CHAPTER XXXIX.
WINDY BROW.
While North Aston was employing its time in wondering, and
Alick Corfield was breaking his heart in sorrowing, Leam was
doing battle with her despair and distress at Windy
Brow—doing the best she could to keep her senses clear
and to live through the penance which she had inflicted on
herself.
So far, Mrs. Pepper's conclusions, based on a badly-gummed
envelope, were right: Miss Gryce of Windy Brow was the sister
of Mr. Gryce of Lionnet, though even Mrs. Pepper did not know
that Leam Dundas, under the name of Leonora Darley, was living
with her.
It is not the most obvious agents that are the most
influential. The greatest things in Nature are the work of the
smallest creatures, and our lives are manipulated far more by
unseen influences, known only to ourselves, than by those
patent to the world. In all North Aston, Mr. Gryce was the man
who had apparently the least hold on the place and the
slightest connection with the people. He had come there by
accident and by choice lived in retirement, though also by choice he
had not been there a month before he knew all there was to be
known of every individual for miles round. The merest chances
had made him personally acquainted with Sebastian
Dundas—those chances his tenancy of Lionnet and the
slight attack of fever which called forth his landlord's
sentiment and pity. Through the father he came to know the
daughter, when the prying curiosity of his nature, his liking
for secret influence and concealed action, together with the
kind heart at bottom, and his real affection for the girl whose
confidence he had partly forced and partly won, threw the whole
secret into his hands and made him master of the
situation—the keeper of the seal set against the writings
whom no one suspected of complicity. This was exactly the kind
of thing he liked, and the kind of thing that suited him, human
mole, born detective and conspirator as he was.
When Leam met him in the wood on the evening of her
confession to Edgar, she met him with the deliberate intention
of confessing her fearful secret to him too, and of asking him
to help her to escape, like the friend which he had promised he
would be. She knew that it was impossible for her now to live
at North Aston, and the sole desire she had was to be blotted
out, as she had been.
There was no excitement about her, no feverish exaltation
that would burn itself cold before twenty-four hours were
over—only the dead dreariness of heartbreak, the
tenacious resolution of despair. She neither wept nor wrung her
hands, but quiet, pale, rigid, she told her terrible story in
the low and level tones in which a Greek Fate might have
spoken, as sad and as immutable. She had sinned, and now had
made such atonement as she could by confession—to her
lover to save him from pollution, to her father to cancel his
obligations to her, to her friend to be helped in her lifelong
penance. This done, she had strengthened herself to bear all
that might come to her with that resignation of remorse which
demands no rights and inherits no joys. She was not one of
those emotional half-hearted creatures who resolve one day,
break down the next, and drift always. For good and evil alike
she had the power to hold where she had gripped and to maintain
what she had undertaken; and even her life at Windy Brow did
not shake her.
And that life might well have shaken both a stronger mind
and even a more resolute will than hers.
A square stone house of eight rooms, set on a bleak
fell-side where the sun never shone, where no fruits ripened,
no flowers bloomed and no trees grew, save here and there a
dwarfed and twisted thorn covered with pale gray lichen and
bent by the wind into painful deformity of growth—a house
which had no garden, only a strip of rank, coarse grass before
the windows, with a potato-patch and kail-yard to the side;
where was no adornment within or without, no beauty of color,
no softness of line, merely a rugged, lonesome, square stone
tent set up on a mountain-spur, as it would seem for the
express reception of tortured penitents not seeking to soften
sorrow,—this was Windy Brow, the patrimony of the Gryces,
where Keziah, Emmanuel's eldest sister, lived and had lived
these sixty years and more.
The house stood alone. Monk Grange, the hamlet to which it
geographically belonged—a place as bleak and bare as
itself, and which seemed to have been flung against the
fell-foot as if a brick-layer's hodman had pitched the hovels
at haphazard anyhow—was two good miles away, and the
market-town, to be got at only by crossing a dangerous moor,
was nine miles off—as far as Sherrington from North
Aston.
The few poor dwellers in Monk Grange had little to do with
the market-town. They lived mostly on what they managed to
raise and rear among themselves—holding braxy mutton good
enough for feast-days, and oatmeal porridge all the year round
the finest food for men and bairns alike. As for the gudewives'
household necessaries, they were got by the carrier who passed
once a fortnight on their road; and for the rest, if aught was
wanting more than that which they had, they did without, and, according to the local
saying, "want was t' master."
Society of a cultured kind there was none. The clergyman was
an old man little if it all superior to the flock to which he
ministered. He was a St. Bees man, the son of a handloom
weaver, speaking broad Cumberland and hopelessly "dished" by a
hard word in the Bible. He was fond of his glass, and was to be
found every day of his life from three to nine at the Blucher,
smoking a clay pipe and drinking rum and milk. He had never
married, but he was by no means an ascetic in his morals, as
more than one buxom wench in his parish had proved; and in all
respects he was an anachronism, the like of which is rare now
among the fells and dales, though at one time it was the normal
type for the clergy of the remoter North Country districts.
This old sinner—Priest Wilson as he was
called—and Miss Gryce of Windy Brow represented the
wealth and intellect of a place which was at the back of
everything, out of the highway of life and untouched by the
progress of history or science. And the one was not very much
superior to the other save in moral cleanliness; which,
however, counts for something.
If North Aston had said with a sniff that Mr. Gryce was not
thoroughbred, what would have been its verdict on Sister
Keziah? He at least had rubbed off some of the native fell-side
mould by rolling about foreign parts, gathering experience if
not moss, and becoming rich in knowledge if not in guineas; but
Keziah, who had spent the last twenty years of her life in
close attendance on a paralytic old mother, had stiffened as
she stood, and the local mould encrusting her was very thick.
Nevertheless, she too had a good heart if a rough hand, and,
though eccentric almost to insanity, as one so often finds with
people living out of the line and influence of public opinion,
yet was as sound at the core as she was rude and odd in the
husk.
She was a small woman, lean, wrinkled, and with a curious
mixture of primness and slovenliness in her dress. She wore a
false front, which she called a topknot, the small, crimped,
deep-brown mohair curls of which were bound about her forehead
with a bit of black velvet ribbon, while gray hairs straggled
from underneath to make the patent sham more transparent still;
and over her topknot she wore a rusty black cap that enclosed
the keen monkeyish face like a ruff. Her every-day gown was one
of coarse brown camlet, any number of years old, darned and
patched till it was like a Joseph's coat; and the Rob Roy
tartan shawl which she pinned across her bosom hid a state of
dilapidation which even she did not care should be seen. She
wore a black stuff apron full of fine tones from fruit-stains
and fire-scorchings; and she took snuff.
She was reputed to be worth a mort of money, and she had
saved a goodly sum. It would have been more had she had the
courage to invest it; but she had a profound distrust of all
financial speculations—had not Emmanuel lost his share by
playing at knucklebones with it in the City?—and she was
not the fool to follow my leader into the mire. For her part,
she put her trust in teapots and stockings, with richer hoards
wrapped in rags and sewn up in the mattress, and here a few odd
pounds under the rice and there a few hidden in the coffee.
That was her idea of a banking account, and she held it to be
the best there was.
"Don't lend your hat," she used to say, "and then you'll not
have to go bareheaded." And sometimes, talking of loans on
securities, she would take a pinch of snuff and say she
"reckoned nowt of that man who locked his own granary door and
gave another man the key."
To all appearance, she lived only to scrape and hoard,
moidering away her loveless life on the futile energies and
sordid aims of a miser's wretched pleasures. But every now and
then she had risen up out of the slough into which she had
gradually sunk, and had done some grand things that marked her
name with so many white stones. While she gloried in her skill
in filching from the pig what would serve the chickens, in
making Jenny go short to
save to-day's baking of havre-bread, in skimping Tim's bowl of
porridge—his appetite being a burden on her estate which
she often declared would break her—she had more than once
given a hundred pounds at a blow to build a raft for a poor
drowning wretch who must otherwise have sunk. In fact, she was
one of those people who are small with the small things of life
and great with the great—who will grudge a daily dole of
a few threshed-out stalks of straw, but who sometimes, when
rightly touched, will shower down with both hands full sheaves
of golden grain. That is, she had mean aims, a bad temper, no
imagination, but the capacity for pity and generosity on
occasions.
Above all things, she hated to be put out of the way or
intruded on. When her brother Emmanuel came down on her without
a word of warning, bringing a girl with eyes that, as she said,
made her feel foolish to look at, and a manner part scared,
part stony, and wholly unconformable, telling her to keep this
precious-bit madam like a bale of goods till called for, and to
do the best with it she could, she was justified, she said, in
splurging against his thoughtlessness and want of
consideration, taking a body like that all of a heap, without
With your leave or By your leave, or giving one a chance of
saying Yes I will, or No I won't.
But though she splurged she gave way; and after she had
fumed and fussed, heckled the maid and harried the man, said
she didn't see as how she could, and she didn't think as how
she would, sworn there was no bedding fit to use, and that she
had no place for the things—apples and onions
chiefly—that were in the spare room if she gave it up for
the young lass's use, she seemed to quiet down, and going over
to Leam, standing mutely by the black-boarded fireplace, put on
her spectacles, peered up into her face, and said in shrill
tones, rasping as a saw, though she meant to be kind, "Ah,
well! I suppose it must be; so go your ways up stairs with
Jenny, bairn, and make yourself at home. It's little I have for
a fine young miss like you to play with, but what I have you're
welcome to; so make no bones about it: d'ye hear?"
"But I am in your way," said Leam, not moving. "You do not
want me?"
Miss Gryce laughed. "Want ye?" she shouted. "Want ye, do you
say? Nay, nay, honey, it was no wanting of you or your marras
that would ever have given me a headache, I'll ensure ye. But
now that you are here you can bide as long as you've a mind;
and you're welcome kindly. And Emmanuel there knows that my
word is as good as my bond, and what I say I mean."
"Am I to stay?" asked Leam, turning to Mr. Gryce with a
certain forced humility which showed how much it cost her to
submit.
"Yes," he answered, less cheerfully and more authoritatively
than was his manner at North Aston, speaking without a lisp and
with a full Cumberland accent. "It is the best thing I can do
for you—all I have to offer."
To which Leam bent her sad head with pathetic
patience—pathetic indeed to those who knew the proud
spirit that it reported broken and humbled for ever. Following
the red-armed, touzled, ragged maid to the dingy cabin that was
to be her room, she left her friend to explain to his sister,
so far as he chose and could, the necessity under which he
found himself of leaving his adopted daughter, Leonora Darley,
in her care for a week or two, until such time as he should
return and claim her.
"Your adopted daughter? God bless my soul, man! but you are
the daftest donnet I ever saw on two legs!" cried Keziah,
snatching up the coarse gray knitting which was the sole
unanchored circumstance in the room and casting off her heel
viciously. "What call had you to adopt a daughter—you
with never a wife to mother her nor a house of your own to take
her to? For I reckon nowt of your furnished houses here and
your beggarly apartments there, as you know. And now you can do
nothing better than bring her here to fash the life out of me
before the week's over! But that's always the way with you men.
You talk precious big, but it's mighty little you put your hands to; and when
you hack out yokes for which you get a deal of praise, you take
care not to bear them on your own backs. It's us women who have
to do that."
"One would have supposed you would have liked a pretty young
thing like that in the house. You are lonesome enough here, and
it makes a little life," said Emmanuel quietly.
He knew his sister Keziah, and that she must have her head
when the talking fit was on her.
"'A pretty young thing like that!'" she repeated scornfully.
"Lord love you, born cuddy as you are! What's her good looks to
me, I wonder, but a pound spent on a looking-glass, and Jenny
taken off her work to make cakes and butter-sops for her dainty
teeth? We'll have all the men-folk too havering round to see
which of 'em may have the honor of ruining himself for my fine
lady. And I'll not have it, I tell ye. I'll not have my house
turned into a fair, with madam there as the show. Life! what do
I want with 'life' about me, or you either, Emmanuel? I've got
my right foot in the grave, and I reckon yours is not far off;
and what we've both got to do now is to see that we make a good
ending for our souls."
"At all events, you don't refuse to take her for a week or
two?" asked Emmanuel innocently.
"Did I say I refused? Did I send her up stairs as the
nighest road to the street-door?" retorted his sister with
disdain. "Did I not tell you, as plain as tongue could speak,
that she is welcome to her bit and sup, and I'll pass the time
away for her in the best way I can, though bad is the best, I
reckon?"
"Well, well, you are a good body," said her brother.
"Ay," she answered, "I am good enough when I jump your way.
But tell me, Emmanuel," changing from the disdain of the
superior creature holding forth on high matters to the inferior
to the familiar gossip of the natural woman, "what's to do with
her? It's as plain as a pike-staff that something is troubling
her, and maybe it will be some of your love nonsense? for it's
mainly that as fashes the lasses. Good Lord! I'm thankful I was
never hindered that way."
"Yes," said Mr. Gryce, "she has had what you women call a
disappointment; and," speaking with unusual energy, "the man
was a fool and a coward, and she has had a lucky escape."
"Say ye? If so, then there is no call for her to carry on,"
said Keziah philosophically. "But the poor bairn's looking
wantle enough now, though I warrant me the fell-side air will
brisk her up in no time."
"I hope it will," said her brother.
"What does she eat, now? You see, now I've got the lass on
my hands, I cannot hunger her," said Keziah. "Not that I can
give her dainties and messes," she added hastily, the miser's
cloak suddenly covering the woman's heart. "She'll have to take
what we get, and be thankful for her meat. Still, it's as well
to know what a body's been accustomed to when they come like
this, all of a heap."
"Don't fash yourself about her," answered Emmanuel. "Do what
you can—that you will, I know—but leave her to
herself: that's the way for her. She's an odd little body, and
the least said the soonest mended with Leam."
"With who, d'ye say?" asked Keziah sharply.
"Lean—Leonora," said Emmanuel cherubically.
"Well, I wouldn't call a daughter of mine after old
Pharaoh's kine," snapped Keziah with supreme scorn; and at that
moment Leam came into the room, and Keziah bustled out of it to
tig after Jenny and ding at Tim, as these two faithful
servitors were wont to express the way of their mistress toward
them.
"My dear, I did not know that things were so miserable here
for you, but you must just bide here till the scent grows cold,
and then I'll come for you and put you where you'll be better
off," said Mr. Gryce kindly when he was alone with Leam.
"This will do," said Leam, suppressing a shudder as she
looked round the little room, where what had originally been a rhubarb-colored
paper—chosen because it was a good wearing
color—was patched here and there with scraps of
newspapers or bits of other patterned papers; where the huge
family Bible and a few musty and torn odd volumes of the
Spectator and the Tatler comprised the sole
library; and where the only ornaments on the chimneypiece were
three or four bits of lead ore from the Roughton Gill mines,
above Caldbeck.
"You have been used to something far different," said
Emmanuel, compassionately.
"My past is over," she answered in a low voice.
"But you'll come to a better future," he cried, his mild
blue eyes watery and red.
"Shall I? When I die?" was her reply as she passed her hand
wearily over her forehead, and wished—ah, how
ardently!—that the question might answer itself now at
once.
But the young live against their will, and Leam, though
bruised and broken, had still the grand vitality of youth to
support her. Of the stuff of which in a good cause martyrs, in
a bad criminals, are made, she accepted her position at Windy
Brow with the very heroism of resignation. She never
complained, though every circumstance, every condition, was
simply torture; and so soon as she saw what she was expected to
do, she did it without remonstrance or reluctance. Her life
there was like a lesson in a foreign language which she had
undertaken to learn by heart, and she gave herself to her task
loyally. But it was suffering beyond even what Emmanuel Gryce
supposed or Keziah ever dreamed of. She, with the sun of the
South in her veins, her dreams of pomegranates and
orange-groves, of music and color and bright blue skies, of
women as beautiful as mamma, of that one man—not of the
South, but fit to have been the godlike son of
Spain—suddenly translated from soft and leafy North Aston
to a bleak fell-side in the most desolate corner of
Cumberland—where for lush hedges were cold, grim gray
stone walls, and the sole flowers to be seen gorse which she
could not gather, and heather which had no perfume—to a
house set so far under the shadow that it saw the sun only for
three months in the year, and where her sole companion was old
Keziah Gryce, ill-favored in person, rough of mood if true of
soul, or creatures even worse than herself;—she, with
that tenacious loyalty, that pride and concentrated passion,
that dry reserve and want of general benevolence characteristic
of her, to be suddenly cast among uncouth strangers whose ways
she must adopt, and who were physically loathsome to her; dead
to the only man she loved, his love for her killed by her own
hand, herself by her own confession accursed; and to bear it
all in silent patience,—was it not heroic? Had she been
more plastic than she was, the effort would not have been so
great. Being what she was, it was grand; and made as it was for
penitence, it had in it the essential spirit of saintliness.
For saintliness comes in small things as well as great, and
George Herbert's swept room is a true image. There was
saintliness in the docility with which she rose at six and went
to bed at nine; saintliness in the quiet asceticism with which
she ate porridge for breakfast and porridge for supper—at
the first honestly believing it either a joke or an insult, and
that they had given her pigs' food to try her temper;
saintliness in the silence with which she accepted her dinners,
maybe a piece of fried bacon and potatoes, or a huge mess of
apple-pudding on washing-days, or a plate of poached eggs
cooked in a pan not over clean; saintliness in the enforced
attention which she gave to Keziah's rambling stories of her
pigs and her chickens, her mother's ailments, Jenny's
shortcomings in the matter of sweepings and savings, Tim's
wastefulness in the garden over the kailrunts, and the
hardships of life on a lone woman left with only a huzzy to
look after her; saintliness in the repression of that proud,
fastidious self to which Keziah's familiarity and snuff,
Jenny's familiarity and disorder, the smell of the
peat—which was the only fuel they burnt—reeking
through the house, and
the utter ugliness and barren discomfort of everything about,
were hourly miseries which she would once have repudiated with
her most cutting scorn; saintliness in the repression of that
self indeed at all four corners, and the resolute submission to
her burden because it was her fitting punishment.
So the sad days wore on, and the fell-side air had not yet
brisked up Emmanuel's adopted daughter as his sister
prophesied. Indeed, she seemed slighter and paler than ever,
and if possible more submissive to her lot and more taciturn.
And as her intense quietude of bearing suited Miss Gryce, who
could not bear to be fussed, and time proved her douce and not
fashious, she became quite a favorite with her rough-grained
hostess, who wondered more and more where Emmanuel had picked
her up, and whose bairn she really was.
Her only pleasure was in wandering over the fells, whence
she could see the tops of the Derwentwater mountains, and from
some points a glimpse of blue Bassanthwaite flowing out into
the open; where mountain-tarns, lying like silver plates in the
purple distance, were her magic shows, seen only in certain
lights, and more often lost than found; whence she could look
over the broad Carlisle plain and dream of that day on the
North Aston moor when she first met Edgar Harrowby; and whence
the glittering strip of the Solway against the horizon made her
yearn to be in one of the ships which she could dimly discern
passing up and down, so that she might leave England for ever
and lay down the burden of her life and her sorrow in mamma's
dear land.
So the hours passed, dreary as Mariana's, and hopeless as
those wherein we stand round the grave and know that the end of
all things has come. And while North Aston wondered, and Alick
mourned, and Edgar repented of his past folly with his handsome
head in Adelaide's lap, Leam Dundas moved slowly through the
shadow to the light, and from her chastisement gathered that
sweet grace of patience which redeemed her soul and raised her
from sin to sanctity. |