Part 6 (2/2)

Vera looked at him in astonishment. How did he know her name; who was he?

He was looking at her with such a penitent and distressed expression, that for the first time she noticed what a kind face it was. Then, before she could answer him, she saw her brother-in-law over the paling of the vicarage garden, coming towards them.

The stranger saw him, too, and lifted his hat to her.

”Good-bye,” he said, rather hastily; ”I did not mean to offend you; don't be angry about it;” and, before she could say a word, he turned quickly down the churchyard through the lych-gate into the road, and was gone.

”Vera,” said Eustace Daintree, coming leisurely up to her through the garden gate, ”how on earth do you come to be talking to Sir John; has he been saying anything to you about the chancel?”

”_Who_ was it? _who_ did you say?” cried Vera, aghast.

”Why, Sir John Kynaston, to be sure. Did you not know it was he?”

She was thunderstruck. ”Are you quite sure?” she faltered.

”Why, of course! I saw him only last night, you know. I wonder why he went off in such a hurry when he saw me?”

Vera was walking silently down the garden towards the house by his side.

The thought in her mind was, ”If that was Sir John Kynaston, who then is the photograph I found in the writing-table drawer?”

”What did he say to you, Vera? How came you to be talking to him?”

pursued her brother-in-law.

”I only let him into the church. I did not know who he was. I told him the chancel ought to be restored--by himself.”

Eustace Daintree looked dismayed.

”How very unfortunate. It will, perhaps, make him still more decided to do nothing.”

Vera smiled a little to herself. ”I hope not, Eustace,” was all she said.

But although she said no word of it to him, she knew at her heart that his chancel would be restored for him.

Late that night Vera sat alone by her fireside, and thought over her morning's adventure; and once again she said to herself, with a little regretful sigh, ”Whose, then, was the photograph?” But she put the thought away from her.

After all, she said to herself, it made no difference. He was still Sir John Kynaston of Kynaston Hall, and just as well worth a woman's while to marry. She had made some mistake, that was all; and the real Sir John was not the least romantic or interesting to look at, but Kynaston Hall belonged to him all the same.

They were not very exalted or very much to be admired, these dreams of Vera's girlhood. But neither were they quite so coa.r.s.e and unlovely as would have been those of a purely mercenary woman. She was free from the vulgarity of desiring the man's money and his name from any desire to raise herself above her relations, or to feed her own vanity and ambition at their expense. It was only that, marriage being a necessity for her, to marry anything but a rich man would have been, with her tastes and the habits to which she had been brought up, the sheerest and rankest folly.

She thought she could make a good wife to any man whose life she would like to share--that is to say, a life of ease and affluence. She knew she would make a very bad wife to a poor man. Therefore she determined upon so carving out her own fortunes that she should not make a failure of herself. It was worldly wisdom of the purest and simplest character.

She was as much determined as ever upon winning Kynaston's owner if he was to be won. Only she wished, with a little sigh, that he had happened to be the man in the photograph. She hardly knew why she wished it--but the wish was there.

She sat bending over her fire, with all her soft, dark hair loose about her face and flowing down her back, and her eyes fixed dreamily upon the flames. Her past life came back to her, her old life in the whirl and turmoil of pleasure which had suited her so well. She compared it, a little drearily, with the present; with the humdrum routine of the vicarage; with the parish talk about the old women and the schools; and the small t.i.ttle-tattle about the schoolmaster and the choir, going on around her all day; with old Mrs. Daintree's sharp tongue and her sister's meek rejoinders. She was very tired of it. It did not amuse her.

She was not exactly discontented with her lot. Eustace and her sister were very kind to her, and she loved them dearly; but she did not live their life--she was with them, but not of them. As for herself, for her interests and her delights, they stagnated amongst them all. How long was it to last?

And Kynaston, by contrast, appeared very fair, with its smooth lawns and its terrace walks, and its great desolate rooms, that she would so well understand how to fill with life and brightness; but Kynaston's master counted for very little to her. She knew the power of her own beauty so well. Experience had taught her that Vera Nevill had but to smile and to win; it had been so easy to her to be loved and wooed.

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