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He wanted to send a frantic telegram; but he did nothing of the kind. He wrote instead.
"I have been away. Only a few minutes ago did your letter reach me. I am at your service in all things. Heaven knows I bitterly regret the annoyance that you have been caused through me. You ask me to meet you in London. Do you not know that I will come most willingly, eagerly. I am writing this on the evening of Tuesday.
You should receive my letter on Wednesday, probably in the evening; but in case it may be delayed, I suggest that you meet me in London on Thursday afternoon"--he paused, racking his brain for some suitable meeting place--"at four o'clock, in the Winter Garden of the Empire Hotel. Do not trouble to reply. I shall be there without fail, and shall then be, as I am now, and will ever be,
"Yours to command, "HUGH ALSTON."
This letter he wrote hurriedly, and raced off with it to catch the post.
Seven, eight, ten days ago since Joan had written that letter, and there had come no reply. The man had ignored her, had treated her with silent contempt. The thought made her face burn, brought a sense of miserable self-abas.e.m.e.nt to her. She had pleaded to him for help, and he had treated her with silence and contempt.
Well, what did it matter? She hated him. She had always hated him. She laughed aloud and bitterly at her own thoughts. "Yes," she repeated to herself, "I hate him. I feel nothing but scorn and contempt for him. I am glad he did not answer my letter. I hope that I shall never see him again. If we do meet, by some mischance, then I shall pa.s.s him by."
Several times this morning Helen had looked curiously at Joan. For Helen was in a secret that as yet Joan did not share. It was a little conspiracy, with Helen as the prime mover in it.
"I am sure that there never was anything between Joan and that Hugh Alston. It was some foolish t.i.ttle-tattle, some nonsense, probably hatched by that stupid old talkative Lady Linden."
Two days ago had come a letter for Helen Everard, with an Australian stamp on it. It was from Jessie, her only sister, urging her to come out to her there, reminding her of an old promise to make a home in that distant land with her and her children. And Helen knew she must go. She wanted to go, had always meant to go, for Jessie's boys were very dear to her. Yet to leave Joan alone in this great house, so utterly alone!
Last night Helen had driven over quietly to Buddesby, and she and Constance had had a long talk.
"I can't leave Joan alone. I have written to Jessie, telling her that I shall start in three months. I have said nothing to Joan yet; but, Connie, I can't leave her alone!"
"Helen, do you think she could care for Johnny enough to become his wife?"
"I believe she is fond of him. I will not say that I think she is desperately in love, but she likes him and trusts him, as she must; and so, Connie, I hope it may come about. Joan will make an ideal wife. He is all a woman could wish and hope for, the truest, dearest, straightest man living, and so--Connie--I hope--"
"I will talk to him to-night, and I will suggest that he comes over to-morrow and puts his fate to the test. I know he loves her."
And to-day Johnny Everard should be here, if he had listened to his sister's advice, and that was a thing that Johnny ever did, save in the matter of hops.
There was a look of subdued eagerness, of visible nervousness and uncertainty, about Mr. John Everard that day. And Helen saw it.
"Joan's in the garden, John," she said.
"Yes, I--" He fumbled nervously with his hands.
"Helen, I have been talking to Con, at least Con's been talking to me!"
"Yes, dear?"
"And she--she says--Con tells me that there is a chance for me--just a chance, Helen. And, Helen, I don't want to spoil my chance, if I have one, by rus.h.i.+ng in. You understand?"
"I think," Helen said, "that Joan would like you the better and admire you the more for being brave enough to speak out."
"That's it! I've got to speak out. You know I love her!"
"I do, dear."
"But she doesn't love me. It is not likely; how could she? Look at me, a great ugly chap--how could such a girl care for me?"
"I think any girl might very easily care for you, Johnny!"
"An ugly brute like me? A farmer. I am nothing more, Helen, and--and--"
"Johnny, she is in the garden. Go to her; take your courage in both your hands. Remember--
'He either fears his fate too much.
Or his deserts are small, That dares not put it to the touch, To gain or lose it all.'"
"I'll go!" Johnny Everard said. "I can but lose, eh? That's the worst that can happen to me--lose. But, by Heaven! if I do lose, it is going to--to hurt, and hurt badly. Helen dear, wish me luck!"
She put both her hands on his broad shoulders and kissed him on the forehead. She felt to him as a mother might.
"From my heart, Johnny, I wish you luck and fortune and happiness," she said.
Joan was at the far end of the wide, far-spreading garden. She was seated on a bench beside a pool where grew water-lilies, and where in the summer suns.h.i.+ne the dragon-flies skimmed on the placid surface of the green water--water that now and again was broken into a ripple by the quick twist of the tail of one of the fat old carp that lived their humdrum, adventureless years in the quiet depths.
She sat here, chin in hand, grey eyes watching the pool, yet seeing nothing of its beauties, and her thoughts away, away with a man who had insulted her, had brought trouble and shame and anger to her--a man to whom she had appealed, and had appealed in vain; a man dead to all manhood, a man she hated--yes, hated--for often she told herself so, and it must be true.
And then suddenly she heard the fall of a footstep on the soft turf behind her, and, turning, looked into the face of a man whose eyes were filled with love for her.
So for one long moment they looked at one another, and the colour rose in the girl's cheeks, and into her eyes there came a wistful regret. For she knew why this man was here. She knew what he had to say to her, to ask of her, here by the green pool.
CHAPTER XXIV
"--TO GAIN, OR LOSE IT ALL"
"Take your courage in both hands" Helen had said to him, and he was doing so; but Johnny Everard knew himself for a coward at this moment.
He felt tongue-tied, more than usually awkward, terribly and shamefully nervous. Yet the grey eyes were on his face, and he knew that he must speak, must put all to the hazard. And he knew also that if to-day he lost her, it would be the biggest and the blackest sorrow of his life, something that he would never live down, never forget.
Oh, it was worth fighting for, worth taking his courage in both hands for, this girl with the sweet, serious face and the tender mouth, the great, enquiring, yet trusting grey eyes. He had seen her cold, stately, a little unapproachable, but he had never seen scorn in those eyes. He had never seen the red lips curled with contempt. He knew nothing of her in this guise, as another man did.
And now the girl seemed to be all woman, tender, sympathetic, and the courage came to him; he sate himself beside her and took her hand in his, and it gave him hope that she did not draw it away.
What he said, how he said it, how he stumbled over his story of love and devotion he never knew. But it was an honest story, a story that did him honour, and did honour too to the woman he told it to.
"I love you, dear. I have loved you from the moment I first saw you. I know you are high above me. I know what I am, an unlovely sort of fellow, rough and--and not fit to touch your hand--" for, being deeply in love, his opinion of himself had naturally sunk to zero. The perfection of the beloved object always makes an honest man painfully conscious of his own inferiority and unworthiness. And so it was with Johnny Everard, this day beside the green pool. And the slim, cool hand was not withdrawn.
"Johnny, what are you asking me? Why have you come here to me? What do you want--of me?" she asked, yet did not look him in the face, but sat with eyes resting on the placid water.
"Just to tell you that--to tell you how I love you, Joan."
Another man had told her that; the echo of his words came back to her from the past. How often those words of his had come back; she could never forget them. Yet she told herself that she hated him who had uttered them, hated him, for was he not a proved craven?