Part 7 (1/2)
”No, but I thought--Does papa know you are going?”
”Not that I am aware of. I don't suppose he would trouble himself about the matter.”
”You are going to use his horse?”
”He knows I do that whenever I can.”
”Don't let Gwendolen ride after the hounds, Rex,” said Anna, whose fears gifted her with second-sight.
”Why not?” said Rex, smiling rather provokingly.
”Papa and mamma and aunt Davilow all wish her not to. They think it is not right for her.”
”Why should you suppose she is going to do what is not right?”
”Gwendolen minds n.o.body sometimes,” said Anna getting bolder by dint of a little anger.
”Then she would not mind me,” said Rex, perversely making a joke of poor Anna's anxiety.
”Oh Rex, I cannot bear it. You will make yourself very unhappy.” Here Anna burst into tears.
”Nannie, Nannie, what on earth is the matter with you?” said Rex, a little impatient at being kept in this way, hat on and whip in hand.
”She will not care for you one bit--I know she never will!” said the poor child in a sobbing whisper. She had lost all control of herself.
Rex reddened and hurried away from her out of the hall door, leaving her to the miserable consciousness of having made herself disagreeable in vain.
He did think of her words as he rode along; they had the unwelcomeness which all unfavorable fortune-telling has, even when laughed at; but he quickly explained them as springing from little Anna's tenderness, and began to be sorry that he was obliged to come away without soothing her. Every other feeling on the subject, however, was quickly merged in a resistant belief to the contrary of hers, accompanied with a new determination to prove that he was right. This sort of certainty had just enough kins.h.i.+p to doubt and uneasiness to hurry on a confession which an untouched security might have delayed.
Gwendolen was already mounted and riding up and down the avenue when Rex appeared at the gate. She had provided herself against disappointment in case he did not appear in time by having the groom ready behind her, for she would not have waited beyond a reasonable time. But now the groom was dismissed, and the two rode away in delightful freedom. Gwendolen was in her highest spirits, and Rex thought that she had never looked so lovely before; her figure, her long white throat, and the curves of her cheek and chin were always set off to perfection by the compact simplicity of her riding dress. He could not conceive a more perfect girl; and to a youthful lover like Rex it seems that the fundamental ident.i.ty of the good, the true and the beautiful, is already extant and manifest in the object of his love. Most observers would have held it more than equally accountable that a girl should have like impressions about Rex, for in his handsome face there was nothing corresponding to the undefinable stinging quality--as it were a trace of demon ancestry--which made some beholders hesitate in their admiration of Gwendolen.
It was an exquisite January morning in which there was no threat of rain, but a gray sky making the calmest background for the charms of a mild winter scene--the gra.s.sy borders of the lanes, the hedgerows sprinkled with red berries and haunted with low twitterings, the purple bareness of the elms, the rich brown of the furrows. The horses' hoofs made a musical chime, accompanying their young voices. She was laughing at his equipment, for he was the reverse of a dandy, and he was enjoying her laughter; the freshness of the morning mingled with the freshness of their youth; and every sound that came from their clear throats, every glance they gave each other, was the bubbling outflow from a spring of joy. It was all morning to them, within and without.
And thinking of them in these moments one is tempted to that futile sort of wis.h.i.+ng--if only things could have been a little otherwise then, so as to have been greatly otherwise after--if only these two beautiful young creatures could have pledged themselves to each other then and there, and never through life have swerved from that pledge!
For some of the goodness which Rex believed in was there. Goodness is a large, often a prospective word; like harvest, which at one stage when we talk of it lies all underground, with an indeterminate future; is the germ prospering in the darkness? at another, it has put forth delicate green blades, and by-and-by the trembling blossoms are ready to be dashed off by an hour of rough wind or rain. Each stage has its peculiar blight, and may have the healthy life choked out of it by a particular action of the foul land which rears or neighbors it, or by damage brought from foulness afar.
”Anna had got it into her head that you would want to ride after the hounds this morning,” said Rex, whose secret a.s.sociations with Anna's words made this speech seem quite perilously near the most momentous of subjects.
”Did she?” said Gwendolen, laughingly. ”What a little clairvoyant she is!”
”Shall you?” said Rex, who had not believed in her intending to do it if the elders objected, but confided in her having good reasons.
”I don't know. I can't tell what I shall do till I get there.
Clairvoyants are often wrong: they foresee what is likely. I am not fond of what is likely: it is always dull. I do what is unlikely.”
”Ah, there you tell me a secret. When once I knew what people in general would be likely to do, I should know you would do the opposite.
So you would have come round to a likelihood of your own sort. I shall be able to calculate on you. You couldn't surprise me.”
”Yes, I could. I should turn round and do what was likely for people in general,” said Gwendolen, with a musical laugh.
”You see you can't escape some sort of likelihood. And contradictoriness makes the strongest likelihood of all. You must give up a plan.”