
a favour to ask."</p>
<p>"Of course I will grant it."</p>
<p>"It is your forgiveness for my conduct yesterday."</p>
<p>"Oh, Lizzie!"</p>
<p>"Say that you forgive me. Say it!"</p>
<p>"How can I forgive where there has been no fault?"</p>
<p>"There has been fault. Say that you forgive me." And she stamped her
foot as she demanded his pardon.</p>
<p>"I do forgive you," he said.</p>
<p>"And now, one farewell." She then threw herself upon his breast and
kissed him. "Now, go," she said; "go, and come no more to me, unless
you would see me mad. May God Almighty bless you, and make you
happy!" As she uttered this prayer she held the door in her hand, and
there was nothing for him but to leave her.</p>
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