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<h4>CHAPTER XXI.</h4>
<h3>THE FIRST EVENING AT RUFFORD HALL.<br/> </h3>
<p>The phaeton arrived the first, the driver having been especially told
by Arabella that he need not delay on the road for the other
carriage. She had calculated that she might make her entrance with
better effect alone with her mother than in company with Morton and
the Senator. It would have been worth the while of any one who had
witnessed her troubles on that morning to watch the bland serenity
and happy ease with which she entered the room. Her mother was fond
of a prominent place but was quite contented on this occasion to play
a second fiddle for her daughter. She had seen at a glance that
Rufford Hall was a delightful house. Oh,—if it might become the home
of her child and her grandchildren,—and possibly a retreat for
herself! Arabella was certainly very handsome at this moment. Never
did she look better than when got up with care for travelling,
especially as seen by an evening light. Her slow motions were adapted
to heavy wraps, and however she might procure her large sealskin
jacket she graced it well when she had it. Lord Rufford came to the
door to meet them and immediately introduced them to his sister.
There were six or seven people in the room, mostly ladies, and tea
was offered to the new-comers. Lady Penwether was largely made, like
her brother; but was a languidly lovely woman, not altogether unlike
Arabella herself in her figure and movements, but with a more
expressive face, with less colour, and much more positive assurance
of high breeding. Lady Penwether was said to be haughty, but it was
admitted by all people that when Lady Penwether had said a thing or
had done a thing, it might be taken for granted that the way in which
she had done or said that thing was the right way. The only other
gentleman there was Major Caneback, who had just come in from hunting
with some distant pack and who had been brought into the room by Lord
Rufford that he might give some account of the doings of the day.
According to Caneback, they had been talking in the Brake country
about nothing but Goarly and the enormities which had been
perpetrated in the U. R. U. "By-the-bye, Miss Trefoil," said Lord
Rufford, "what have you done with your Senator?"</p>
<p>"He's on the road, Lord Rufford, examining English institutions as he
comes along. He'll be here by midnight."</p>
<p>"Imagine the man coming to me and telling me that he was a friend of
Goarly's. I rather liked him for it. There was a thorough pluck about
it. They say he's going to find all the money."</p>
<p>"I thought Mr. Scrobby was to do that?" said Lady Penwether.</p>
<p>"Mr. Scrobby will not have the slightest objection to have that part
of the work done for him. If all we hear is true Miss Trefoil's
Senator may have to defend both Scrobby and Goarly."</p>
<p>"My Senator as you call him will be quite up to the occasion."</p>
<p>"You knew him in America, Miss Trefoil?" asked Lady Penwether.</p>
<p>"Oh yes. We used to meet him and Mrs. Gotobed everywhere. But we
didn't exactly bring him over with us;—though our party down to
Bragton was made up in Washington," she added, feeling that she might
in this way account in some degree for her own presence in John
Morton's house. "It was mamma and Mr. Morton arranged it all."</p>
<p>"Oh my dear it was you and the Senator," said Lady Augustus, ready
for the occasion.</p>
<p>"Miss Trefoil," said the lord, "let us have it all out at once. Are
you taking Goarly's part?"</p>
<p>"Taking Goarly's part!" ejaculated the Major.</p>
<p>Arabella affected to give a little start, as though frightened by the
Major's enthusiasm. "For heaven's sake let us know our foes,"
continued Lord Rufford. "You see the effect such an announcement had
upon Major Caneback. Have you made an appointment before dawn with
Mr. Scrobby under the elms? Now I look at you I believe in my heart
you're a Goarlyite,—only without the Senator's courage to tell me
the truth beforehand."</p>
<p>"I really am very much obliged to Goarly," said Arabella, "because it
is so nice to have something to talk about."</p>
<p>"That's just what I think, Miss Trefoil," declared a young lady, Miss
Penge, who was a friend of Lady Penwether. "The gentlemen have so
much to say about hunting which nobody can understand! But now this
delightful man has scattered poison all over the country there is
something that comes home to our understanding. I declare myself a
Goarlyite at once, Lord Rufford, and shall put myself under the
Senator's leading directly he comes."</p>
<p>During all this time not a word had been said of John Morton, the
master of Bragton, the man to whose party these new-comers belonged.
Lady Augustus and Arabella clearly understood that John Morton was
only a peg on which the invitation to them had been hung. The feeling
that it was so grew upon them with every word that was spoken,—and
also the conviction that he must be treated like a peg at Rufford.
The sight of the hangings of the room, so different to the
old-fashioned dingy curtains at Bragton, the brilliancy of the
mirrors, all the decorations of the place, the very blaze from the
big grate, forced upon the girl's feelings a conviction that this was
her proper sphere. Here she was, being made much of as a new-comer,
and here if possible she must remain. Everything smiled on her with
gilded dimples, and these were the smiles she valued. As the softness
of the cushions sank into her heart, and mellow nothingnesses from
well-trained voices greeted her ears, and the air of wealth and
idleness floated about her cheeks, her imagination rose within her
and assured her that she could secure something better than Bragton.
The cautions with which she had armed herself faded away. This,—this
was the kind of thing for which she had been striving. As a girl of
spirit was it not worth her while to make another effort even though
there might be danger? Aut Cæsar aut nihil. She knew nothing about
Cæsar; but before the tardy wheels which brought the Senator and Mr.
Morton had stopped at the door she had declared to herself that she
would be Lady Rufford. The fresh party was of course brought into the
drawing-room and tea was offered; but Arabella hardly spoke to them,
and Lady Augustus did not speak to them at all, and they were shown
up to their bedrooms with very little preliminary conversation.</p>
<p>It was very hard to put Mr. Gotobed down; or it might be more
correctly said,—as there was no effort to put him down,—that it was
not often that he failed in coming to the surface. He took Lady
Penwether out to dinner and was soon explaining to her that this
little experiment of his in regard to Goarly was being tried simply
with the view of examining the institutions of the country. "We don't
mind it from you," said Lady Penwether, "because you are in a certain
degree a foreigner." The Senator declared himself flattered by being
regarded as a foreigner only "in a certain degree." "You see you
speak our language, Mr. Gotobed, and we can't help thinking you are
half-English."</p>
<p>"We are two-thirds English, my lady," said Mr. Gotobed; "but then we
think the other third is an improvement."</p>
<p>"Very likely."</p>
<p>"We have nothing so nice as this;" as he spoke he waved his right
hand to the different corners of the room. "Such a dinner-table as I
am sitting down to now couldn't be fixed in all the United States
though a man might spend three times as many dollars on it as his
lordship does."</p>
<p>"That is very often done, I should think."</p>
<p>"But then as we have nothing so well done as a house like this, so
also have we nothing so ill done as the houses of your poor people."</p>
<p>"Wages are higher with you, Mr. Gotobed."</p>
<p>"And public spirit, and the philanthropy of the age, and the
enlightenment of the people, and the institutions of the country all
round. They are all higher."</p>
<p>"Canvas-back ducks," said the Major, who was sitting two or three off
on the other side.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir, we have canvas-back ducks."</p>
<p>"Make up for a great many faults," said the Major.</p>
<p>"Of course, sir, when a man's stomach rises above his intelligence
he'll have to argue accordingly," said the Senator.</p>
<p>"Caneback, what are you going to ride to-morrow?" asked the lord who
saw the necessity of changing the conversation, as far at least as
the Major was concerned.</p>
<p>"Jemima;—mare of Purefoy's; have my neck broken, they tell me."</p>
<p>"It's not improbable," said Sir John Purefoy who was sitting at Lady
Penwether's left hand. "Nobody ever could ride her yet."</p>
<p>"I was thinking of asking you to let Miss Trefoil try her," said Lord
Rufford. Arabella was sitting between Sir John Purefoy and the Major.</p>
<p>"Miss Trefoil is quite welcome," said Sir John. "It isn't a bad idea.
Perhaps she may carry a lady, because she has never been tried. I
know that she objects strongly to carry a man."</p>
<p>"My dear," said Lady Augustus, "you shan't do anything of the kind."
And Lady Augustus pretended to be frightened.</p>
<p>"Mamma, you don't suppose Lord Rufford wants to kill me at once."</p>
<p>"You shall either ride her, Miss Trefoil, or my little horse Jack.
But I warn you beforehand that as Jack is the easiest ridden horse in
the country, and can scramble over anything, and never came down in
his life, you won't get any honour and glory; but on Jemima you might
make a character that would stick to you till your dying day."</p>
<p>"But if I ride Jemima that dying day might be to-morrow. I think I'll
take Jack, Lord Rufford, and let Major Caneback have the honour. Is
Jack fast?" In this way the anger arising between the Senator and the
Major was assuaged. The Senator still held his own, and, before the
question was settled between Jack and Jemima, had told the company
that no Englishman knew how to ride, and that the only seat fit for a
man on horseback was that suited for the pacing horses of California
and Mexico. Then he assured Sir John Purefoy that eighty miles a day
was no great journey for a pacing horse, with a man of fourteen stone
and a saddle and accoutrements weighing four more. The Major's
countenance, when the Senator declared that no Englishman could ride,
was a sight worth seeing.</p>
<p>That evening, even in the drawing-room, the conversation was chiefly
about horses and hunting, and those terrible enemies Goarly and
Scrobby. Lady Penwether and Miss Penge who didn't hunt were distantly
civil to Lady Augustus of whom of course a woman so much in the world
as Lady Penwether knew something. Lady Penwether had shrugged her
shoulders when consulted as to these special guests and had expressed
a hope that Rufford "wasn't going to make a goose of himself." But
she was fond of her brother and as both Lady Purefoy and Miss Penge
were special friends of hers, and as she had also been allowed to
invite a couple of Godolphin's girls to whom she wished to be civil,
she did as she was asked. The girl, she said to Miss Penge that
evening, was handsome, but penniless and a flirt. The mother she
declared to be a regular old soldier. As to Lady Augustus she was
right; but she had perhaps failed to read Arabella's character
correctly. Arabella Trefoil was certainly not a flirt. In all the
horsey conversation Arabella joined, and her low, clear, slow voice
could be heard now and then as though she were really animated with
the subject. At Bragton she had never once spoken as though any
matter had interested her. During this time Morton fell into
conversation first with Lady Purefoy and then with the two Miss
Godolphins, and afterwards for a few minutes with Lady Penwether who
knew that he was a county gentleman and a respectable member of the
diplomatic profession. But during the whole evening his ear was
intent on the notes of Arabella's voice; and also, during the whole
evening, her eye was watching him. She would not lose her chance with
Lord Rufford for want of any effort on her own part. If aught were
required from her in her present task that might be offensive to Mr.
Morton,—anything that was peremptorily demanded for the effort,—she
would not scruple to offend the man. But if it might be done without
offence, so much the better. Once he came across the room and said a
word to her as she was talking to Lord Rufford and the Purefoys. "You
are really in earnest about riding to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Oh dear, yes. Why shouldn't I be in earnest?"</p>
<p>"You are coming out yourself I hope," said the Lord.</p>
<p>"I have no horses here of my own, but I have told that man Stubbings
to send me something, and as I haven't been at Bragton for the last
seven years I have nothing proper to wear. I shan't be called a
Goarlyite I hope if I appear in trowsers."</p>
<p>"Not unless you have a basket of red herrings on your arm," said Lord
Rufford. Then Morton retired back to the Miss Godolphins finding that
he had nothing more to say to Arabella.</p>
<p>He was very angry,—though he hardly knew why or with whom. A girl
when she is engaged is not supposed to talk to no one but her
recognised lover in a mixed party of ladies and gentlemen, and she is
especially absolved from such a duty when they chance to meet in the
house of a comparative stranger. In such a house and among such
people it was natural that the talk should be about hunting, and as
the girl had accepted the loan of a horse it was natural that she
should join in such conversation. She had never sat for a moment
apart with Lord Rufford. It was impossible to say that she had
flirted with the man,—and yet Morton felt that he was neglected, and
felt also that he was only there because this pleasure-seeking young
Lord had liked to have in his house the handsome girl whom he,
Morton, intended to marry. He felt thoroughly ashamed of being there
as it were in the train of Miss Trefoil. He was almost disposed to
get up and declare that the girl was engaged to marry him. He thought
that he could put an end to the engagement without breaking his
heart;—but if the engagement was an engagement he could not submit
to treatment such as this, either from her or from others. He would
see her for the last time in the country at the ball on the following
evening,—as of course he would not be near her during the
hunting,—and then he would make her understand that she must be
altogether his or altogether cease to be his. And so resolving he
went to bed, refusing to join the gentlemen in the smoking-room.</p>
<p>"Oh, mamma," Arabella said to her mother that evening, "I do so wish
I could break my arm to-morrow."</p>
<p>"Break your arm, my dear!"</p>
<p>"Or my leg would be better. I wish I could have the courage to chuck
myself off going over some gate. If I could be laid up here now with
a broken limb I really think I could do it."</p>
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