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<h2> CHAPTER LX </h2>
<h3> ANNIE LUCKIER THAN JOHN </h3>
<p>Some people may look down upon us for our slavish ways (as they may choose
to call them), but in our part of the country, we do love to mention
title, and to roll it on our tongues, with a conscience and a comfort.
Even if a man knows not, through fault of education, who the Duke of this
is, or the Earl of that, it will never do for him to say so, lest the room
look down on him. Therefore he must nod his head, and say, 'Ah, to be
sure! I know him as well as ever I know my own good woman's brother. He
married Lord Flipflap's second daughter, and a precious life she led him.'
Whereupon the room looks up at him. But I, being quite unable to carry all
this in my head, as I ought, was speedily put down by people of a noble
tendency, apt at Lords, and pat with Dukes, and knowing more about the
King than His Majesty would have requested. Therefore, I fell back in
thought, not daring in words to do so, upon the titles of our horses. And
all these horses deserved their names, not having merely inherited, but by
their own doing earned them. Smiler, for instance, had been so called, not
so much from a habit of smiling, as from his general geniality, white
nose, and white ankle. This worthy horse was now in years, but hale and
gay as ever; and when you let him out of the stable, he could neigh and
whinny, and make men and horses know it. On the other hand, Kickums was a
horse of morose and surly order; harbouring up revenge, and leading a
rider to false confidence. Very smoothly he would go, and as gentle as a
turtle-dove; until his rider fully believed that a pack-thread was enough
for him, and a pat of approval upon his neck the aim and crown of his
worthy life. Then suddenly up went his hind feet to heaven, and the rider
for the most part flew over his nose; whereupon good Kickums would take
advantage of his favourable position to come and bite a piece out of his
back. Now in my present state of mind, being understood of nobody, having
none to bear me company, neither wishing to have any, an indefinite kind
of attraction drew me into Kickum's society. A bond of mutual sympathy was
soon established between us; I would ride no other horse, neither Kickums
be ridden by any other man. And this good horse became as jealous about me
as a dog might be; and would lash out, or run teeth foremost, at any one
who came near him when I was on his back.</p>
<p>This season, the reaping of the corn, which had been but a year ago so
pleasant and so lightsome, was become a heavy labour, and a thing for
grumbling rather than for gladness. However, for the sake of all, it must
be attended to, and with as fair a show of spirit and alacrity as might
be. For otherwise the rest would drag, and drop their hands and idle,
being quicker to take infection of dullness than of diligence. And the
harvest was a heavy one, even heavier than the year before, although of
poorer quality. Therefore was I forced to work as hard as any horse could
during all the daylight hours, and defer till night the brooding upon my
misfortune. But the darkness always found me stiff with work, and weary,
and less able to think than to dream, may be, of Lorna. And now the house
was so dull and lonesome, wanting Annie's pretty presence, and the light
of Lorna's eyes, that a man had no temptation after supper-time even to
sit and smoke a pipe.</p>
<p>For Lizzie, though so learned, and pleasant when it suited her, never had
taken very kindly to my love for Lorna, and being of a proud and slightly
upstart nature, could not bear to be eclipsed in bearing, looks, and
breeding, and even in clothes, by the stranger. For one thing I will say
of the Doones, that whether by purchase or plunder, they had always
dressed my darling well, with her own sweet taste to help them. And though
Lizzie's natural hate of the maid (as a Doone and burdened with father's
death) should have been changed to remorse when she learned of Lorna's
real parentage, it was only altered to sullenness, and discontent with
herself, for frequent rudeness to an innocent person, and one of such high
descent. Moreover, the child had imbibed strange ideas as to our
aristocracy, partly perhaps from her own way of thinking, and partly from
reading of history. For while, from one point of view she looked up at
them very demurely, as commissioned by God for the country's good; from
another sight she disliked them, as ready to sacrifice their best and
follow their worst members.</p>
<p>Yet why should this wench dare to judge upon a matter so far beyond her,
and form opinions which she knew better than declare before mother? But
with me she had no such scruple, for I had no authority over her; and my
intellect she looked down upon, because I praised her own so. Thus she
made herself very unpleasant to me; by little jags and jerks of sneering,
sped as though unwittingly; which I (who now considered myself allied to
the aristocracy, and perhaps took airs on that account) had not wit enough
to parry, yet had wound enough to feel.</p>
<p>Now any one who does not know exactly how mothers feel and think, would
have expected my mother (than whom could be no better one) to pet me, and
make much of me, under my sad trouble; to hang with anxiety on my looks,
and shed her tears with mine (if any), and season every dish of meat put
by for her John's return. And if the whole truth must be told, I did
expect that sort of thing, and thought what a plague it would be to me;
yet not getting it, was vexed, as if by some new injury. For mother was a
special creature (as I suppose we all are), being the warmest of the warm,
when fired at the proper corner; and yet, if taken at the wrong point, you
would say she was incombustible.</p>
<p>Hence it came to pass that I had no one even to speak to, about Lorna and
my grievances; for Captain Stickles was now gone southward; and John Fry,
of course, was too low for it, although a married man, and well under his
wife's management. But finding myself unable at last to bear this any
longer, upon the first day when all the wheat was cut, and the stooks set
up in every field, yet none quite fit for carrying, I saddled good Kickums
at five in the morning, and without a word to mother (for a little anxiety
might do her good) off I set for Molland parish, to have the counsel and
the comfort of my darling Annie.</p>
<p>The horse took me over the ground so fast (there being few better to go
when he liked), that by nine o'clock Annie was in my arms, and blushing to
the colour of Winnie's cheeks, with sudden delight and young happiness.</p>
<p>'You precious little soul!' I cried: 'how does Tom behave to you?'</p>
<p>'Hush!' said Annie: 'how dare you ask? He is the kindest, and the best,
and the noblest of all men, John; not even setting yourself aside. Now
look not jealous, John: so it is. We all have special gifts, you know. You
are as good as you can be, John; but my husband's special gift is nobility
of character.' Here she looked at me, as one who has discovered something
quite unknown.</p>
<p>'I am devilish glad to hear it,' said I, being touched at going down so:
'keep him to that mark, my dear; and cork the whisky bottle.'</p>
<p>'Yes, darling John,' she answered quickly, not desiring to open that
subject, and being too sweet to resent it: 'and how is lovely Lorna? What
an age it is since I have seen you! I suppose we must thank her for that.'</p>
<p>'You may thank her for seeing me now,' said I; 'or rather,'—seeing
how hurt she looked,—'you may thank my knowledge of your kindness,
and my desire to speak of her to a soft-hearted dear little soul like you.
I think all the women are gone mad. Even mother treats me shamefully. And
as for Lizzie—' Here I stopped, knowing no words strong enough,
without shocking Annie.</p>
<p>'Do you mean to say that Lorna is gone?' asked Annie, in great amazement;
yet leaping at the truth, as women do, with nothing at all to leap from.</p>
<p>'Gone. And I never shall see her again. It serves me right for aspiring
so.'</p>
<p>Being grieved at my manner, she led me in where none could interrupt us;
and in spite of all my dejection, I could not help noticing how very
pretty and even elegant all things were around. For we upon Exmoor have
little taste; all we care for is warm comfort, and plenty to eat and to
give away, and a hearty smack in everything. But Squire Faggus had seen
the world, and kept company with great people; and the taste he had first
displayed in the shoeing of farmers' horses (which led almost to his ruin,
by bringing him into jealousy, and flattery, and dashing ways) had now
been cultivated in London, and by moonlight, so that none could help
admiring it.</p>
<p>'Well!' I cried, for the moment dropping care and woe in astonishment: 'we
have nothing like this at Plover's Barrows; nor even Uncle Reuben. I do
hope it is honest, Annie?'</p>
<p>'Would I sit in a chair that was not my own?' asked Annie, turning
crimson, and dropping defiantly, and with a whisk of her dress which I
never had seen before, into the very grandest one: 'would I lie on a
couch, brother John, do you think, unless good money was paid for it?
Because other people are clever, John, you need not grudge them their
earnings.'</p>
<p>'A couch!' I replied: 'why what can you want with a couch in the day-time,
Annie? A couch is a small bed, set up in a room without space for a good
four-poster. What can you want with a couch downstairs? I never heard of
such nonsense. And you ought to be in the dairy.'</p>
<p>'I won't cry, brother John, I won't; because you want to make me cry'—and
all the time she was crying—'you always were so nasty, John,
sometimes. Ah, you have no nobility of character, like my husband. And I
have not seen you for two months, John; and now you come to scold me!'</p>
<p>'You little darling,' I said, for Annie's tears always conquered me; 'if
all the rest ill-use me, I will not quarrel with you, dear. You have
always been true to me; and I can forgive your vanity. Your things are
very pretty, dear; and you may couch ten times a day, without my
interference. No doubt your husband has paid for all this, with the ponies
he stole from Exmoor. Nobility of character is a thing beyond my
understanding; but when my sister loves a man, and he does well and
flourishes, who am I to find fault with him? Mother ought to see these
things: they would turn her head almost: look at the pimples on the
chairs!'</p>
<p>'They are nothing,' Annie answered, after kissing me for my kindness:
'they are only put in for the time indeed; and we are to have much better,
with gold all round the bindings, and double plush at the corners; so soon
as ever the King repays the debt he owes to my poor Tom.'</p>
<p>I thought to myself that our present King had been most unlucky in one
thing—debts all over the kingdom. Not a man who had struck a blow
for the King, or for his poor father, or even said a good word for him, in
the time of his adversity, but expected at least a baronetcy, and a grant
of estates to support it. Many have called King Charles ungrateful: and he
may have been so. But some indulgence is due to a man, with entries few on
the credit side, and a terrible column of debits.</p>
<p>'Have no fear for the chair,' I said, for it creaked under me very
fearfully, having legs not so large as my finger; 'if the chair breaks,
Annie, your fear should be, lest the tortoise-shell run into me. Why, it
is striped like a viper's loins! I saw some hundreds in London; and very
cheap they are. They are made to be sold to the country people, such as
you and me, dear; and carefully kept they will last for almost half a
year. Now will you come back from your furniture, and listen to my story?'</p>
<p>Annie was a hearty dear, and she knew that half my talk was joke, to make
light of my worrying. Therefore she took it in good part, as I well knew
that she would do; and she led me to a good honest chair; and she sat in
my lap and kissed me.</p>
<p>'All this is not like you, John. All this is not one bit like you: and
your cheeks are not as they ought to be. I shall have to come home again,
if the women worry my brother so. We always held together, John; and we
always will, you know.'</p>
<p>'You dear,' I cried, 'there is nobody who understands me as you do. Lorna
makes too much of me, and the rest they make too little.'</p>
<p>'Not mother; oh, not mother, John!'</p>
<p>'No, mother makes too much, no doubt; but wants it all for herself alone;
and reckons it as a part of her. She makes me more wroth than any one: as
if not only my life, but all my head and heart must seek from hers, and
have no other thought or care.'</p>
<p>Being sped of my grumbling thus, and eased into better temper, I told
Annie all the strange history about Lorna and her departure, and the small
chance that now remained to me of ever seeing my love again. To this Annie
would not hearken twice, but judging women by her faithful self, was quite
vexed with me for speaking so. And then, to my surprise and sorrow, she
would deliver no opinion as to what I ought to do until she had consulted
darling Tom.</p>
<p>Dear Tom knew much of the world, no doubt, especially the dark side of it.
But to me it scarcely seemed becoming that my course of action with regard
to the Lady Lorna Dugal should be referred to Tom Faggus, and depend upon
his decision. However, I would not grieve Annie again by making light of
her husband; and so when he came in to dinner, the matter was laid before
him.</p>
<p>Now this man never confessed himself surprised, under any circumstances;
his knowledge of life being so profound, and his charity universal. And in
the present case he vowed that he had suspected it all along, and could
have thrown light upon Lorna's history, if we had seen fit to apply to
him. Upon further inquiry I found that this light was a very dim one,
flowing only from the fact that he had stopped her mother's coach, at the
village of Bolham, on the Bampton Road, the day before I saw them. Finding
only women therein, and these in a sad condition, Tom with his usual
chivalry (as he had no scent of the necklace) allowed them to pass; with
nothing more than a pleasant exchange of courtesies, and a testimonial
forced upon him, in the shape of a bottle of Burgundy wine. This the poor
countess handed him; and he twisted the cork out with his teeth, and drank
her health with his hat off.</p>
<p>'A lady she was, and a true one; and I am a pretty good judge,' said Tom:
'ah, I do like a high lady!'</p>
<p>Our Annie looked rather queer at this, having no pretensions to be one:
but she conquered herself, and said, 'Yes, Tom; and many of them liked
you.'</p>
<p>With this, Tom went on the brag at once, being but a shallow fellow, and
not of settled principles, though steadier than he used to be; until I
felt myself almost bound to fetch him back a little; for of all things I
do hate brag the most, as any reader of this tale must by this time know.
Therefore I said to Squire Faggus, 'Come back from your highway days. You
have married the daughter of an honest man; and such talk is not fit for
her. If you were right in robbing people, I am right in robbing you. I
could bind you to your own mantelpiece, as you know thoroughly well, Tom;
and drive away with your own horses, and all your goods behind them, but
for the sense of honesty. And should I not do as fine a thing as any you
did on the highway? If everything is of public right, how does this chair
belong to you? Clever as you are, Tom Faggus, you are nothing but a fool
to mix your felony with your farmership. Drop the one, or drop the other;
you cannot maintain them both.'</p>
<p>As I finished very sternly a speech which had exhausted me more than ten
rounds of wrestling—but I was carried away by the truth, as
sometimes happens to all of us—Tom had not a word to say; albeit his
mind was so much more nimble and rapid than ever mine was. He leaned
against the mantelpiece (a newly-invented affair in his house) as if I had
corded him to it, even as I spoke of doing. And he laid one hand on his
breast in a way which made Annie creep softly to him, and look at me not
like a sister.</p>
<p>'You have done me good, John,' he said at last, and the hand he gave me
was trembling: 'there is no other man on God's earth would have dared to
speak to me as you have done. From no other would I have taken it.
Nevertheless every word is true; and I shall dwell on it when you are
gone. If you never did good in your life before, John, my brother, you
have done it now.'</p>
<p>He turned away, in bitter pain, that none might see his trouble; and
Annie, going along with him, looked as if I had killed our mother. For my
part, I was so upset, for fear of having gone too far, that without a word
to either of them, but a message on the title-page of King James his
Prayer-book, I saddled Kickums, and was off, and glad of the moorland air
again.</p>
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