<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3>HELEN AND ROSALIND CALL UPON SIR GILBERT HARRINGTON</h3>
<p>Helen Mowbray knew that the choleric friend whose gentler feelings she
wished to propitiate was an early riser himself, and was never better
disposed to be well pleased with others than when they showed themselves
capable of following his example. She was therefore anxious to arrive at
his house in time to have the conversation she sought, yet dreaded,
before nine o'clock, the usual family breakfast-hour; though in the
shooting-season Sir Gilbert generally contrived to coax my lady and her
housekeeper to have hot rolls smoking on the table by eight. But,
luckily for the young ladies' morning repose, it was not
shooting-season; and they calculated that if they started about half
past seven they should have time for their walk, and a reasonably long
conversation afterwards, before the breakfast, to which they looked as
the pacific conclusion of the negotiation, should be ready.</p>
<p>At half past seven, accordingly, the fair friends met at the door of
Rosalind's dressing-room, and set off, fearless, though unattended,
through the shrubberies, the park, the flowery lanes, and finally,
across one or two hay-fields, which separated the two mansions.</p>
<p>Nothing can be better calculated to raise the animal spirits than an
early walk in the gay month of June; and on those not accustomed to the
elasticity, the freshness, the exhilarating clearness of the morning
air, the effect is like enchantment. All the sad thoughts which had of
late so constantly brooded round Helen's heart seemed to withdraw their
painful pressure, and she again felt conscious of the luxury of life,
with youth, health, and innocence, a clear sky, bright verdure, flowery
banks, and shady hedge-rows, to adorn it.</p>
<p>Rosalind, by an irresistible impulse of gaiety, joined her voice to
those of the blackbirds that carolled near her, till she was stopped by
Helen's exclaiming, "Rosalind, I feel courage for anything this
morning!"</p>
<p>"Yes," answered her companion, "let Sir Gilbert appear in any shape but
that of the Vicar of Wrexhill, and I should great him with a degree of
confidence and kindness that I am positive would be irresistible."</p>
<p>They were now within a short distance of the baronet's grounds, and
another step brought their courage to the proof; for on mounting a
stepping-stile which had originally been placed for the especial
accommodation of the Mowbray ladies, they perceived the redoubtable Sir
Gilbert at the distance of fifty paces, in the act of removing an
offending dock-root with his spud.</p>
<p>He raised his eyes, and recognising his young visitors, stepped eagerly
forward to meet them. To Rosalind, however, though usually a great
favourite, he now paid not the slightest attention; but taking Helen in
his arms, kissing her on both cheeks and on the forehead, and then
looking her in the face very much as if he were going to weep over her,
he exclaimed,</p>
<p>"My poor, poor child!... Why did not you bring poor Fanny too?... You
are right to come away, quite right, my dear child: it's dreadful to
live in dependence upon any one's caprice for one's daily bread! Your
home shall be here, Helen, and Fanny's too, as long as you like. Come,
my dear, take my arm: my lady will dance, you may depend upon it, when
she sees you, for we have had dreadful work about keeping her from
Mowbray! I'd just as soon keep a wild cat in order as your godmother,
Helen, when she takes a fancy: but you know, my dear, her going to
Mowbray was a thing not to be thought of, You are a good girl to
come—it shows that you see the matter rightly. I wish Fanny were here
too!"</p>
<p>All this was said with great rapidity, and without pausing for any
answer. Meanwhile he had drawn Helen's arm within his, and was leading
her towards the house.</p>
<p>Rosalind followed them quietly for a few steps; and then, either moved
thereto by the feeling of courage her walk had inspired, or from some
latent consciousness of the baronet's partiality to herself, she boldly
stepped up and took his arm on the other side.</p>
<p>"Bless my soul, Miss Torrington!... by the honour of a knight, I never
saw you; nor do I think I should have seen a regiment of young ladies,
though they had been all as handsome as yourself, if they had happened
to come with my poor dear Helen. It was very good of you to walk over
with her, poor little thing!... Your fortune is quite safe and
independent, my dear, isn't it? Nobody's doing a foolish thing can
involve you in any way, can it?"</p>
<p>"Not unless the foolish thing happened to be done by myself, Sir
Gilbert."</p>
<p>"That's a great blessing, my dear,—a very great blessing!... And you'll
be kind to our two poor girls, won't you, my dear?"</p>
<p>"I have more need that they should be kind to me—and so they are,—and
we are all very kind to one another; and if you will be but very kind
too, and come and see us all as you used to do, we shall be very happy
again in time."</p>
<p>"Stuff and nonsense, child!... You may come here, I tell you, and see me
as much as you like, under my own roof,—because I know who that belongs
to, and all about it; but I promise you that you will never see me going
to houses that don't belong to their right owner,—it would not suit me
in the least—quite out of my way; I should be making some confounded
blunder, and talking to poor Charles about his estate and his
property:—poor fellow! and he not worth sixpence in the world."</p>
<p>During all this time Helen had not spoken a word. They had now nearly
reached the house; and drawing her arm away, she held out her hand to
Sir Gilbert, and said in a very humble and beseeching tone,</p>
<p>"Sir Gilbert!... may I speak to you alone for a few minutes?"</p>
<p>"Speak to me, child?—what about? Is it about a sweet-heart? Is it about
wanting pocket-money, my poor child?—I'm executor to your father's
will, you know, Helen; and if you were starving in a ditch, and Fanny in
another, and poor Charles begging his bread on the high road, I have not
the power of giving either of ye a shilling of his property, though he
has left above fourteen thousand a year!"</p>
<p>Sir Gilbert was now lashing himself into a rage that it was evident
would render the object of Helen's visit abortive if she attempted to
bring it forward now. She exchanged a glance with Rosalind, who shook
her head, and the next moment contrived to whisper in her ear, "Wait
till after breakfast."</p>
<p>Sir Gilbert was now striding up the steps to the hall-door: the two
girls silently followed him, and were probably neither of them sorry to
see Colonel Harrington coming forward to meet them.</p>
<p>This young man had for the two or three last years seen but little of
the Mowbray family, having been abroad during nearly the whole of that
time; but he returned with something very like a tender recollection of
Helen's having been the prettiest little nymph at fifteen that he had
ever beheld, and her appearance at this moment was not calculated to
make him think she had lost her delicate beauty during his absence. Her
slight tall figure was shown to great advantage by her mourning dress;
and the fair and abundant curls that crowded round her face, now a
little flushed by exercise and agitation, made her altogether as pretty
a creature in her peculiar style as a young soldier would wish to look
upon.</p>
<p>The coal-black hair and sparkling dark eyes of Rosalind, her ruby lips
and pearl-like teeth, her exquisite little figure, and the general air
of piquant vivacity which made her perfectly radiant when animated,
rendered her in most eyes the more attractive of the two; but Colonel
Harrington did not think so; and giving her one glance of
curiosity,—for he had never seen her before,—he decided, that neither
she, nor any other woman he had ever beheld, could compare in loveliness
with his former friend and favourite.</p>
<p>His greeting to Helen was just what might be expected from a man who had
known her with great intimacy when she was some half-dozen inches
shorter, and who felt the strongest possible desire to renew the
acquaintance with as little delay as possible.</p>
<p>"Helen Mowbray!" he exclaimed, springing forward and seizing her hand,
"how delighted I am to see you! How is dear little Fanny?—how is
Charles? I trust you have none of you forgotten me?"</p>
<p>Helen blushed deeply at the unexpected ardour of this address from a
very tall, handsome, fashionable-looking personage, whose face she
certainly would not have recognised had she met him accidentally: but a
happy smile accompanied the blush, and he had no reason to regret the
politic freedom of his first salutation, which had thus enabled him to
pass over an infinity of gradations towards the intimacy he coveted, at
one single step placing him at once on the footing of a familiar friend.
It was indeed nearly impossible that Helen could be offended by the
freedom; for not only was it sanctioned by the long-established union of
their two families, but at this moment she could not but be pleased at
finding another dear old friend in the garrison, who would be sure to
add his influence to that of her godmother, that what she so greatly
wished to obtain should not be refused.</p>
<p>Before they reached the breakfast-room, therefore, the most perfect
understanding was established between them. Her friend Miss Torrington
was gaily introduced, for her heart felt gladdened by this important
addition to her supporters in the cause she had undertaken; and she was
disposed to believe that Rosalind's proposal to make this alarming visit
would turn out to have been one of the most fortunate things that ever
happened.</p>
<p>Within the breakfast-room, and approachable by no other access, was a
small room, known throughout the mansion, and indeed throughout the
neighbourhood also, as "My Lady's Closet." This sacred retreat was an
oblong room, about eighteen feet by eight; a large and lofty window
occupied nearly one end of it, across which was placed a deal-dresser or
table of three feet wide, filling the entire space between the walls.
The whole room was lined with shelves and drawers, the former of which
were for the most part sheltered by heavy crimson damask curtains. A few
small tables stood scattered here and there; and the sole accommodation
for sitting consisted of one high stool, such as laundresses use when
ironing.</p>
<p>To the door of this apartment Sir Gilbert approached, and there
reverently stopped; for by the law of the land, even he, though a pretty
extensively privileged personage, was permitted to go no farther, unless
licensed by an especial warrant from its mistress.</p>
<p>"My lady," he said, in the cheerful lusty voice that announces
agreeable tidings,—"My lady, I have brought home company to breakfast."</p>
<p>"Have you, Sir Knight?" replied Lady Harrington, without turning her
head, or otherwise interrupting herself in the performance of some
apparently delicate process upon which she was occupied.</p>
<p>"I'd rather have Mrs. Bluebeard for a wife than such an incurious old
soul as you are!" said the testy baronet.—"And so you have not even the
grace to ask who it is?"</p>
<p>"Why, my dear Sir Tiger, I shall be sure to know within two minutes
after Tomkins gives his passing thump to announce that he is carrying in
the coffee; then why should I disturb this fairest of the Pentandria
class?—my charming high-dried mirabilis?"</p>
<p>"The devil take you, and all your classes, orders, and tribes, to his
own hothouse!—I'll be hanged if I don't lock you into your den while I
breakfast with her;—you shan't see her at all!"</p>
<p>"Mother! mother!" exclaimed the colonel hastily, to anticipate the
execution of the threat—"it is Helen Mowbray!"</p>
<p>"Helen Mowbray!" cried the old lady, thrusting her hot smoothing-iron on
one side, and her blossom blotting-paper on the other, while the
precious mirabilis fell to the ground; "Helen Mowbray!" and pushing
aside the baronet by no very gentle movement of her tall and substantial
person, she rushed forward, and Helen was speedily folded in a very
close embrace.</p>
<p>"There, there, there! don't stifle the girl, old lady!—And supposing
you were to bestow one little monosyllable of civility upon this pretty
creature, Miss Torrington, who stands smiling at us all like an angel,
though every soul amongst us is as rude as a bear to her.—I don't
believe you ever found yourself so entirely neglected before, my dear?"</p>
<p>"I have never witnessed attention more gratifying to me than that which
I have seen displayed this morning," replied Rosalind.</p>
<p>"You are a good girl, a very good girl, my dear, and I shall always love
you for coming over with this poor dear disinherited child."</p>
<p>"Miss Torrington, I am delighted to see you, now and ever, my dear
young lady," said Lady Harrington, who, when she chose it, could be as
dignified, and as courteous too, as any lady in the land.</p>
<p>"You have walked over, I am sure, by the bright freshness of your looks.
Now, then, sit down one on each side of me, that I may be able to see
you without hoisting a <i>lunette d'approche</i> across this prodigious
table."</p>
<p>"And so, because your ladyship is near-sighted," said Sir Gilbert,
"William and I are to sit at this awful distance from these beautiful
damsels? You are a tiresome old soul as ever lived!"</p>
<p>"And that's the reason you appear so profoundly melancholy and miserable
at this moment," said Lady Harrington, looking with no trifling degree
of satisfaction at the radiant good-humour and happiness which the
unexpected arrival of Helen had caused to be visible in the countenance
of her boisterous husband. "Do you find William much altered, Helen?"
she continued. "I wonder if any one has had the grace to present Colonel
Harrington to Miss Torrington?"</p>
<p>"Helen did me that kind office," said the colonel, "and I suppose she
must do the same for me to little Fanny. I long to see if she continues
as surpassingly beautiful as she was when I took my sad, reluctant leave
of Mowbray Park."</p>
<p>Rosalind immediately became answerable for the undiminished beauty of
Fanny, adding to her report on this point a declaration that the whole
family were anxious to renew their acquaintance with him.</p>
<p>This was the nearest approach that any of the party ventured to make
towards the mention of Mowbray Park or its inhabitants. Nevertheless,
the breakfast passed cheerfully, and even without a word from Sir
Gilbert in allusion to the destitute condition of Helen, and her brother
and sister. But when even the baronet had disposed of his last
egg-shell, pushed the ham fairly away from him, and swallowed his last
bowl of tea, the beautiful colour of Helen began gradually to deepen;
she ceased to speak, and hardly seemed to hear what was said to her.</p>
<p>Rosalind took the hint, and with more tact than is usually found in the
possession of seventeen and a half, she said to Lady Harrington,</p>
<p>"If I promise to keep my hands not only from picking and stealing, but
from touching, will your ladyship indulge me with a sight of your press,
and your boxes, and a volume or two of your <i>hortus siccus</i>? for I feel
considerable aspirations after the glory of becoming a botanist myself."</p>
<p>"My ladyship will show you something infinitely more to the purpose,
then, if you will come to the hothouse with me," replied Lady
Harrington, rising, and giving an intelligible glance to her son as she
did so, which immediately caused him to rise and follow her. "I cannot
take you where I should be sure to overhear them, my dear," she added in
a whisper as she led Rosalind from the room; "for if my rough diamond
should chance to be too rough with her, I should infallibly burst out
upon them; and yet I know well enough that I should do nothing but
mischief."</p>
<p>Helen was thus left alone with the kind-hearted but pertinacious
baronet. He seemed to have a misgiving of the attack that was about to
be opened upon him; for he made a fidgetty movement in his chair, pushed
it back, and looked so very much inclined to run away, that Helen saw no
time was to be lost, and, in a voice not over-steady, said,</p>
<p>"I want to speak to you, Sir Gilbert, about my dear mamma. I fear from
what you said to Charles, and more still by nobody's coming from Oakley
to see us, that you are angry with her.—If it is about the will, Sir
Gilbert, you do her great injustice: I am very, very sure that she
neither wished for such a will, nor knew any thing about it."</p>
<p>"It is very pretty and dutiful in you, Miss Helen, to say so, and to
think so too if you can. Perhaps I might have done the same at nineteen;
but at sixty-five, child, one begins to know a little better what signs
and tokens mean.—There is no effect without a cause, Miss Helen. The
effect in this affair is already pretty visible to all eyes, and will
speedily become more so, you may depend upon it. The cause may be still
hid from babes and sucklings, but not from an old fellow like me, who
knew your poor father, girl, before you were hatched or thought of,—and
knew him to be both a good and a wise man, who would never have done the
deed he did unless under the influence of one as ever near and ever dear
to him as your mother."</p>
<p>"You have known my mother too, Sir Gilbert, for many, many years:—did
you ever see in her any symptom of the character you now attribute to
her?"</p>
<p>"If I had, Miss Helen, I should not loathe and abominate her hypocrisy
as I now do. I will never see her more—for all our sakes: for if I did,
I know right well that I could not restrain my indignation within
moderate bounds."</p>
<p>"Then certainly it would be better that you should not see her," said
the weeping Helen: "for indeed, sir, I think such unmerited indignation
would almost kill her."</p>
<p>"If you knew any thing about the matter, child, you would be aware that
<i>merited</i> indignation would be more likely to disagree with her.
Unmerited indignation does one no harm in the world, as I can testify
from experience; for my lady is dreadfully indignant, as I dare say you
guess, at my keeping her and William away from Mowbray Park: and it's
ten to one but you will be indignant too, child;—but I can't help it. I
love you all three very much, Helen; but I must do what I think right,
for all that."</p>
<p>"Not indignant, Sir Gilbert;—at least, that would not be the prevailing
feeling with me, though a sense of injustice might make it so with my
poor mother. What I shall feel will be grief—unceasing grief, if the
friend my beloved father most valued and esteemed continues to refuse
his countenance and affection to the bereaved family he has left."</p>
<p>From the time this conversation began, Sir Gilbert had been striding up
and down the room, as it was always his custom to do when he felt
himself in a rage, or was conscious that he was about to be so. He now
stopped opposite Helen; and while something very like tenderness almost
impeded his utterance, he said,</p>
<p>"That's trash—abominable false trash! Miss Helen. After what's passed
to-day, to say nothing of times past, you must know well enough that I'm
not likely to refuse my countenance and affection to your father's
children;—bereaved they are, sure enough! You know as well as I do,
that I love you all three—for your own sakes, girl, as well as for
his;—and your pretending to doubt it, was a hit of trumpery womanhood,
Helen,—so never make use of it again: for you see I understand the
sex,—and that's just the reason why I like my old woman better than any
other <i>she</i> in the wide world;—she never tries any make-believe tricks
upon me."</p>
<p>"Believe me, Sir Gilbert," said Helen, smiling, "I hate tricks as much
as my godmother can: and if it were otherwise, you are the last person I
should try them upon. But how can we think you love us, if you will not
come near Mowbray?"</p>
<p>"You may think it, and know it, very easily, child, by the welcome you
shall always find here. It is very likely that you may not be long
comfortable at home; and before it happens, remember I have told you
that you shall always have a home at Oakley: but it must not be on
condition of bringing your mother with you; for see her I will not,—and
there's an end."</p>
<p>Helen remained silent. She felt painfully convinced that, at least for
the present, she should gain nothing by arguing the cause of her mother
any farther; and after a long pause, during which Sir Gilbert continued
to pace up and down before her, she rose, and sighing deeply, said,</p>
<p>"I believe it is time for us to return.—Good-b'ye, Sir Gilbert."</p>
<p>There was something in the tone of her voice which very nearly overset
all the sturdy resolution of the baronet; but instead of yielding to the
weakness, as he would have called it, like a skilful general he marched
off the field with his colours still flying, and certainly without
giving his adversary any reasonable ground to hope for victory.</p>
<p>"They are all in the hothouse, I believe," said he, walking before Helen
to a door of the hall which opened upon the beautiful gardens. "You have
not seen my lady's heaths for many a day, Helen:—she'll be savage if
you go without taking a look at them."</p>
<p>Helen followed without saying a word in reply, for her heart was full;
and when she joined the trio who had so considerately left her to the
uninterrupted possession of Sir Gilbert's ear, there was no need of any
questioning on their part, or answering on hers, to put them all in full
possession of the result of the t�te-�-t�te.</p>
<p>It would be difficult to say which of the three looked most vexed:
perhaps Lady Harrington gave the strongest outward demonstrations of
what she felt on the occasion.</p>
<p>She glanced frowningly at Sir Gilbert, who looked as if he intended to
say something amiable, and seizing upon Helen's two hands, kissed them
both, exclaiming, "Dearest and best! what a heart of flint must that
being have who could find the cruel strength to pain thee!"</p>
<p>Colonel Harrington, who, discomposed and disappointed, had thrown
himself on a bench, gave his mother a very grateful look for this; while
Rosalind, after examining her sad countenance for a moment, pressed
closely to her friend and whispered, "Let us go, Helen."</p>
<p>Poor Helen had no inclination to delay her departure; and knowing that
her partial godmother was fully capable of understanding her feelings,
she said, returning her carresses,</p>
<p>"Do not keep me a moment longer, dearest friend, for fear I should weep!
and then I am sure he would call it a trick."</p>
<p>"I will not keep you, Helen," replied Lady Harrington aloud. "You have
come on a mission of love and peace; and if I mistake not that heavy eye
and feverish cheek, you have failed. Poor child! she does not look like
the same creature that she did an hour and a half ago—does she,
William?"</p>
<p>"Adieu, Lady Harrington!" said Helen, the big tears rolling down her
cheeks despite her struggles to prevent them. "Good morning, Colonel
Harrington;—farewell, Sir Gilbert!"</p>
<p>"This is hard, Miss Torrington!" said the baronet, turning from Helen's
offered hand; "this is confounded hard! I'm doing my duty, and acting
according to my conscience as a man of honour, and yet I shall be made
to believe that Nero was a dove, and Bluebeard a babe of grace, compared
to me!"</p>
<p>But Miss Torrington being in no humour to answer him playfully, said
gravely,</p>
<p>"I am very sorry we broke in upon you so unadvisedly, Sir Gilbert. It is
plain our hopes have not been realised."</p>
<p>The young lady bowed silently to the colonel, and taking a short
farewell of Lady Harrington, but one in which mutual kindness was
mutually understood, she took the arm of her discomfited friend, and
they proceeded towards a little gate in the iron fencing which divided
the garden from the paddock in front of the house.</p>
<p>"And you won't shake hands with me, Helen!" said Sir Gilbert, following.</p>
<p>"Do not say so, sir," replied Helen, turning back and holding out her
hand.</p>
<p>"And when shall we see you here again?"</p>
<p>"Whenever you will come and fetch me, Sir Gilbert," she replied,
endeavouring to look cheerful. He took her hand, wrung it, and turned
away without speaking.</p>
<p>"Your interdict, sir," said Colonel Harrington, "does not, I hope,
extend beyond Mowbray Park paling?—I trust I may be permitted to take
care of these young ladies as far as the lodges?"</p>
<p>"If you did not do it, you know very well that I should, you puppy!"
replied his father: and so saying, he turned into a walk which led in a
direction as opposite as possible from that which his ireful lady had
chosen.</p>
<p>Colonel Harrington felt that it required some exertion of his
conversational powers to bring his fair companions back to the tone of
cheerful familiarity which had reigned among them all at the
breakfast-table; but the exertion was made, and so successfully, that
before the walk was ended a feeling of perfect confidence was
established between them. When they were about to part, he said,</p>
<p>"My mother and I shall labour, and cease not, to work our way through
the <i>�corce</i> to the kernel of my good father's heart; and there we shall
find exactly the material we want, of which to form a reconciliation
between your mother and him.—Farewell, Helen!—farewell, Miss
Torrington! I trust that while the interdict lasts, chance will
sometimes favour our meeting beyond the forbidden precincts."</p>
<p>He stepped forward to open the Park gate for them, shook hands, uttered
another "Farewell!" and departed.</p>
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