The Bond of Black - Part 23
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Part 23

"But will you not reconsider?" I urged. "When you reflect that I love you, Muriel, better than all the world besides, that I will do all in my power to secure your happiness, that you shall be my sole thought night and day, will your heart not soften towards me? Will you never reflect that you treated me, your oldest friend, a little unfairly?"

"If in the future I reproach myself, I alone shall bear the p.r.i.c.ks of conscience," she answered, with surprising calmness.

"And this, then, is your decision?"

"Yes," she replied, in a blank, monotonous voice. "I am honoured by your offer, but am compelled to decline it."

Her words fell as a blow upon me. I had been confident, from the many little services she had rendered me, the interest she had taken in the arrangement of my bachelor's quarters, and her eagerness always to please me, that she loved me. Yet her sudden, inexplicable desire to end our friendship shattered all my hopes. She loved another. It was my own fault, I told myself. I had neglected her too long, and it was but what I might have expected.

In silence we walked on, emerging at length into the high road, and turning into that well-known hostelry the Greyhound, where we had tea in that great room so well patronised by excursionists on Sundays. We talked but little, both our hearts being too full for words. Our utterances were mere trivialities, spoken in order that those around us should not remark upon our silence. It was a dismal meal, and I was glad when we emerged again and entered the well-kept gardens of Hampton Court, bright with their beds of old-world flowers.

I was never tired of wandering through that historic, time-mellowed, old pile, where the sparrows twitter in the quiet court-yards, the peac.o.c.ks strut across the ancient gardens, and the crumbling sundials mark the time, as they have done daily through three centuries.

In my gloomy mood, however, I fear I answered her chatter abruptly in monosyllables. It struck me as strange that she could so quickly forget and become suddenly light-hearted. Indeed, it seemed as though she were glad that the ordeal she had feared had pa.s.sed, and was delighted with her freedom.

The bright air of the riverside was fresh and exhilarating, but the sun soon went down, and when it grew chill we took train back to Waterloo, and drove to Frascati's, where we dined.

"And is this actually to be our last dinner together?" I asked, as the soup was brought, for I recollected the many snug little meals we had eaten together in times gone by, and how she had enjoyed them as a change after the eternal joints of beef or mutton as supplied to the a.s.sistants at Madame Gabrielle's.

"It must be," she sighed.

"And you do not regret?"

Her lips quivered, and she glanced at me without replying.

"There is some mystery in all this, Muriel," I said, bending across to her earnestly. "Why do you refuse to explain to me?"

"Because I cannot. If I could, I would."

"Then if after to-night we are to part," I went on bitterly, "mine will be a dismal future."

"You have your own world," she said. "You will quickly forget me among your gay friends, as you have already forgotten me times without number."

I could not bear her reproaches; her words cut me to the quick.

"No. I have never forgotten you," I protested quickly. "I shall never forget."

"Did you not utter those same words to that woman who fascinated you a few months ago?" she suggested with a slight curl of the lip.

"If I did, it was because I was beneath the spell of her beauty--a beauty so mysterious as to be almost supernatural," I answered. "I love you nevertheless," I added in a low tone, so that none should overhear.

"I swear I do."

"It is useless," she exclaimed, with a frown of displeasure. "Further discussion of the subject will lead to no alteration of my decision.

You know me well enough to be aware that if I am determined no argument will turn me from my purpose."

"But my future depends upon you, Muriel," I cried in despair. "Through years--ever since the old days in Stamford--I have admired you, and as time has progressed, and you have become more beautiful and more refined, my admiration has developed into a true and honest love. Will you never believe me?"

"No," she answered. "I can never believe you. Besides, we could never be happy, for our paths in life will lie in very different directions."

"That's all foolish sentiment," I exclaimed. "I have to ask permission of no one as to whom I may marry. Why will you not reconsider this decision of yours? You know well--you must have seen long, long ago-- that I love you."

"I have already told you my intention," she responded with a frigidity of manner that again crushed all hope from my heart. "To-night must be our last night together. Afterwards we must remember one another only as acquaintances."

"No, no!" I protested. "Don't say that."

"It must be," she responded decisively. All argument appeared useless, so I remained silent.

It was nine o'clock before we left the restaurant, too early for her to return to Madame Gabrielle's, therefore at my invitation she accompanied me to my chambers, and sat with me in my sitting-room for a long time.

So long had we been platonic friends that I could not bring myself to believe that that was really her farewell visit. She sat in the same chair in which Aline had sat on the first night when she had so strangely come into my life, and now again she chatted on merrily, as in the old days, inquiring after mutual friends in Stamford, and what changes had been effected in sleepy, lethargic Duddington. I had told her all the latest gossip of the place, when suddenly I observed--

"Just now everybody in the village is taken up with the new curate."

"No curate gets on well for very long with old Layton," she remarked.

"Mr Farrar was a splendid preacher, and they said it was because the rector was jealous of his talents that he got rid of him."

"Yes, Farrar was a clever fellow, but Yelverton, the new man, is an awfully good chap. He was at college with me, and you may judge my astonishment when I met him, after years of separation, in my mother's drawing-room."

"What did you say his name was?" she inquired, with knit brows.

"Yelverton--Jack Yelverton," I answered.

"Yelverton!" She uttered the name in a strange voice, and seemed to shrink at its p.r.o.nouncement.

"Yes. He's a thoroughly good fellow. He was in London--believes in social reform among the poor, and all that sort of thing. Do you know him?"

"I--well, yes. If it is the same man, I've heard of him. He did a lot of good down in the East End somewhere," she answered evasively.

"I suppose all the girls will be running after him," I laughed. "It's really extraordinary what effect a clerical collar has upon some girls; and mothers, too, for the matter of that."

"They think the Church a respectable profession, perhaps," she said, joining in my laughter.

"Well, if you're a clergyman you are not compelled to swindle people; a proceeding which nowadays is the essence of good business," I said.

"The successful commercial man is the fellow who is able to screw the largest amount of profits out of his customers; the rich stockbroker is merely a lucky gambler; and the company promoter is but a liar whose ingenuity is such that by exaggeration he obtains money out of the public's pockets to float his bubble concerns. It is difficult indeed nowadays to find an honest man in trade, and the professions are not much better off. Medicine is but too often quackery; the law has long been synonymous with swindling; parliamentary Honours are too often the satisfying of unbounded egotism; and the profession of the Church is more often than not followed by men to whom a genteel profession is a necessity, whose capabilities are not sufficient to enable them to enter journalism or literature, and who profess in the pulpit what they don't practise in private life."

She laughed again.

"That's a sweeping condemnation," she declared. "But there's a great deal of truth in it. Trade is mostly dishonest, and the more clever the rogue the larger the fortune he ama.s.ses."

"Yes," I argued; "the man who has for years gained huge profits from the public--succeeded in hoodwinking them with some patent medicine, scented soap, or other commodity out of which he has made eighty per cent, profit--is put forward as the type of the successful business man.

There is really no morality in trade in these days."

"And this Mr Yelverton is actually curate of Duddington," she said pensively. "Strange that he should go and bury himself down there, isn't it?"

"He hasn't been well," I said. "Work in the slums has upset his health.

He's a good fellow. Not one of those who go in for the Church as an easy means of obtaining five or six hundred a year and a snug parsonage, but an earnest, devout man whose sole object is to do good among his fellow-creatures. Would that there were more of his sort about."

Thus we chatted on. It seemed as though she knew more of Yelverton than she would admit, and that she had learned with surprise of his whereabouts.