‘Mr Vanstone will see you,’ she said, ‘if you will kindly wait a few minutes. He will ring the parlour bell when his present occupation is at an end, and he is ready to receive you. Be careful, ma’am, not to depress his spirits, or to agitate him in any way. His heart has been a cause of serious anxiety to those about him, from his earliest years. There is no positive disease; there is only a chronic feebleness – a fatty degeneration – a want of vital power in the organ itself. His heart will go on well enough if you don’t give his heart too much to do – that is the advice of all the medical men who have seen him. You will not forget it, and you will keep a guard over your conversation accordingly. Talking of medical men, have you ever tried the Golden Ointment for that sad affliction in your eyes? It has been described to me as an excellent remedy.’
‘It has not succeeded in my case,’ replied Magdalen, sharply. ‘Before I see Mr Noel Vanstone,’ she continued, ‘may I inquire –’
‘I beg your pardon,’ interposed Mrs Lecount. ‘Does your question refer in any way to those two poor girls?’
‘It refers to the Miss Vanstones.’
‘Then I can’t enter into it. Excuse me, I really can’t discuss these poor girls (I am so glad to hear you call them the Miss Vanstones!) except in my master’s presence, and by my master’s express permission. Let us talk of something else while we are waiting here. Will you notice my glass Tank? I have every reason to believe that it is a perfect novelty in England.’
‘I looked at the Tank while you were out of the room,’ said Magdalen.
‘Did you? You take no interest in the subject, I dare say? Quite natural. I took no interest either until I was married. My dear husband – dead many years since – formed my tastes, and elevated me to himself. You have heard of the late Professor Lecomte, the eminent Swiss naturalist? I am his widow. The English circle at Zürich (where I lived in my late master’s service) Anglicized my name to Lecount. Your generous country people will have nothing foreign about them – not even a name, if they can help it. But I was speaking of my husband -my dear husband, who permitted me to assist him in his pursuits. I have had only one interest since his death – an interest in science. Eminent in many things, the Professor was great at reptiles. He left me his Subjects and his Tank. I had no other legacy. There is the Tank. All the Subjects died but this quiet little fellow – this nice little toad. Are you surprised at my liking him? There is nothing to be surprised at. The Professor lived long enough to elevate me above the common prejudice against the reptile creation. Properly understood, the reptile creation is beautiful. Properly dissected, the reptile creation is instructive in the last degree.’ She stretched out her little finger, and gently stroked the toad’s back with the tip of it. ‘So refreshing to the touch,’ said Mrs Lecount. ‘So nice and cool this summer weather!’
The bell from the parlour rang. Mrs Lecount rose, bent fondly over the Aquarium, and chirruped to the toad at parting as if it had been a bird. ‘Mr Vanstone .is ready to receive you. Follow me, if you please, Miss Garth.’ With these words she opened the door, and led the way out of the room.
Chapter Three
‘Miss Garth, sir,’ said Mrs Lecount, opening the parlour door, and announcing the visitor’s appearance, with the tone and manner of a well-bred servant.
Magdalen found herself in a long, narrow room – consisting of a back parlour and a front parlour, which had been thrown into one by opening the folding-doors between them. Seated not far from the front window, with his back to the light, she saw a frail, flaxen-haired, self-satisfied little man, clothed in a fair white dressing-gown, many sizes too large for him, with a nosegay of violets drawn nearly through the button-hole over his breast. He looked from thirty to five-and-thirty years old. His complexion was as delicate as a young girl’s, his eyes were of the lightest blue, his upper lip was adorned by a weak little white moustache, waxed and twisted at either end into a thin spiral curl. When any object specially attracted his attention, he half closed his eyelids to look at it. When he smiled, the skin at his temples crumpled itself up into a nest of wicked little wrinkles. He had a plate of strawberries on his lap, with a napkin under them to preserve the purity of his white dressing-gown. At his right hand stood a large round table, covered with a collection of foreign curiosities, which seemed to have been brought together from the four quarters of the globe. Stuffed birds from Africa, porcelain monsters from China, silver ornaments and utensils from India and Peru, mosaic work from Italy, and bronzes from France – were all heaped together, pell-mell, with the coarse deal boxes and dingy leather cases which served to pack them for travelling. The little man apologized, with a cheerful and simpering conceit, for his litter of curiosities, his dressing-gown, and his delicate health; and, waving his hand towards a chair, placed his attention, with pragmatical politeness, at the visitor’s disposal. Magdalen looked at him with a momentary doubt whether Mrs Lecount had not deceived her. Was this the man who mercilessly followed the path on which his merciless father had walked before him? She could hardly believe it. ‘Take a seat, Miss Garth,’ he repeated; observing her hesitation, and announcing his own name, in a high, thin, fretfully-consequential voice: ‘I am Mr Noel Vanstone. You wished to see me – here I am!’
‘May I be permitted to retire, sir?’ inquired Mrs Lecount.
‘Certainly not!’ replied her master. ‘Stay here, Lecount, and keep us company. Mrs Lecount has my fullest confidence,’ he continued, addressing Magdalen. ‘Whatever you say to me, ma’am, you say to her. She is a domestic treasure. There is not another house in England has such a treasure as Mrs Lecount.’
The housekeeper listened to the praise of her domestic virtues with eyes immovably fixed on her elegant chemisette. But Magdalen’s quick penetration had previously detected a look that passed between Mrs Lecount and her master, which suggested that Noel Vanstone had been instructed beforehand, what to say and do in his visitor’s presence. The suspicion of this – and the obstacles which the room presented to arranging her position in it so as to keep her face from the light -warned Magdalen to be on her guard.
She had taken her chair at first nearly midway in the room. An instant’s after-reflection induced her to move her seat towards the left hand, so as to place herself just inside, and close against, the left post of the folding-door. In this position, she dexterously barred the only passage by which Mrs Lecount could have skirted round the large table, and contrived to front Magdalen by taking a chair at her master’s side. On the right hand of the table the empty space was well occupied by the fireplace and fender, by some travelling trunks, and a large packing-case. There was no alternative left for Mrs Lecount but to place herself on a line with Magdalen, against the opposite post of the folding-door – or to push rudely past the visitor, with the obvious intention of getting in front of her. With an expressive little cough, and with one steady look at her master, the housekeeper conceded the point, and took her seat against the right-hand door-post. ‘Wait a little,’ thought Mrs Lecount, ‘my turn next!’
‘Mind what you are about, ma’am!’ cried Noel Vanstone, as Magdalen accidentally approached the table, in moving her chair. ‘Mind the sleeve of your cloak! Excuse me, you nearly knocked down that silver candlestick. Pray don’t suppose it’s a common candlestick. It’s nothing of the sort – it’s a Peruvian candlestick. There are only three of that pattern in the world. One is in the possession of the President of Peru; one is locked up in the Vatican; and one is on My table. It cost ten pounds; it’s worth fifty. One of my father’s bargains, ma’am. All these things are my father’s bargains. There is not another house in England which has such curiosities as these. Sit down, Lecount; I beg you will make yourself comfortable. Mrs Lecount is like the curiosities, Miss Garth – she is one of my father’s bargains. You are one of my father’s bargains, are you not, Lecount? My father was a remarkable man, ma’am. You will be reminded of him here, at every turn. I have got his dressing-gown on at this moment. No such linen as this is m
ade now – you can’t get it for love or money. Would you like to feel the texture? Perhaps you’re no judge of texture? Perhaps you would prefer talking to me about these two pupils of yours? They are two, are they not? Are they fine girls? Plump, fresh, full-blown English beauties?’
‘Excuse me, sir,’ interposed Mrs Lecount sorrowfully. ‘I must really beg permission to retire if you speak of the poor things in that way. I can’t sit by, sir, and hear them turned into ridicule. Consider their position; consider Miss Garth.’
‘You good creature!’ said Noel Vanstone, surveying the housekeeper through his half-closed eyelids. ‘You excellent Lecount! I assure you, ma’am, Mrs Lecount is a worthy creature. You will observe that she pities the two girls. I don’t go so far as that myself – but I can make allowances for them. I am a large-minded man. I can make allowances for them and for you.’ He smiled with the most cordial politeness, and helped himself to a strawberry from the dish on his lap.
‘You shock Miss Garth; indeed, sir, without meaning it, you shock Miss Garth,’ remonstrated Mrs Lecount. ‘She is not accustomed to you as I am. Consider Miss Garth, sir. As a favour to me,consider Miss Garth.’
Thus far, Magdalen had resolutely kept silence. The burning anger which would have betrayed her in an instant if she had let it flash its way to the surface, throbbed fast and fiercely at her heart, and warned her, while Noel Vanstone was speaking, to close her lips. She would have allowed him to talk on uninterruptedly for some minutes more, if Mrs Lecount had not interfered for the second time. The refined insolence of the housekeeper’s pity, was a woman’s insolence; and it stung her into instantly controlling herself. She had never more admirably imitated Miss Garth’s voice and manner, than when she spoke her next words.
‘You are very good,’ she said to Mrs Lecount. ‘I make no claim to be treated with any extraordinary consideration. I am a governess, and I don’t expect it. I have only one favour to ask. I beg Mr Noel Vanstone, for his own sake, to hear what I have to say to him.’
‘You understand, sir?’ observed Mrs Lecount. ‘It appears that Miss Garth has some serious warning to give you. She says you are to hear her, for your own sake.’
Mr Noel Vanstone’s fair complexion suddenly turned white. He put away the plate of strawberries among his father’s bargains. His hand shook, and his little figure twisted itself uneasily in the chair. Magdalen observed him attentively. ‘One discovery already,’ she thought; ‘he is a coward!’
‘What do you mean, ma’am?’ asked Noel Vanstone with visible trepidation of look and manner. ‘What do you mean by telling me I must listen to you for my own sake? If you come here to intimidate me, you come to the wrong man. My strength of character was universally noticed in our circle at Zurich – wasn’t it, Lecount?’
‘Universally, sir,’ said Mrs Lecount. ‘But let us hear Miss Garth. Perhaps I have misinterpreted her meaning.’
‘On the contrary,’ replied Magdalen, ‘you have exactly expressed my meaning. My object in coming here is to warn Mr Noel Vanstone against the course which he is now taking.’
‘Don’t!’ pleaded Mrs Lecount. ‘Oh, if you want to help these poor girls, don’t talk in that way! Soften his resolution, ma’am, by entreaties; don’t strengthen it by threats!’ She a little overstrained the tone of humility in which she spoke those words – a little overacted the look of apprehension which accompanied them. If Magdalen had not seen plainly enough already that it was Mrs Lecount’s habitual practice to decide everything for her master in the first instance, and then to persuade him that he was not acting under his housekeeper’s resolution, but under his own – she would have seen it now.
‘You hear what Lecount has just said?’ remarked Noel Vanstone. ‘You hear the unsolicited testimony of a person who has known me from childhood? Take care, Miss Garth – take care!’ He complacently arranged the tails of his white dressing-gown over his knees, and took the plate of strawberries back on his lap.
‘I have no wish to offend you,’ said Magdalen. ‘I am only anxious to open your eyes to the truth. You are not acquainted with the characters of the two sisters whose fortunes have fallen into your possession. I have known them from childhood; and I come to give you the benefit of my experience in their interests and in yours. You have nothing to dread from the elder of the two; she patiently accepts the hard lot which you, and your father before you, have forced on her. The younger sister’s conduct is the very opposite of this. She has already declined to submit to your father’s decision; and she now refuses to be silenced by Mrs Lecount’s letter. Take my word for it, she is capable of giving you serious trouble if you persist in making an enemy of her.’
Noel Vanstone changed colour once more, and began to fidget again in his chair. ‘Serious trouble,’ he repeated, with a blank look. ‘If you mean writing letters, ma’am, she has given trouble enough already. She has written once to me, and twice to my father. One of the letters to my father was a threatening letter – wasn’t it, Lecount?’
‘She expressed her feelings, poor child,’ said Mrs Lecount. ‘I thought it hard to send her back her letter, but your dear father knew best. What I said at the time was, Why not let her express her feelings? What are a few threatening words, after all? In her position, poor creature, they are words, and nothing more.’
‘I advise you not to be too sure of that,’ said Magdalen. ‘I know her better than you do.’
She paused at those words – paused in a momentary terror. The sting of Mrs Lecount’s pity had nearly irritated her into forgetting her assumed character, and speaking in her own voice.
‘You have referred to the letters written by my pupil,’ she resumed, addressing Noel Vanstone, as soon as she felt sure of herself again. ‘We will say nothing about what she has written to your father; we will only speak of what she has written to you. Is there anything unbecoming in her letter, anything said in it that is false? Is it not true that these two sisters have been cruelly deprived of the provision which their father made for them? His will to this day speaks for him and for them; and it only speaks to no purpose, because he was not aware that his marriage obliged him to make it again, and because he died before he could remedy the error. Can you deny that?’
Noel Vanstone smiled, and helped himself to a strawberry. ‘I don’t attempt to deny it,’ he said. ‘Go on, Miss Garth.’
‘Is it not true,’ persisted Magdalen, ‘that the law which has taken the money from these sisters, whose father made no second will, has now given that very money to you, whose father made no will at all? Surely, explain it how you may, this is hard on those orphan girls?’
‘Very hard,’ replied Noel Vanstone. ‘It strikes you in that light, too -doesn’t it, Lecount?’
Mrs Lecount shook her head, and closed her handsome black eyes. ‘Harrowing,’ she said; ‘I can characterize it, Miss Garth, by no other word – harrowing. How the young person – no! how Miss Vanstone the younger – discovered that my late respected master made no will, I am at a loss to understand. Perhaps it was put in the papers? But I am interrupting you, Miss Garth. You have something more to say about your pupil’s letter?’ She noiselessly drew her chair forward as she said those words, a few inches beyond the line of the visitor’s chair. The attempt was neatly made, but it proved useless. Magdalen only kept her head more to the left – and the packing-case on the floor prevented Mrs Lecount from advancing any farther.
‘I have only one more question to put,’ said Magdalen. ‘My pupil’s letter addressed a proposal to Mr Noel Vanstone. I beg him to inform me why he has refused to consider it.’
‘My good lady!’ cried Noel Vanstone, arching his white eyebrows in satirical astonishment. ‘Are you really in earnest? Do you know what the proposal is? Have you seen the letter?’
‘I am quite in earnest,’ said Magdalen, ‘and I have seen the letter. It entreats you to remember how Mr Andrew Vanstone’s fortune has come into your hands; it informs you that one-half of that fortune, divided between his daughte
rs, was what his will intended them to have; and it asks of your sense of justice to do for his children, what he would have done for them himself if he had lived. In plainer words still, it asks you to give one-half of the money to the daughters, and it leaves you free to keep the other half yourself. That is the proposal. Why have you refused to consider it?’
‘For the simplest possible reason, Miss Garth,’ said Noel Vanstone, in high good humour. ‘Allow me to remind you of a well-known proverb: A fool and his money are soon parted. Whatever else I may be, ma’am, I’m not a fool.’
‘Don’t put it in that way, sir!’ remonstrated Mrs Lecount. ‘Be serious – pray be serious!’
‘Quite impossible, Lecount,’ rejoined her master. ‘I can’t be serious. My poor father, Miss Garth, took a high moral point of view in this matter. Lecount, there, takes a high moral point of view – don’t you, Lecount? I do nothing of the sort. I have lived too long in the continental atmosphere to trouble myself about moral points of view. My course in this business is as plain as two and two make four. I have got the money, and I should be a born idiot if I parted with it. There is my point of view! Simple enough, isn’t it? I don’t stand on my dignity; I don’t meet you with the law, which is all on my side; I don’t blame your coming here, as a total stranger, to try and alter my resolution; I don’t blame the two girls for wanting to dip their fingers into my purse. All I say is, I am not fool enough to open it. Pas si bête,as we used to say in the English circle at Zürich. You understand French, Miss Garth? Pas si bête!’He set aside his plate of strawberries once more, and daintily dried his fingers on his fine white napkin.
Magdalen kept her temper. If she could have struck him dead by lifting her hand at that moment – it is probable she would have lifted it. But she kept her temper.
‘Am I to understand,’ she asked, ‘that the last words you have to say in this matter, are the words said for you in Mrs Lecount’s letter?’