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<h4>CHAPTER XX.</h4>
<h3>THERE ARE CONVENANCES.<br/> </h3>
<p>Before the Monday came the party to Rufford Hall had become quite a
settled thing and had been very much discussed. On the Saturday the
Senator had been driven to the meet, a distance of about ten miles,
on purpose that he might see Lord Rufford and explain his views about
Goarly. Lord Rufford had bowed and stared, and laughed, and had then
told the Senator that he thought he would "find himself in the wrong
box." "That's quite possible, my Lord. I guess, it won't be the first
time I've been in the wrong box, my Lord. Sometimes I do get right.
But I thought I would not enter your lordship's house as a guest
without telling you what I was doing." Then Lord Rufford assured him
that this little affair about Goarly would make no difference in that
respect. Mr. Gotobed again scrutinised the hounds and Tony Tuppett,
laughed in his sleeve because a fox wasn't found in the first quarter
of an hour, and after that was driven back to Bragton.</p>
<p>The Sunday was a day of preparation for the Trefoils. Of course they
didn't go to church. Arabella indeed was never up in time for church
and Lady Augustus only went when her going would be duly registered
among fashionable people. Mr. Gotobed laughed when he was invited and
asked whether anybody was ever known to go to church two Sundays
running at Bragton. "People have been known to refuse with less
acrimony," said Morton. "I always speak my mind, sir," replied the
Senator. Poor John Morton, therefore, went to his parish church
alone.</p>
<p>There were many things to be considered by the Trefoils. There was
the question of dress. If any good was to be done by Arabella at
Rufford it must be done with great despatch. There would be the
dinner on Monday, the hunting on Tuesday, the ball, and then the
interesting moment of departure. No girl could make better use of her
time; but then, think of her difficulties! All that she did would
have to be done under the very eyes of the man to whom she was
engaged, and to whom she wished to remain engaged,—unless, as she
said to herself, she could "pull off the other event." A great deal
must depend on appearance. As she and her mother were out on a
lengthened cruise among long-suffering acquaintances, going to the De
Brownes after the Gores, and the Smijthes after the De Brownes, with
as many holes to run to afterwards as a four-year-old fox,—though
with the same probability of finding them stopped,—of course she had
her wardrobe with her. To see her night after night one would think
that it was supplied with all that wealth would give. But there were
deficiencies and there were make-shifts, very well known to herself
and well understood by her maid. She could generally supply herself
with gloves by bets, as to which she had never any scruple in taking
either what she did win or did not, and in dunning any who might
chance to be defaulters. On occasions too, when not afraid of the
bystanders, she would venture on a hat, and though there was
difficulty as to the payment, not being able to give her number as
she did with gloves, so that the tradesmen could send the article,
still she would manage to get the hat,—and the trimmings. It was
said of her that she once offered to lay an Ulster to a sealskin
jacket, but that the young man had coolly said that a sealskin jacket
was beyond a joke and had asked her whether she was ready to "put
down" her Ulster. These were little difficulties from which she
usually knew how to extricate herself without embarrassment; but she
had not expected to have to marshal her forces against such an enemy
as Lord Rufford, or to sit down for the besieging of such a city this
campaign. There were little things which required to be done, and the
lady's-maid certainly had not time to go to church on Sunday.</p>
<p>But there were other things which troubled her even more than her
clothes. She did not much like Bragton, and at Bragton, in his own
house, she did not very much like her proposed husband. At Washington
he had been somebody. She had met him everywhere then, and had heard
him much talked about. At Washington he had been a popular man and
had had the reputation of being a rich man also;—but here, at home,
in the country he seemed to her to fall off in importance, and he
certainly had not made himself pleasant. Whether any man could be
pleasant to her in the retirement of a country house,—any man whom
she would have no interest in running down,—she did not ask herself.
An engagement to her must under any circumstances be a humdrum
thing,—to be brightened only by wealth. But here she saw no signs of
wealth. Nevertheless she was not prepared to shove away the plank
from below her feet, till she was sure that she had a more
substantial board on which to step. Her mother, who perhaps did not
see in the character of Morton all the charms which she would wish to
find in a son-in-law, was anxious to shake off the Bragton alliance;
but Arabella, as she said so often both to herself and to her mother,
was sick of the dust of the battle and conscious of fading strength.
She would make this one more attempt, but must make it with great
care. When last in town this young lord had whispered a word or two
to her, which then had set her hoping for a couple of days; and now,
when chance had brought her into his neighbourhood, he had gone out
of his way,—very much out of his way,—to renew his acquaintance
with her. She would be mad not to give herself the chance;—but yet
she could not afford to let the plank go from under her feet.</p>
<p>But the part she had to play was one which even she felt to be almost
beyond her powers. She could perceive that Morton was beginning to be
jealous,—and that his jealousy was not of that nature which
strengthens a tie but which is apt to break it altogether. His
jealousy, if fairly aroused, would not be appeased by a final return
to himself. She had already given him occasion to declare himself
off, and if thoroughly angered he would no doubt use it. Day by day,
and almost hour by hour, he was becoming more sombre and hard, and
she was well aware that there was reason for it. It did not suit her
to walk about alone with him through the shrubberies. It did not suit
her to be seen with his arm round her waist. Of course the people of
Bragton would talk of the engagement, but she would prefer that they
should talk of it with doubt. Even her own maid had declared to Mrs.
Hopkins that she did not know whether there was or was not an
engagement,—her own maid being at the time almost in her confidence.
Very few of the comforts of a lover had been vouchsafed to John
Morton during this sojourn at Bragton and very little had been done
in accordance with his wishes. Even this visit to Rufford, as she
well knew, was being made in opposition to him. She hoped that her
lover would not attempt to ride to hounds on the Tuesday, so that she
might be near the lord unseen by him,—and that he would leave
Rufford on the Wednesday before herself and her mother. At the ball
of course she could dance with Lord Rufford, and could keep her eye
on her lover at the same time.</p>
<p>She hardly saw Morton on the Sunday afternoon, and she was again
closeted on the Monday till lunch. They were to start at four and
there would not be much more than time after lunch for her to put on
her travelling gear. Then, as they all felt, there was a difficulty
about the carriages. Who was to go with whom? Arabella, after lunch,
took the bull by the horns. "I suppose," she said as Morton followed
her out into the hall, "mamma and I had better go in the phaeton."</p>
<p>"I was thinking that Lady Augustus might consent to travel with Mr.
Gotobed and that you and I might have the phaeton."</p>
<p>"Of course it would be very pleasant," she answered smiling.</p>
<p>"Then why not let it be so?"</p>
<p>"There are convenances."</p>
<p>"How would it be if you and I were going without anybody else? Do you
mean to say that in that case we might not sit in the same carriage?"</p>
<p>"I mean to say that in that case I should not go at all. It isn't
done in England. You have been in the States so long that you forget
all our old-fashioned ways."</p>
<p>"I do think that is nonsense." She only smiled and shook her head.
"Then the Senator shall go in the phaeton, and I will go with you and
your mother."</p>
<p>"Yes,—and quarrel with mamma all the time as you always do. Let me
have it my own way this time."</p>
<p>"Upon my word I believe you are ashamed of me," he said leaning back
upon the hall table. He had shut the dining-room door and she was
standing close to him.</p>
<p>"What nonsense!"</p>
<p>"You have only got to say so, Arabella, and let there be an end of it
all."</p>
<p>"If you wish it, Mr. Morton."</p>
<p>"You know I don't wish it. You know I am ready to marry you
to-morrow."</p>
<p>"You have made ever so many difficulties as far as I can understand."</p>
<p>"You have unreasonable people acting for you, Arabella, and of course
I don't mean to give way to them."</p>
<p>"Pray don't talk to me about money. I know nothing about it and have
taken no part in the matter. I suppose there must be settlements?"</p>
<p>"Of course there must."</p>
<p>"And I can only do what other people tell me. You at any rate have
something to do with it all, and I have absolutely nothing."</p>
<p>"That is no reason you shouldn't go in the same carriage with me to
Rufford."</p>
<p>"Are you coming back to that,—just like a big child? Do let us
consider that as settled. I'm sure you'll let mamma and me have the
use of the phaeton." Of course the little contest was ended in the
manner proposed by Arabella.</p>
<p>"I do think," said Arabella, when she and her mother were seated in
the carriage, "that we have treated him very badly."</p>
<p>"Quite as well as he deserves! What a house to bring us to;—and what
people! Did you ever come across such an old woman before! And she
has him completely under her thumb. Are you prepared to live with
that harridan?"</p>
<p>"You may let me alone, mamma, for all that. She won't be in my way
after I'm married, I can tell you."</p>
<p>"You'll have something to do then."</p>
<p>"I ain't a bit afraid of her."</p>
<p>"And to ask us to meet such people as this American!"</p>
<p>"He's going back to Washington and it suited him to have him. I don't
quarrel with him for that. I wish I were married to him and back in
the States."</p>
<p>"You do?"</p>
<p>"I do."</p>
<p>"You have given it all up about Lord Rufford then?"</p>
<p>"No;—that's just where it is. I haven't given it up, and I still see
trouble upon trouble before me. But I know how it will be. He doesn't
mean anything. He's only amusing himself."</p>
<p>"If he'd once say the word he couldn't get back again. The Duke would
interfere then."</p>
<p>"What would he care for the Duke? The Duke is no more than anybody
else nowadays. I shall just fall to the ground between two stools. I
know it as well as if it were done already. And then I shall have to
begin again! If it comes to that I shall do something terrible. I
know I shall." Then they turned in at Lord Rufford's gates; and as
they were driven up beneath the oaks, through the gloom, both mother
and daughter thought how charming it would be to be the mistress of
such a park.</p>
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