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<h2> 3. III. THE RENEWED IMAGE BURNS ITSELF IN </h2>
<p>There was nothing to hinder Pierston in calling upon the new Avice's
mother as often as he should choose, beyond the five miles of intervening
railway and additional mile or two of clambering over the heights of the
island. Two days later, therefore, he repeated his journey and knocked
about tea-time at the widow's door.</p>
<p>As he had feared, the daughter was not at home. He sat down beside the old
sweetheart who, having eclipsed her mother in past days, had now eclipsed
herself in her child. Jocelyn produced the girl's boot from his pocket.</p>
<p>'Then, 'tis YOU who helped Avice out of her predicament?' said Mrs.
Pierston, with surprise.</p>
<p>'Yes, my dear friend; and perhaps I shall ask you to help me out of mine
before I have done. But never mind that now. What did she tell you about
the adventure?'</p>
<p>Mrs. Pierston was looking thoughtfully upon him. 'Well, 'tis rather
strange it should have been you, sir,' she replied. She seemed to be a
good deal interested. 'I thought it might have been a younger man—a
much younger man.'</p>
<p>'It might have been as far as feelings were concerned.... Now, Avice, I'll
to the point at once. Virtually I have known your daughter any number of
years. When I talk to her I can anticipate every turn of her thought,
every sentiment, every act, so long did I study those things in your
mother and in you. Therefore I do not require to learn her; she was learnt
by me in her previous existences. Now, don't be shocked: I am willing to
marry her—I should be overjoyed to do it, if there would be nothing
preposterous about it, or that would seem like a man making himself too
much of a fool, and so degrading her in consenting. I can make her
comparatively rich, as you know, and I would indulge her every whim. There
is the idea, bluntly put. It would set right something in my mind that has
been wrong for forty years. After my death she would have plenty of
freedom and plenty of means to enjoy it.'</p>
<p>Mrs. Isaac Pierston seemed only a little surprised; certainly not shocked.</p>
<p>'Well, if I didn't think you might be a bit taken with her!' she said with
an arch simplicity which could hardly be called unaffected. 'Knowing the
set of your mind, from my little time with you years ago, nothing you
could do in this way would astonish me.'</p>
<p>'But you don't think badly of me for it?'</p>
<p>'Not at all.... By-the-bye, did you ever guess why I asked you to come?...
But never mind it now: the matter is past.... Of course, it would depend
upon what Avice felt.... Perhaps she would rather marry a younger man.'</p>
<p>'And suppose a satisfactory younger man should not appear?'</p>
<p>Mrs. Pierston showed in her face that she fully recognized the difference
between a rich bird in hand and a young bird in the bush. She looked him
curiously up and down.</p>
<p>'I know you would make anybody a very nice husband,' she said. 'I know
that you would be nicer than many men half your age; and, though there is
a great deal of difference between you and her, there have been more
unequal marriages, that's true. Speaking as her mother, I can say that I
shouldn't object to you, sir, for her, provided she liked you. That is
where the difficulty will lie.'</p>
<p>'I wish you would help me to get over that difficulty,' he said gently.
'Remember, I brought back a truant husband to you twenty years ago.'</p>
<p>'Yes, you did,' she assented; 'and, though I may say no great things as to
happiness came of it, I've always seen that your intentions towards me
were none the less noble on that account. I would do for you what I would
do for no other man, and there is one reason in particular which inclines
me to help you with Avice—that I should feel absolutely certain I
was helping her to a kind husband.'</p>
<p>'Well, that would remain to be seen. I would, at any rate, try to be
worthy of your opinion. Come, Avice, for old times' sake, you must help
me. You never felt anything but friendship in those days, you know, and
that makes it easy and proper for you to do me a good turn now.'</p>
<p>After a little more conversation his old friend promised that she really
would do everything that lay in her power. She did not say how simple she
thought him not to perceive that she had already, by writing to him, been
doing everything that lay in her power; had created the feeling which
prompted his entreaty. And to show her good faith in this promise she
asked him to wait till later in the evening, when Avice might possibly run
across to see her.</p>
<p>Pierston, who fancied he had won the younger Avice's interest, at least,
by the part he had played upon the rocks the week before, had a dread of
encountering her in full light till he should have advanced a little
further in her regard. He accordingly was perplexed at this proposal, and,
seeing his hesitation, Mrs. Pierston suggested that they should walk
together in the direction whence Avice would come, if she came at all.</p>
<p>He welcomed the idea, and in a few minutes they started, strolling along
under the now strong moonlight, and when they reached the gates of
Sylvania Castle turning back again towards the house. After two or three
such walks up and down the gate of the castle grounds clicked, and a form
came forth which proved to be the expected one.</p>
<p>As soon as they met the girl recognized in her mother's companion the
gentleman who had helped her on the shore; and she seemed really glad to
find that her chivalrous assistant was claimed by her parent as an old
friend. She remembered hearing at divers times about this worthy London
man of talent and position, whose ancestry were people of her own isle,
and possibly, from the name, of a common stock with her own.</p>
<p>'And you have actually lived in Sylvania Castle yourself, Mr. Pierston?'
asked Avice the daughter, with her innocent young voice. 'Was it long
ago?'</p>
<p>'Yes, it was some time ago,' replied the sculptor, with a sinking at his
heart lest she should ask how long.</p>
<p>'It must have been when I was away—or when I was very little?'</p>
<p>'I don't think you were away.'</p>
<p>'But I don't think I could have been here?'</p>
<p>'No, perhaps you couldn't have been here.'</p>
<p>'I think she was hiding herself in the parsley-bed,' said Avice's mother
blandly.</p>
<p>They talked in this general way till they reached Mrs. Pierston's house;
but Jocelyn resisted both the widow's invitation and the desire of his own
heart, and went away without entering. To risk, by visibly confronting
her, the advantage that he had already gained, or fancied he had gained,
with the re-incarnate Avice required more courage than he could claim in
his present mood.</p>
<p>* * *<br/></p>
<p>Such evening promenades as these were frequent during the waxing of that
summer moon. On one occasion, as they were all good walkers, it was
arranged that they should meet halfway between the island and the town in
which Pierston had lodgings. It was impossible that by this time the
pretty young governess should not have guessed the ultimate reason of
these rambles to be a matrimonial intention; but she inclined to the
belief that the widow rather than herself was the object of Pierston's
regard; though why this educated and apparently wealthy man should be
attracted by her mother—whose homeliness was apparent enough to the
girl's more modern training—she could not comprehend.</p>
<p>They met accordingly in the middle of the Pebble-bank, Pierston coming
from the mainland, and the women from the peninsular rock. Crossing the
wooden bridge which connected the bank with the shore proper they moved in
the direction of Henry the Eighth's Castle, on the verge of the rag-stone
cliff. Like the Red King's Castle on the island, the interior was open to
the sky, and when they entered and the full moon streamed down upon them
over the edge of the enclosing masonry, the whole present reality faded
from Jocelyn's mind under the press of memories. Neither of his companions
guessed what Pierston was thinking of. It was in this very spot that he
was to have met the grandmother of the girl at his side, and in which he
would have met her had she chosen to keep the appointment, a meeting which
might—nay, must—have changed the whole current of his life.</p>
<p>Instead of that, forty years had passed—forty years of severance
from Avice, till a secondly renewed copy of his sweetheart had arisen to
fill her place. But he, alas, was not renewed. And of all this the pretty
young thing at his side knew nothing.</p>
<p>Taking advantage of the younger woman's retreat to view the sea through an
opening of the walls, Pierston appealed to her mother in a whisper: 'Have
you ever given her a hint of what my meaning is? No? Then I think you
might, if you really have no objection.'</p>
<p>Mrs. Pierston, as the widow, was far from being so coldly disposed in her
own person towards her friend as in the days when he wanted to marry her.
Had she now been the object of his wishes he would not have needed to ask
her twice. But like a good mother she stifled all this, and said she would
sound Avice there and then.</p>
<p>'Avice, my dear,' she said, advancing to where the girl mused in the
window-gap, 'what do you think of Mr. Pierston paying his addresses to you—coming
courting, as <i>I</i> call it in my old-fashioned way. Supposing he were
to, would you encourage him?'</p>
<p>'To ME, mother?' said Avice, with an inquiring laugh. 'I thought—he
meant you!'</p>
<p>'O no, he doesn't mean me,' said her mother hastily. 'He is nothing more
than my friend.'</p>
<p>'I don't want any addresses,' said the daughter.</p>
<p>'He is a man in society, and would take you to an elegant house in London
suited to your education, instead of leaving you to mope here.'</p>
<p>'I should like that well enough,' replied Avice carelessly.</p>
<p>'Then give him some encouragement.'</p>
<p>'I don't care enough about him to do any encouraging. It is his business,
I should think, to do all.'</p>
<p>She spoke in her lightest vein; but the result was that when Pierston, who
had discreetly withdrawn, returned to them, she walked docilely, though
perhaps gloomily, beside him, her mother dropping to the rear. They came
to a rugged descent, and Pierston took her hand to help her. She allowed
him to retain it when they arrived on level ground.</p>
<p>Altogether it was not an unsuccessful evening for the man with the
unanchored heart, though possibly initial success meant worse for him in
the long run than initial failure. There was nothing marvellous in the
fact of her tractability thus far. In his modern dress and style, under
the rays of the moon, he looked a very presentable gentleman indeed, while
his knowledge of art and his travelled manners were not without their
attractions for a girl who with one hand touched the educated middle-class
and with the other the rude and simple inhabitants of the isle. Her
intensely modern sympathies were quickened by her peculiar outlook.</p>
<p>Pierston would have regarded his interest in her as overmuch selfish if
there had not existed a redeeming quality in the substratum of old
pathetic memory by which such love had been created—which still
permeated it, rendering it the tenderest, most anxious, most protective
instinct he had ever known. It may have had in its composition too much of
the boyish fervour that had characterized such affection when he was
cherry-cheeked, and light in the foot as a girl; but, if it was all this
feeling of youth, it was more.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pierston, in fearing to be frank, lest she might seem to be angling
for his fortune, did not fully divine his cheerful readiness to offer it,
if by so doing he could make amends for his infidelity to her family forty
years back in the past. Time had not made him mercenary, and it had
quenched his ambitions; and though his wish to wed Avice was not entirely
a wish to enrich her, the knowledge that she would be enriched beyond
anything that she could have anticipated was what allowed him to indulge
his love.</p>
<p>He was not exactly old he said to himself the next morning as he beheld
his face in the glass. And he looked considerably younger than he was. But
there was history in his face—distinct chapters of it; his brow was
not that blank page it once had been. He knew the origin of that line in
his forehead; it had been traced in the course of a month or two by past
troubles. He remembered the coming of this pale wiry hair; it had been
brought by the illness in Rome, when he had wished each night that he
might never wake again. This wrinkled corner, that drawn bit of skin, they
had resulted from those months of despondency when all seemed going
against his art, his strength, his happiness. 'You cannot live your life
and keep it, Jocelyn,' he said. Time was against him and love, and time
would probably win.</p>
<p>'When I went away from the first Avice,' he continued with whimsical
misery, 'I had a presentiment that I should ache for it some day. And I am
aching—have ached ever since this jade of an Ideal learnt the
unconscionable trick of inhabiting one image only.'</p>
<p>Upon the whole he was not without a bodement that it would be folly to
press on.</p>
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