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Chapter 2

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lord rokesle sat down upon the long, high-backed bench, beside the fire, and facing lady allonby's arm-chair.

neither he nor lady allonby spoke for a while.

in a sombre way lord rokesle was a handsome man, and to-night, in brown and gold, very stately. his bearing savored faintly of the hidalgo; indeed, his mother was a foreign woman, cast ashore on usk, from a wrecked spanish vessel, and incontinently married by the despot of the island. for her, death had delayed his advent unmercifully; but her reason survived the marriage by two years only, and there were those familiar with the late lord rokesle's [footnote: born 1685, and accidentally killed by sir piers sabiston in 1738; an accurate account of this notorious duellist, profligate, charlatan, and playwright is given in ireson's letters.] peculiarities who considered that in this, at least, the crazed lady was fortunate. among these gossips it was also esteemed a matter deserving comment that in the shipwrecks not infrequent about usk the women sometimes survived, but the men never.

now lord rokesle regarded lady allonby, the while that she displayed conspicuous interest in the play of the flames. but by and by, "o vulgarity!" said lady allonby. "pray endeavor to look a little more cheerful. positively, you are glaring at me like one of those disagreeable beggars one so often sees staring at bakery windows."

he smiled. "do you remember what the frenchman wrote—et pain ne voyent qu'aux fenêtres? there is not an enormous difference between me and the tattered rascal of chepe, for we both stare longingly at what we most desire. and were i minded to hunt the simile to the foot of the letter, i would liken your coquetry to the intervening window-pane,—not easily broken through, but very, very transparent, anastasia."

"you are not overwhelmingly polite," she said, reflectively; "but, then, i suppose, living in the country is sure to damage a man's manners. still, my dear orson, you smack too much of the forest."

"anastasia," said lord rokesle, bending toward her, "will you always be thus cruel? do you not understand that in this world you are the only thing i care for? you think me a boor; perhaps i am,—and yet it rests with you, my lady, to make me what you will. for i love you, anastasia—"

"why, how delightful of you!" said she, languidly.

"it is not a matter for jesting. i tell you that i love you." my lord's color was rising.

but lady allonby yawned. "your honor's most devoted," she declared herself; "still, you need not boast of your affection as if falling in love with me were an uncommonly difficult achievement. that, too, is scarcely polite."

"for the tenth time i ask you will you marry me?" said lord rokesle.

"is't only the tenth time? dear me, it seems like the thousandth. of course, i couldn't think of it. heavens, my lord, how can you expect me to marry a man who glares at me like that? positively you look as ferocious as the blackamoor in the tragedy,—the fellow who smothered his wife because she misplaced a handkerchief, you remember."

lord rokesle had risen, and he paced the hall, as if fighting down resentment. "i am no othello," he said at last; "though, indeed, i think that the love i bear you is of a sort which rarely stirs our english blood. 'tis not for nothing i am half-spaniard, i warn you, anastasia, my love is a consuming blaze that will not pause for considerations of policy nor even of honor. and you madden me, anastasia! to-day you hear my protestations with sighs and glances and faint denials; to-morrow you have only taunts for me. sometimes, i think, 'tis hatred rather than love i bear you. sometimes—" he clutched at his breast with a wild gesture. "i burn!" he said. "woman, give me back a human heart in place of this flame you have kindled here, or i shall go mad! last night i dreamed of hell, and of souls toasted on burning forks and fed with sops of bale-fire,—and you were there, anastasia, where the flames leaped and curled like red-blazoned snakes about the poor damned. and i, too, was there. and through eternity i heard you cry to god in vain, o dear, wonderful, golden-haired woman! and we could see him, somehow,—see him, a great way off, with straight, white brows that frowned upon you pitilessly. and i was glad. for i knew then that i hated you. and even now, when i think i must go mad for love of you, i yet hate you with a fervor that shakes and thrills in every fibre of me. oh, i burn, i burn!" he cried, with the same frantic clutching at his breast.

lady allonby had risen.

"positively, i must ask you to open a window if you intend to continue in this strain. d'ye mean to suffocate me, my lord, with your flames and your blazes and your brimstone and so on? you breathe conflagrations, like a devil in a pantomime. i had as soon converse with a piece of fireworks. so, if you'll pardon me, i will go to my brother."

at the sound of her high, crisp speech his frenzy fell from him like a mantle. "and you let me kiss you yesterday! oh, i know you struggled, but you did not struggle very hard, did you, anastasia?"

"why, what a notion!" cried lady allonby; "as if a person should bother seriously one way or the other about the antics of an amorous clodhopper! meanwhile, i repeat, my lord, i wish to go to my brother."

"egad!" lord rokesle retorted, "that reminds me i have been notably remiss. i bear you a message from harry. he had to-night a letter from job nangle, who, it seems, has a purchaser for trevor's folly at last. the fellow is with our excellent nangle at peniston friars, and offers liberal terms if the sale be instant. the chance was too promising to let slip, so harry left the island an hour ago. it happened by a rare chance that some of my fellows were on the point of setting out for the mainland,—and he knew that he could safely entrust you to mrs. morfit's duennaship, he said."

"he should not have done so," lady allonby observed, as if in a contention of mind. "he—i will go to mrs. morfit, then, to confess to her in frankness that, after all these rockets and bonfires—"

"why, that's the unfortunate part of the whole affair," said lord rokesle. "the same boat brought sabina a letter which summoned her to the bedside of her husband, [footnote: archibald morfit, m.p. for salop, and in 1753 elected speaker, which office he declined on account of ill-health. he was created a baronet in 1758 through the duke of ormskirk's influence.] who, it appears, lies desperately ill at kuyper manor. it happened by a rare chance that some of my fellows were on the point of setting out for the mainland—from heriz pier yonder, not from the end of the island whence harry sailed,—so she and her maid embarked instanter. of course, there was your brother here to play propriety, she said. and by the oddest misfortune in the world," lord rokesle sighed, "i forgot to tell her that harry heleigh had left usk a half-hour earlier. my memory is lamentably treacherous."

but lady allonby had dropped all affectation. "you coward! you planned this!"

"candidly, yes. nangle is my agent as well as harry's, you may remember. i have any quantity of his letters, and of course an equal number of archibald's. so i spent the morning in my own apartments, anastasia,—tracing letters against the window-pane, which was, i suppose, a childish recreation, but then what would you have? as you very justly observe, country life invariably coarsens a man's tastes; and accordingly, as you may now recall, i actually declined a game of écarté with you in order to indulge in these little forgeries. decidedly, my dear, you must train your husband's imagination for superior flights—when you are lady rokesle."

she was staring at him as though he had been a portent. "i am alone," she said. "alone—in this place—with you! alone! you devil!"

"your epithets increase in vigor. just now i was only a clodhopper. well, i can but repeat that it rests with you to make me what you will. though, indeed, you are to all intent alone upon usk, and upon usk there are many devils. there are ten of them on guard yonder, by the way, in case your brother should return inopportunely, though that's scarcely probable. obedient devils, you observe, anastasia,—devils who exert and check their deviltry as i bid 'em, for they esteem me lucifer's lieutenant. and i grant the present situation is an outrage to propriety, yet the evil is not incurable. lady allonby may not, if she value her reputation, pass to-night at stornoway; but here am i, all willingness, and upstairs is the parson. believe me, anastasia, the most vinegarish prude could never object to lady rokesle's spending to-night at stornoway."

"let me think, let me think!" lady allonby said, and her hands plucked now at her hair, now at her dress. she appeared dazed. "i can't think!" she wailed on a sudden. "i am afraid. i—o vincent, vincent, you cannot do this thing! i trusted you, vincent. i know i let you make love to me, and i relished having you make love to me. women are like that. but i cannot marry you, vincent. there is a man, yonder in england, whom i love. he does not care for me any more,—he is in love with my step-daughter. that is very amusing, is it not, vincent? some day i may be his mother-in-law. why don't you laugh, vincent? come, let us both laugh—first at this and then at the jest you have just played on me. do you know, for an instant, i believed you were in earnest? but harry went to sleep over the cards, didn't he? and mrs. morfit has gone to bed with one of her usual headaches? of course; and you thought you would retaliate upon me for teasing you. you were quite right, 'twas an excellent jest. now let us laugh at it. laugh, vincent! oh!" she said now, more shrilly, "for the love of god, laugh, laugh!—or i shall go mad!"

but lord rokesle was a man of ice, "matrimony is a serious matter, anastasia; 'tis not becoming in those who are about to enter it to exhibit undue levity. i wonder what's keeping simon?"

"simon orts!" she said, in a half-whisper. then she came toward lord rokesle, smiling. "why, of course, i teased you, vincent, but there was never any hard feeling, was there? and you really wish me to marry you? well, we must see, vincent. but, as you say, matrimony is a serious matter. d'ye know you say very sensible things, vincent?—not at all like those silly fops yonder in london. i dare say you and i would be very happy together. but you wouldn't have any respect for me if i married you on a sudden like this, would you? of course not. so you will let me consider it. come to me a month from now, say,—is that too long to wait? well, i think 'tis too long myself. say a week, then. i must have my wedding-finery, you comprehend. we women are such vain creatures—not big and brave and sensible like you men. see, for example, how much bigger your hand is than mine—mine's quite lost in it, isn't it? so—since i am only a vain, chattering, helpless female thing,—you are going to indulge me and let me go up to london for some new clothes, aren't you, vincent? of course you will; and we will be married in a week. but you will let me go to london first, won't you?—away from this dreadful place, away—i didn't mean that. i suppose it is a very agreeable place when you get accustomed to it. and 'tis only for clothes—oh, i swear it is only for clothes, vincent! and you said you would—yes, only a moment ago you distinctly said you would let me go. 'tis not as if i were not coming back—who said i would not come back? of course i will. but you must give me time, vincent dear,—you must, you must, i tell you! o god!" she sobbed, and flung from her the loathed hand she was fondling, "it's no use!"

"no," said lord rokesle, rather sadly. "i am not samson, nor are you delilah to cajole me. it's of no use, anastasia. i would have preferred that you came to me voluntarily, but since you cannot, i mean to take you unwilling. simon," he called, loudly, "does that rascal intend to spin out his dying interminably? charon's waiting, man."

from above, "coming, my lord," said simon orts.

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