<h3>XVI</h3>
<p>After this there only remained to be settled between them the
practical details of the project.</p>
<p>These were that he should leave home in a couple of days, and
take lodgings either in the distant city of Bath or in a
convenient suburb of London, till a sufficient time should have
elapsed to satisfy legal requirements; that on a fine morning at
the end of this time she should hie away to the same place, and
be met at the station by St. Cleeve, armed with the marriage
license; whence they should at once proceed to the church fixed
upon for the ceremony; returning home independently in the course
of the next two or three days.</p>
<p>While these tactics were under discussion the two-and-thirty
winds of heaven continued, as before, to beat about the tower,
though their onsets appeared to be somewhat lessening in
force. Himself now calmed and satisfied, Swithin, as is the
wont of humanity, took serener views of Nature’s crushing
mechanics without, and said, ‘The wind doesn’t seem
disposed to put the tragic period to our hopes and fears that I
spoke of in my momentary despair.’</p>
<p>‘The disposition of the wind is as vicious as
ever,’ she answered, looking into his face with pausing
thoughts on, perhaps, other subjects than that discussed.
‘It is your mood of viewing it that has changed.
“There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it
so.”’</p>
<p>And, as if flatly to stultify Swithin’s assumption, a
circular hurricane, exceeding in violence any that had preceded
it, seized hold upon Rings-Hill Speer at that moment with the
determination of a conscious agent. The first sensation of
a resulting catastrophe was conveyed to their intelligence by the
flapping of the candle-flame against the lantern-glass; then the
wind, which hitherto they had heard rather than felt, rubbed past
them like a fugitive. Swithin beheld around and above him,
in place of the concavity of the dome, the open heaven, with its
racing clouds, remote horizon, and intermittent gleam of
stars. The dome that had covered the tower had been whirled
off bodily; and they heard it descend crashing upon the
trees.</p>
<p>Finding himself untouched Swithin stretched out his arms
towards Lady Constantine, whose apparel had been seized by the
spinning air, nearly lifting her off her legs. She, too,
was as yet unharmed. Each held the other for a moment,
when, fearing that something further would happen, they took
shelter in the staircase.</p>
<p>‘Dearest, what an escape!’ he said, still holding
her.</p>
<p>‘What is the accident?’ she asked.
‘Has the whole top really gone?’</p>
<p>‘The dome has been blown off the roof.’</p>
<p>As soon as it was practicable he relit the extinguished
lantern, and they emerged again upon the leads, where the extent
of the disaster became at once apparent. Saving the absence
of the enclosing hemisphere all remained the same. The
dome, being constructed of wood, was light by comparison with the
rest of the structure, and the wheels which allowed it
horizontal, or, as Swithin expressed it, azimuth motion, denied
it a firm hold upon the walls; so that it had been lifted off
them like a cover from a pot. The equatorial stood in the
midst as it had stood before.</p>
<p>Having executed its grotesque purpose the wind sank to
comparative mildness. Swithin took advantage of this lull
by covering up the instruments with cloths, after which the
betrothed couple prepared to go downstairs.</p>
<p>But the events of the night had not yet fully disclosed
themselves. At this moment there was a sound of footsteps
and a knocking at the door below.</p>
<p>‘It can’t be for me!’ said Lady
Constantine. ‘I retired to my room before leaving the
house, and told them on no account to disturb me.’</p>
<p>She remained at the top while Swithin went down the
spiral. In the gloom he beheld Hannah.</p>
<p>‘O Master Swithin, can ye come home! The wind have
blowed down the chimley that don’t smoke, and the
pinning-end with it; and the old ancient house, that have been in
your family so long as the memory of man, is naked to the
world! It is a mercy that your grammer were not killed,
sitting by the hearth, poor old soul, and soon to walk wi’
God,—for ’a ’s getting wambling on her pins,
Mr. Swithin, as aged folks do. As I say, ’a was all
but murdered by the elements, and doing no more harm than the
babes in the wood, nor speaking one harmful word. And the
fire and smoke were blowed all across house like a chapter in
Revelation; and your poor reverent father’s features
scorched to flakes, looking like the vilest ruffian, and the gilt
frame spoiled! Every flitch, every eye-piece, and every
chine is buried under the walling; and I fed them pigs with my
own hands, Master Swithin, little thinking they would come to
this end. Do ye collect yourself, Mr. Swithin, and come at
once!’</p>
<p>‘I will,—I will. I’ll follow you in a
moment. Do you hasten back again and assist.’</p>
<p>When Hannah had departed the young man ran up to Lady
Constantine, to whom he explained the accident. After
sympathizing with old Mrs. Martin Lady Constantine added,
‘I thought something would occur to mar our
scheme!’</p>
<p>‘I am not quite sure of that yet.’</p>
<p>On a short consideration with him, she agreed to wait at the
top of the tower till he could come back and inform her if the
accident were really so serious as to interfere with his plan for
departure. He then left her, and there she sat in the dark,
alone, looking over the parapet, and straining her eyes in the
direction of the homestead.</p>
<p>At first all was obscurity; but when he had been gone about
ten minutes lights began to move to and fro in the hollow where
the house stood, and shouts occasionally mingled with the wind,
which retained some violence yet, playing over the trees beneath
her as on the strings of a lyre. But not a bough of them
was visible, a cloak of blackness covering everything netherward;
while overhead the windy sky looked down with a strange and
disguised face, the three or four stars that alone were visible
being so dissociated by clouds that she knew not which they
were. Under any other circumstances Lady Constantine might
have felt a nameless fear in thus sitting aloft on a lonely
column, with a forest groaning under her feet, and
palæolithic dead men feeding its roots; but the recent
passionate decision stirred her pulses to an intensity beside
which the ordinary tremors of feminine existence asserted
themselves in vain. The apocalyptic effect of the scene
surrounding her was, indeed, not inharmonious, and afforded an
appropriate background to her intentions.</p>
<p>After what seemed to her an interminable space of time, quick
steps in the staircase became audible above the roar of the firs,
and in a few instants St. Cleeve again stood beside her.</p>
<p>The case of the homestead was serious. Hannah’s
account had not been exaggerated in substance: the gable end of
the house was open to the garden; the joists, left without
support, had dropped, and with them the upper floor. By the
help of some labourers, who lived near, and Lady
Constantine’s man Anthony, who was passing at the time, the
homestead had been propped up, and protected for the night by
some rickcloths; but Swithin felt that it would be selfish in the
highest degree to leave two lonely old women to themselves at
this juncture. ‘In short,’ he concluded
despondently, ‘I cannot go to stay in Bath or London just
now; perhaps not for another fortnight!’</p>
<p>‘Never mind,’ she said. ‘A fortnight
hence will do as well.’</p>
<p>‘And I have these for you,’ he continued.
‘Your man Green was passing my grandmother’s on his
way back from Warborne, where he had been, he says, for any
letters that had come for you by the evening post. As he
stayed to assist the other men I told him I would go on to your
house with the letters he had brought. Of course I did not
tell him I should see you here.’</p>
<p>‘Thank you. Of course not. Now I’ll
return at once.’</p>
<p>In descending the column her eye fell upon the superscription
of one of the letters, and she opened and glanced over it by the
lantern light. She seemed startled, and, musing, said,
‘The postponement of our—intention must be, I fear,
for a long time. I find that after the end of this month I
cannot leave home safely, even for a day.’ Perceiving
that he was about to ask why, she added, ‘I will not
trouble you with the reason now; it would only harass you.
It is only a family business, and cannot be helped.’</p>
<p>‘Then we cannot be married till—God knows
when!’ said Swithin blankly. ‘I cannot leave
home till after the next week or two; you cannot leave home
unless within that time. So what are we to do?’</p>
<p>‘I do not know.’</p>
<p>‘My dear, dear one, don’t let us be beaten like
this! Don’t let a well-considered plan be overthrown
by a mere accident! Here’s a remedy. Do
<i>you</i> go and stay the requisite time in the parish we are to
be married in, instead of me. When my grandmother is again
well housed I can come to you, instead of you to me, as we first
said. Then it can be done within the time.’</p>
<p>Reluctantly, shyly, and yet with a certain gladness of heart,
she gave way to his proposal that they should change places in
the programme. There was much that she did not like in it,
she said. It seemed to her as if she were taking the
initiative by going and attending to the preliminaries. It
was the man’s part to do that, in her opinion, and was
usually undertaken by him.</p>
<p>‘But,’ argued Swithin, ‘there are cases in
which the woman does give the notices, and so on; that is to say,
when the man is absolutely hindered from doing so; and ours is
such a case. The seeming is nothing; I know the truth, and
what does it matter? You do not refuse—retract your
word to be my wife, because, to avoid a sickening delay, the
formalities require you to attend to them in place of
me?’</p>
<p>She did not refuse, she said. In short she agreed to his
entreaty. They had, in truth, gone so far in their dream of
union that there was no drawing back now. Whichever of them
was forced by circumstances to be the protagonist in the
enterprise, the thing must be done. Their intention to
become husband and wife, at first halting and timorous, had
accumulated momentum with the lapse of hours, till it now bore
down every obstacle in its course.</p>
<p>‘Since you beg me to,—since there is no
alternative between my going and a long postponement,’ she
said, as they stood in the dark porch of Welland House before
parting,—‘since I am to go first, and seem to be the
pioneer in this adventure, promise me, Swithin, promise your
Viviette, that in years to come, when perhaps you may not love me
so warmly as you do now—’</p>
<p>‘That will never be.’</p>
<p>‘Well, hoping it will not, but supposing it should,
promise me that you will never reproach me as the one who took
the initiative when it should have been yourself, forgetting that
it was at your request; promise that you will never say I showed
immodest readiness to do so, or anything which may imply your
obliviousness of the fact that I act in obedience to necessity
and your earnest prayer.’</p>
<p>Need it be said that he promised never to reproach her with
that or any other thing as long as they should live? The
few details of the reversed arrangement were soon settled, Bath
being the place finally decided on. Then, with a warm
audacity which events had encouraged, he pressed her to his
breast, and she silently entered the house. He returned to
the homestead, there to attend to the unexpected duties of
repairing the havoc wrought by the gale.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">* * * * *</p>
<p>That night, in the solitude of her chamber, Lady Constantine
reopened and read the subjoined letter—one of those handed
to her by St. Cleeve:—</p>
<blockquote><p style="text-align: right">“--- <span class="smcap">Street</span>, <span class="smcap">Piccadilly</span>,<br/>
October 15, 18--.</p>
<p>‘<span class="smcap">Dear Viviette</span>,—You
will be surprised to learn that I am in England, and that I am
again out of harness—unless you should have seen the latter
in the papers. Rio Janeiro may do for monkeys, but it
won’t do for me. Having resigned the appointment I
have returned here, as a preliminary step to finding another vent
for my energies; in other words, another milch cow for my
sustenance. I knew nothing whatever of your husband’s
death till two days ago; so that any letter from you on the
subject, at the time it became known, must have miscarried.
Hypocrisy at such a moment is worse than useless, and I therefore
do not condole with you, particularly as the event, though new to
a banished man like me, occurred so long since. You are
better without him, Viviette, and are now just the limb for doing
something for yourself, notwithstanding the threadbare state in
which you seem to have been cast upon the world. You are
still young, and, as I imagine (unless you have vastly altered
since I beheld you), good-looking: therefore make up your mind to
retrieve your position by a match with one of the local
celebrities; and you would do well to begin drawing neighbouring
covers at once. A genial squire, with more weight than wit,
more realty than weight, and more personalty than realty
(considering the circumstances), would be best for you. You
might make a position for us both by some such alliance; for, to
tell the truth, I have had but in-and-out luck so far. I
shall be with you in little more than a fortnight, when we will
talk over the matter seriously, if you don’t
object.—Your affectionate brother,</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Louis</span>.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It was this allusion to her brother’s coming visit which
had caught her eye in the tower staircase, and led to a
modification in the wedding arrangement.</p>
<p>Having read the letter through once Lady Constantine flung it
aside with an impatient little stamp that shook the decaying old
floor and casement. Its contents produced perturbation,
misgiving, but not retreat. The deep glow of enchantment
shed by the idea of a private union with her beautiful young
lover killed the pale light of cold reasoning from an
indifferently good relative.</p>
<p>‘Oh, no,’ she murmured, as she sat, covering her
face with her hand. ‘Not for wealth untold could I
give him up now!’</p>
<p>No argument, short of Apollo in person from the clouds, would
have influenced her. She made her preparations for
departure as if nothing had intervened.</p>
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