Chapter XVII.
Cn the Dark Brow of Helvollyn. While these plans were being settled, and while Lesbia's future was the ali-absorbing subject of Lady Maulevrier's thoughts, Mary contrived to be happier than ever she had been in her life before. It was happiness that grew and strengthened with every day ; and yet there was no obvious reason for this deep joy. Her life ran in the same familiar groove. She walked and rode on the old pathways; she rowed on the lake she had known from babyhood ; she visited her cottagers, and taught in the village school, just the same as of old. The change was only that she was no longer alone ; and of late the solitude of her li c, the ever-present consciousness that nobody shared her pleasures or sympathised with her upon any poiut had weighed upon her like an actual burden. _ Now she had Maulevrier, who was always kind, who understood and shared almost all her tastes, and Maulevrier's friend, who, although not given to saying smooth things, seemed warmly interested in her pursuits and opinions. He encouraged her to talk, although he generally took the opposite side in every argument; and she no longer felt oppressed or irritated by tho idea that he despised her. Indeed, although he never flattered or even praised her, Mr Hammond demonstrated/ that he liked her society. She had gone out of her way to avoid him, very fearful lest he should think her bold or masculine ; but he had taken pains to frustrate all her efforts to avoid him ; he had refused to go upon excursions which she could not share. " Lidy Mary must come with us," he said, when they were planning a morning's ramble. Thus it happened that Mary was his guide and companion in all his walks, and roamed with him, bamboo in hand, over every oue of those mountainous paths she knew and loved bo wtll. Distance was as nothing to thorn—sometimes a boat helped them, and they went over wintry Windermere to climb the heights above Bowness. Sometimes they took ponies, and a groom, and left their steeds to perform the wilder part of the way on foot. In this wise John Hammond j saw all that was to be seen within a days' journey of Grasmere, except the top of Helvellyn. Maulevrier had shirked the expedition, • had always put off Mary and Mr Hammond when they proposed it. The season was not advanced enough—the rugged pathway by the Tongue Ghyll would be as ulippery as glas —no pony could get up there in such weather. " We have not had any frost to speak for the last fortnight," pleaded Mary, who was particularly anxious to do the honours of Helvellyn, as the real lion of the neighbourhood. " What a simpleton you are, Molly," cried Maulevrier. "Do you suppose because theie is no frost iv your gx'audmotber'a garden—and if you wero to abk Staples about his penciled ho would tell you a \ery differont story—that there's a tropical atmosphere on Dolly Waggon Pike. Why, I'd wn&ov tho ice on Grifidalo earn is thick enough for skating. Ilelvellyn won't run away, child. You and Hammond can dance the Highland Schuttische on Striding Edge in June, if you liko." " Mr Hammond won't be here in June," said Mary. "Who knows—the train service is pretty fair between London and Windermere. , Hammond and I would think nothing of putting ourselves in the mail ou a Friday night and
1 coming down to spend Saturday or Sunday with you— if you are good." There came a sunny morning soon after Easter which seemed mild enough for June, and when EUmmond suggested that this was the very day for Helvellyn, Maulevrier had not a word to say against the truth of that propoeition. Tho weather had been exceptionally warm for a wvek, and they had played tennis and sat in the garden just as if it had been actually summer. Patches of suow might still liuger on thy crests of the hills — but the approach to those bleak heights could hardly be glacial. Mary clasped her hands delightedly. " Dear old Maulevrier !" she exclahnod, " you are aiways good to me. And now I shall be able to show you the Red Tarn, the highest pieco of water in England," she said, turning to Hammond. "And you will see Windermere winding like a silvery serpent between the hills, and Grasmere shining like a jewel in the depth of the valley, and the sea glittering like a line of white light between the edges of earth and heaven, and the dark Scotch hills far away to the north." " That is to say 9 *hese things are all upposed to be on viow from the top of the mountain ; but as a peculiar and altogether exceptional state of the atmosphere is essential to their being seen, I neod not tell you that they are rarely visible," said Maulevrier. " You uva talking to old mountaineers, Molly. Hammond has done Cotopaxi, and had his little clamber on the equatorial Andes, and I— wo!], chi d, I have done my Rigi, and I have always found the boasted panorama enveloped in dense fog." "It won't be foggy to-day," said Mary. " Shall we do the whole thing on foot, or shall I order the ponies ?" Mr Hammond inquired the distance up and down, and being told that it involved only a matter of eight miles, decided upon walking. " I'll walk and lead your pony," he said to Mary, but Mary declared herself quite capable of going on foot, so the ponies were dispensed with as a possible encumbrance. This was planned and discussed in the garden before breakfast. Fraulein was told that Mary was going for a long walk with her brother and Mr Hammond ; a walk which might last over the usual luncheon hour ; so Fraulein was not to wait luncheon. Mary went to her grandmother's room to pay her duty visit. There were no letters for her to write that morning, so she was perfectly free. The three pedestrians started an hour after breakfast in light marching order. The two young men wore their Argyleshire shooting clothes — homespun knickerbockers and jackets, thick ribbed hose knitted by Highland lasses in Invernes-s. They carried a couple of hunting flasks filled with claret, and a couple of sandwich boxes, and that waß all. Mary wore her substantial tailor-gown of olive tweed and little toque to match, with a silver-mounted grouse's olaw for her only ornament. It was a delicious morning, the air frash and sweet, the sun comfortably warm, a little too warm, perhaps, presently, when they had trodden the narrow path by the Tongue Ghyll, and were beginning to wind slowly upwards over rough boulders and last year's bracken, tough, and brown, and tangled, towards that rugged wall of earth and stone tufted with rank grasses, which calls itself Dolly Waggon Pike. Here they all came to a stand-still, and wiped the dew of honest labour from their foreheads ; and here Maulsyrier flung himself down upon a big boulder, with the soles of Mb atout shooting boots in running water, and took out his cigar case. " How do you like it?" he asked his friend, when he had lighted his cigarette. " I hope you are enjoying yourself." " I never was happier in my life," answered Hammond. He was standing on higher ground, with Mary by his side, pointing out and expatiating upon the details of the prospect. There were the lakes — Grasmere, a dish of shining blue ; Rydal, a patch of silver ; and .Winderraere wiuding amidst a labyrinth of wooded hills. " Are you tired ?" asked Maulevrier. " Not a whit." " Oh, I forgot you had done Cotopaxi ; that makes a difference. lam going homo." "Oh, Maulevrier!" exclaimed Mary, piteously. "I am going homo. You can go to the top. You are both hardened mountaineers, and I am not in it with either of you. When I rashly consented to a pedestrian ascent of Helvellyn I had forgotten what the gentleman was like ; and as to Dolly Waggon I had actually forgotten her existence. But now I see the lady — as steep as the side of a house, and as stony — no, naught but herself can be her parallel in stoniness. No, Molly, I will go no further." " But wo shall go down on the other side," urged Mary. " It's a little steeper on the Cumberland side, but not nearly so far." " A little steeper ! Can anything be steeper than Dolly Waggon ? Yes, you are right. It is steeper on the Cumberland side. I remember coming down a sheer descent, like an exaggerated sugar-loaf ; but I was on a pony, and it was the brute's look-out. I will not go down the Cumberland side on my own legs. No, Molly, not even for you. But if you and Hammond want to go to the top, there is nothing^ to prevent you. He is a skilled mountaineer. I'll trust you with him." Mary blushed, and made no reply. Of all things in the world she least wanted to abandon the expedition. Yet to climb Helvellyn alone with her brother's friend would no doubt be a terrible violation of those laws of maidenly propriety which Fraulein was always expounding. If Mary were to do this thing, which she longed to do, she must hazard a lecture from her governess, and probably a biting reproof from hei grandmother. " Will you trust yourself with me, Lady Mary }" asked Hammond, looking at her with a gaze so earnest — so much more earnest than the occasion required— that her blushes deepened and her eyelids fell. "I have done a good deal of climbing in my day, and I am not afraid of anything that Helvellyn can do to me. I promise to take great care of you if you will come." How could she refuse? How could she for one moment pretend that she did not trust him, that her heart did not yearn to go with him. She would have climbed Cotopaxi with him, or crossed the great Sahara with him, and feared nothing. Her trust in him was infinite — as infinite as her reverence and love. "lam afraid Fraulein would make a fuss," she faltered, after a pause. " Hang Fraulein," cried Maulevrier, puffing at his cigarette, and kicking about the stones in the clear running water. " I'll square it with Fraulein. I'll give her a pint of cham. with her lunch, and make her see everything iv a vony hue. The good soul is fond of her Heidseck. You will be back by afternoon tea. Why should there be any fuss about the matter? Hammond .vants to see the Rod Tarn, and you are dying to show him the way. Go, and joy go with you both. Climbing a atony hill is a form of pleasure to which I have nor> yet risen. I shall stroll home at my leisure, and spend the afternoon on the billiardroom sofa reading Mudie's last contribution to the comforts of home."
"What a Sybarite," Baid Hammond. " Come, Lady Mary, we musn't loiter, if we are to be back at Fellside by five o'clock. Mary looked at her brother doubtfully, and he gave her a little nod which seemed to mean " co by all means," so she dug the end of her staff into Dolly's rugged breast and mounted cheerily, stepping lightly from boulder to boulder. , The sun was not so warm aa it had been ten minutes a?o, when Manievrior flung himself down to rest. The .sky had clouded over a little, and a cooler wind was blowing across the breast of the hill. Fdirfield yonder, that long smooth slope of verdure which a « fc ''° while ago looked emerald green in the sunlight, now wore a soft and shadowy hue. All the world was grayer and dimmer in a moment as it were, and Coniston Lake in its distant valley disappeared beneath a veil of mist, while the shimmering sea-line upon the verge of the horizon melted and vanished among the clouds that overhung it. The weather changes very quickly in this part of the world. , Sharp drops of rain came spitting at Hammond and Mary as they climbed the crest of the Pike, and stopped, somewhat breathless, to look back at Maulevrier. He was trudging blithely down the winding way, and seemed to have done wonders while they had been doing very little. " How fast he is going," said Mary. "Easy is the descent of Avernus. He s going downhill, and wo are going upwards. That makes all the difference in life, you see, answered Hammond. Mary looked at him with divine compassion. She thought that for him the hill of life woul^ be harder than Helvellyn. He was bmve,^ honest, clever ; but her grandmother had impressed upon her that modern civilisation hardly has room for a young man who wants to get on in the world without either fortune or powerful connections. He had better go to Australia and keep sheep than attempt the impossible at home. The rain was a passing shower, hardly worth speaking of, but the glory of the day was over. The sky was gray, and there were dark clouds creeping up from the sea-line. Silvery Windermere had taken a leaden hue ; and now they turned their last fond look upon the Westmoreland valley and set their faces steadily towards Cumberland, and the fine grassy plateau on the top of the hill. All this was not done in a flash. It took them some time to scale Dolly's stubborn breast, and it took them another hour to reach the grassy platform, and by the time they came to the iron gate in the fence which at this point divides the two counties, the atmosphere had thickened ominously and dark wreaths of fog were floating about and around them, whirled here and there by a boisterous wind which shrieked and roared at them with savageseeming fury, as if it were the voice of some Titan monarch of the mountain protesting against this intrusion upon bis domain. " I'm afraid you won't see the Scottish hills," shouted Mary, holding on her little cloth hat. She was obliged to shout at the top of her voice, though she was close to Mr Hammond's elbow, for that shrill Bcreaming wind would have drowned the voice of a stentor. " Never mind the view," replied Hammond in the same fortissimo, " but I really wish I hadn't brought you up here. If this fog should get any worse, it may be dangerous." , " The fog is sure to get worse, ' said Mary in a brief lull of the burly burly, " but there is no danger. I know every inch of the hill, and I am not a bit afraid. • £ can guide you, if you will trust me." " My bravest of girls," he exclaimed, looking down at her. " Trust you ! Yes, I would trust my life to you— my soul — my honoursecure in your purity and good faith." Never had the eyes of living man or woman looked down upon her With such tenderness, such fervent love. She looked up at him ; looked with eyes which, at first bewildered, then grew bold, and lost themselves, as it were, in the dark gray depths of the eyes they met. The savage wind, hustling and howling, blew her nearer to him, as a reed is blown against a rock. Dark gray mists were rising round them like a sea ; but had that ever thickening, ever darkening vapour been the sea itself, the death inevitable, Mary Haseldon would have hardly cared. For in this moment the one precious gift for which her soul had long been yearning had been freely given to her. She knew, all at once, that she was fondly loved by that one man whom she had chosen for her idol and her hero. What matter that he was fortuneless, a nobody, with but the poorest chances of success in the world ? What if he must needs, only to win the bare means of existence, go to Australia and keep sheep, or to the Red River country and grow corn ? What if he must labour, as the peasants laboured on the sides of this rude hill ? Gladly would she go with him to a strange country and keep his log cabin, and work for him, and share his hard life, rough or smooth. No loss of social rank could lessen her pride in him, her belief in him. They were standing side by side a little way from the edge of the sheer descent, below which the Red Tarn showed black in a basin scooped out of the hill, like water held in the hollow of a giant's haud. "Look," cried Mary, pointing downward, "you must see the Red Tarn, the highest water in England ?" But just at this moment there came a blast which shook even Hammond's strong frame, and with a cry of fear he snatched Mary in his arms and carried her away from the edge of the hill. He folded her in his arms and held her there, thirty yards away from tfcfe precipice, safely sheltered against his brea^l, while the wind raved round them,blowingthehair from the broad white brow, and showing it to him in all its power and beauty ; while the darkness deepened round them so that they could see hardly anything but each other's eyes.
"My love, my true, dear love," he murmured fondly ; " I will trust you with my life. Will you accept the trust ? I am hardly worthy, for less than a year ago I offered myself to your Bister, and I thought that she was the only woman in this wide world who could make me happy. And when she refused me I was in despair, Mary, and I left Fellside in the full belief that I had done with life and happiness. And then 1 came back, only to oblige Maulevrier, and determined to be utterly miserable at Fellside. I was miserable for the first two hours. Memories of dead and gone joys and disappointed hopes were very bitter ; and I tried honestly to keep up my feeling of wretchedness for the last few days. But it was no use, Molly. There was a genial spirit in the place, a laughing fairy who would not let me be sad ; and I found myself becoming most unromantically happy, eating my breakfast with a hearty appetite, thinking: my cup of afternoon tea nectar for the love of the dear hand that gave it. And so, and so, till tho new love, the purer and better love, grew and grew into a mighty tree, which was an oak to an orchid, compared with that passion flower of earlier growth. Mary, will you trust your life to me, as I trust mine to you. I say to you almost in the words I spoke last year to Lesbia," and here his tone grew gravor almost to solemnity, " trust me and I will make your life free from the shadow of care -trust me, for
I have a brave spirit and a strong arm to fight the battle of life— trust me, and I will win for you the position you have a right to occupy — trust me, and you shall never ropent your trust." She looked up at him with eyes which told of infinite faith— childlike, unquestioning faith. " I will trust you in all things, and for ever," she said. "I am not afiaid to face evil fortune. Ido not care how poor you are — how hard our lives may ba— if — if you are sure you love me." " Sure ! There ia not a beat of all my heart nor a thought of my mind that does not belong to you. lam yours to the very depths of my soul. My innocent love, my clear-eyed, clearsouled angel ! 1 have studied you and watched ■ you and thought of you, and sounded the depths of your lovely nature, and the result is that you are for me earth's one woman. I will have no other, Mary — no ether love, no other wife." " Lady Maulevrier will be dreadfully angry," faltered Mary. " Are you afraid of her anger ?" " No ; I am afraid of nothing, for your cake." He lifted her hand to his lips and kissed it reverently, and there was a touch of chivalry in that reverential kiss. His eyes clouded with tears as he looked down into the trustful face. The fog had darkened to a denser blackness, aud it was almost as if they were engulfed in sudden night. •" If we were never to find our way down the hill — if this were to be the last hour of our r lives, Mary, would you be content ?" " Quite content," she answered simply. " I think I have lived long enough, if you really love me — if you are not making fun." "What, Molly, do you still doubt? Is it afcrange that I love you ?" ." very strange. lam so different from Lesbia." " Yes, very different, and the difference is your highest charm. And now, love, we had better go down whichever side of the hill is easiest, for this fog is rather appalling. I forglve the wind, because it blew you against my cart just now, and that is where I want you to dwell for ever." " Don't be frightened," said Mary. " I know every Btep of the way." So, leaning on her lover, and yet guiding him, slowly, step by step, groping their way through the darkness, Lady Mary led Mr Hammond down the winding track along which the ponies and the guides travel so often in the summer season. And soon they began to descend out of that canopy of fog which enveloped the brow of Helvellyn, and to see the whole world smiling beneath them— a world of Sreen pastures and sheep-folds, with a white omeatead here and there amidst the fields, looking so human and so comfortable after that gloomy mountain top round which the tempest howled so outrageously. Beyond those pastures stretched the dark waters of Thirlmere, looking like a broad river. The descent w.is passing' steep, but Ham mond's strong arm and steady steps made Mary's progress very easy, while she had in no wise exaggerated her familiarity with the windings and twistings of the track. Yet as they had need to travel very slowly so long as the fog still surrounded them, the journey downward lasted a considerable time, and it was past five when they arrived at the little roadside inn at the foot of the hill. Here Mr Hammond insisted that Mary should rest at least long enough to take a cup of tea. She was very white and tired. She had been profoundly agitated, aai looked on the point of fainting, although she protested that she was quite ready to walk on. " You are not going to walk another step," said Hammond. " While you are taking your tea I will get you a carriage." " Indeed, I had rather hurry on at once," | urged Mary. "We are so late already." ' " You will get home all the sooner if you obey me. It is your duty to obey me now," said Hammond, in a lowered voice. She smiled at him, but it was a weak, wan little smile, for that descent in the wind and tho fog had quite exhausted her. Mr Ham-, mond took her into a snug little parlour where there was a cheerful fire, and saw her comfortably seated in an arm-chair by the hearth, before he wont to look after a carriage. There was no such tbing as a conveyance to be had, but the Windermere coach would pass in about half an hour, and for this they must wait. It would take them back to Grasmere sooner than they could get there by walking, in Mary's exhausted condition. The tea-tray was brought in presently, and Hammond poured out i-he tea aud vvaited upon Lady Mary. It was a reversal of the. usual formula, but it was very pleasant to Mary to Bit with her feet on the low brass fender, and to be waited upon by her lover. That fog on the brow of Helvellyn— that piercing wind — had chilled her to the bone, and there was unspeakable comfort in the glow and warmth of the fire, in the refreshment of a good cup of tea. " Mary, you are my own property now, remember," said Hammond, watching her tenderly aa she sipped her tea. She glanced up at him shyly, now and then, with eyes full of innocent wonder. It was so strange to her, as strange as sweet, to know that he loved her; such a marvellous thing that she had pledged herself to be his wife. " You are my very own, mine to guard and cherish, mine to think and work for," he went on, " and you will have to trust me, sweet one ; even if the beginning of things is not altogether fre^from trouble." 'fl am not afraid of trouble." "'Bravely spoken. First and foremost then, you wiil have to announce your engagement to Lady Maulevrier. She will take it ill, no doubt ; will do her utmost to persuade you to give me up. Have you courage and resolution, do you think, to stand against her arguments ? Can you hold to your purpose bravely, and cry, no surrender?" "There shall be no surrender," answered Mary. " I promise you that. No doubt grandmamma will be very angry, but she has never cared for me very much. It will not hurt her for me to make a bad match, as it would have done in Lesbia's case. She has had no daydreams — no grand ambition about me ?" ' "So mv h tHe better, my lowly flower. When you have said all that is sweet and dutiful to her, and have let her know at the same time that you mean to be my wife, come weal come woe, I will see her, and will say my say. I will not promise her a grand career for my darling, but I will pledge myself that nothing of that kind which the world calls cvil — no penury, or shabbiness of surroundings — shall ever touch Mary Haselden after she is Mary Hammond. I can promise, ' at least, so much as that." "It is more than enough," said Mary. " I have told you that I ' would gladly share poverty with you," " Sweet, it is good of you to say as much, but I would not take you at your word. You don't know what poverty is." " Do you think I am a coward, or self-indul-gent. You are wrong, Jack. May I call you Jack, as Maulevrier does *" "May you?" The question evoked such a gush of tenderness that be was fain to kneel beside her chair
and kiss the little hand holding the cup, before he considered he had answered properly. " You are wrong, Jack. I do know what poverty means. I have studied the ways of the poor, fried to console them, and help them a little in their troubles ; and I know there is no pain which want of money can bring which I would not share willingly with yon. Do you suppose my happiness is dependeat on n> fine house and powdered footmen ? I should like to go to the Red River with you, and wear cotton gown 3, and tuck up my sleeves and clean our cottage." ".Very pretty sport, dear, for a summer day | but my Mary shall have a sweeter life, ana shall occasionally walk in silk attire." That tea-drinking by the fireside in the inn parlour was the most delicious thing within John Hammond's experience, Mary was a buwitching compound of earnestness and simplicity, so humble, so confiding, so perplexed, and astounded at her own bliss. " Confess, now, in the summer, when you were in love with Lesbia, you thought me a horrid kind of girl," she said presently, when they were standing side by side at the window, watching for the coach. " Never, Mary. My crime is to have thought very little of you in those days. I was so dazzled by Lesbia's beauty, ho charmed by her accomplishments and girlKh graces, that I forgot to take noliee of anything else in tho world. If 1 thought of you at all it was as another Maulevrier — a younger Maulevrier in petticoats, very gay, and good humoured, and nice." " But when you saw me rushing about with the terriers — I must have seemed utterly horrid. " "Why, dearest? There is nothing essentially horrible in terriers, or in a bright, lively girl running races with them. You made a very pretty picture in the sunlight, with your hat hanging on your shoulder, and your curly brown hair and dancing hazel eyes. If I had not been deep in love with Lesbia's peerless complexion and Grecian features, I should have looked below the surface of that Gainsborough picture, and disoovered what treasures of goodness, and courage, and truth and purity those frank brown eyes and that wide forehead betokened. I was sowing my wild oats laht summer, Mary, and they brought me a crop of sorrow. But lam wiser now — wiser and happier." " But if you were to see Leßbia again would not the old love revive ?" "The old love is dead, Mary. There 13 nothing left of it but a handful of ashes, which I scatter thus to the four winds," with a wave of his hand towards the open casement. " The new love absorbs and masters my being. If Lesbia were to. re-appear at Fellsiae this evening, I could offer her my hand in all brotherly frankness, and ask her to accept me as a brother. Here comes the coach. We shall be ; at Fellside just in time for dinner." I (To be Continued.)
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Bibliographic details
Otago Witness, Issue 1654, 4 August 1883, Page 24
Word Count
4,991Chapter XVII. Otago Witness, Issue 1654, 4 August 1883, Page 24
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