<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p class="chapterhead">BAD TIDINGS.</p>
<p><span class="firstwords">About</span> the middle of October, there came a letter from the Marquis
of Brotherton to his brother, which startled them all at Manor Cross
very much indeed. In answering Lord George's communication as to
the marriage, the Marquis had been mysterious and disagreeable;—but
then he was always disagreeable and would on occasions take the
trouble to be mysterious also. He had warned his brother that he
might himself want the house at Manor Cross; but he had said the
same thing frequently during his residence in Italy, being always
careful to make his mother and sisters understand that they might have
to take themselves away any day at a very short warning. But now
the short warning had absolutely come, and had come in such a shape
as to upset everything at Manor Cross, and to upset many things at
the Brotherton Deanery. The letter was as follows:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>
"My dear George,</p>
<p style="text-indent: 2em;">"I am to be married to the Marchesa Luigi. Her name is
Catarina Luigi, and she is a widow. As to her age, you can ask herself
when you see her, if you dare. I haven't dared. I suppose her
to be ten years younger than myself. I did not expect that it would
be so, but she says now that she would like to live in England. Of
course I've always meant to go back myself some day. I don't suppose
we shall be there before May, but we must have the house got
ready. My mother and the girls had better look out for a place as
soon as they can. Tell my mother of course I will allow her the rent
of Cross Hall, to which indeed she is entitled. I don't think she
would care to live there, and neither she nor the girls would get on
with my wife.</p>
<div class="closing">
<span class="presignature3">"Yours, B.</span></div>
<p style="text-indent: 1.5em;">"I am waiting to know about getting the house painted and
furnished."</p>
</div>
<p>When Lord George received this letter, he showed it first in
privacy to his sister Sarah. As the reader will have understood,<!-- Page 35 -->
there had never been any close family affection between the present
Marquis and his brothers and sisters; nor had he been a loving son
to his mother. But the family at Manor Cross had always endeavoured
to maintain a show of regard for the head of the family, and
the old Marchioness would no doubt have been delighted had her
eldest son come home and married an English wife. Lady Sarah, in
performing what she had considered to be a family duty, had written
regular despatches to her elder brother, telling him everything that
happened about the place,—despatches which he, probably, never
read. Now there had come a blow indeed. Lady Sarah read the
letter, and then looked into her brother's face.</p>
<p>"Have you told Mary?" she asked.</p>
<p>"I have told no one."</p>
<p>"It concerns her as much as any of us. Of course, if he has
married, it is right that he should have his house. We ought to wish
that he should live hero."</p>
<p>"If he were different from what he is," said Lord George.</p>
<p>"If she is good it may be that he will become different. It is not
the thing, but the manner in which he tells it to us! Did you ever
hear her name before?"</p>
<p>"Never."</p>
<p>"What a way he has of mentioning her;—about her age," said Lady
Sarah, infinitely shocked. "Well! Mamma must be told, of course.
Why shouldn't we live at Cross Hall? I don't understand what he
means about that. Cross Hall belongs to mamma for her life, as much
as Manor Cross does to him for his."</p>
<p>Just outside the park gate, at the side of the park furthest away
from Brotherton, and therefore placed very much out of the world,
there stood a plain substantial house built in the days of Queen Anne,
which had now for some generations been the habitation of the
dowager of the Brotherton family. When the late marquis died, this
had become for her life the property of the Marchioness; but had been
ceded by her to her son, in return for the loan of the big house. The
absentee Marquis had made with his mother the best bargain in his
power, and had let the dower house, known as Cross Hall, to a
sporting farmer. He now kindly offered to allow his mother to
have the rent of her own house, signifying at the same time his
wish that all his family should remove themselves out of his way.</p>
<p>"He wishes that we should take ourselves off," said Lord George,
hoarsely.</p>
<p>"But I do not see why we are to give way to his wishes. George,
where are we to go? Of what use can we be in a strange country?
Wherever we are we shall be very poor, but our money will go further
here than elsewhere. How are we to get up new interests in life?
The land is his, but the poor people belong to us as much as to him.
It is unreasonable."<!-- Page 36 --></p>
<p>"It is frightfully selfish."</p>
<p>"I for one am not prepared to obey him in this," said Lady Sarah.
"Of course mamma will do as she pleases, but I do not see why we
should go. He will never live here all the year through."</p>
<p>"He will be sick of it after a month. Will you read the letter to
my mother?"</p>
<p>"I will tell her, George. She had better not see the letter, unless
she makes a point of it. I will read it again, and then do you keep
it. You should tell Mary at once. It is natural that she should have
built hopes on the improbability of Brotherton's marriage."</p>
<p>Before noon on that day the news had been disseminated through
the house. The old Marchioness, when she first heard of the Italian
wife, went into hysterics, and then was partly comforted by reminding
herself that all Italians were not necessarily bad. She asked
after the letter repeatedly; and at last, when it was found to be
impossible to explain to her otherwise what her eldest son meant
about the houses, it was shown to her. Then she began to weep
afresh.</p>
<p>"Why mayn't we live at Cross Hall, Sarah?" she said.</p>
<p>"Cross Hall belongs to you, mamma, and nothing can hinder you
from living there."</p>
<p>"But Augustus says that we are to go away."</p>
<p>The Marchioness was the only one of the family who ever called the
Marquis by his Christian name, and she did so only when she was
much disturbed.</p>
<p>"No doubt he expresses a wish that we should do so?"</p>
<p>"Where are we to go to, and I at my age?"</p>
<p>"I think you should live at Cross Hall."</p>
<p>"But he says that we mayn't. We could never go on there if he
wants us to go away."</p>
<p>"Why not, mamma? It is your house as much as this is his. If
you will let him understand that when you leave this you mean to go
there, he will probably say nothing more about it."</p>
<p>"Mr. Price is living there. I can't make Mr. Price go away
directly the painter people come in here. They'll come to-morrow,
perhaps, and what am I to do then?"</p>
<p>The matter was discussed throughout the whole day between Lady
Sarah and her mother, the former bearing the old woman's plaintive
weakness with the utmost patience, and almost succeeding, before the
evening came, in inducing her mother to agree to rebel against the
tyranny of her son. There were peculiar difficulties and peculiar
hardships in the case. The Marquis could turn out all the women of
his family at a day's notice. He had only to say to them, "Go!"
and they must be gone. And he could be rid of them without even
saying or writing another word. A host of tradesmen would come,
and then of course they must go. But Mr. Price at Cross Hall must<!-- Page 37 -->
have a regular year's notice, and that notice could not now be given
till Lady-day next.</p>
<p>"If the worst comes to the worst, mamma we will go and live in
Brotherton for the time. Mr. Holdenough or the Dean would find
some place for us." Then the old lady began to ask how Mary had
borne the news; but as yet Lady Sarah had not been able to interest
herself personally about Mary.</p>
<p>Lord George was surprised to find how little his wife was affected
by the terrible thunderbolt which had fallen among them. On him
the blow had been almost as terrible as on his mother. He had taken
a house in town, at the instance of the Dean, and in consequence of a
promise made before his marriage, which was sacred to him but which
he regretted. He would have preferred himself to live the whole
year through at Manor Cross. Though he had not very much to do
there the place was never dull to him. He liked the association of
the big house. He liked the sombre grandeur of the park. He liked
the magistrates' bench, though he rarely spoke a word when he was
there. And he liked the thorough economy of the life. But as to
that house in town, though his wife's fortune would enable him to
live there four or five months, he knew that he could not stretch the
income so as to bear the expense of the entire year. And yet, what
must he do now? If he could abandon the house in town, then he
could join his mother as to some new country house. But he did not
dare to suggest that the house in town should be abandoned. He
was afraid of the Dean, and afraid, so to say, of his own promise. The
thing had been stipulated, and he did not know how to go back from
the stipulation.</p>
<p>"Going to leave Manor Cross," said Mary, when she was told.
"Dear me; how odd. Where will they go to?"</p>
<p>It was evident to her husband from the tone of her voice that she
regarded her own house in Munster Court, for it was her own, as her
future residence,—as hers and his. In asking where "they" would
live, she spoke of the other ladies of the family. He had expected
that she would have shown some disappointment at the danger to her
future position which this new marriage would produce. But in
regard to that she was, he thought, either perfectly indifferent, or
else a very good actor. In truth, she was almost indifferent. The
idea that she might some day be Lady Brotherton had been something
to her, but not much. Her happiness was not nearly as much disturbed
by this marriage as it had been by the allusion made to her dress.
She herself could hardly understand the terrible gloom which seemed
during that evening and the whole of the next day to have fallen on
the entire family.</p>
<p>"George, does it make you very unhappy?" she said, whispering
to him on the morning of the second day.</p>
<p>"Not that my brother should marry," he said, "God forbid that I,<!-- Page 38 -->
as a younger brother, should wish to debar him from any tittle of
what belongs to him. If he would marry well it ought to be a joy to
us all."</p>
<p>"Is not this marrying well?"</p>
<p>"What, with a foreigner; with an Italian widow? And then there
will, I fear, be great trouble in finding a comfortable home for my
mother."</p>
<p>"Amelia says she can go to Cross Hall."</p>
<p>"Amelia does not know what she is talking of. It would be very
long before they could get into Cross Hall, even if they can go there
at all. It would have to be completely furnished, and there is no
money to furnish it."</p>
<p>"Wouldn't your brother——?" Lord George shook his head. "Or
papa." Lord George again shook his head—"What will they do?"</p>
<p>"If it were not for our house in London we might take a place in the
country together," said Lord George.</p>
<p>All the various facts of the proposition now made to her flashed
upon Mary's mind at once. Had it been suggested to her, when she
was first asked to marry Lord George, that she should live permanently
in a country house with his mother and sisters, in a house
of which she would not be and could not be the mistress, she would
certainly have rejected the offer. And now the tedium of such a
life was plainer to her than it would have been then. But, under
her father's auspices, a pleasant, gay little house in town had been
taken for her, and she had been able to gild the dullness of Manor
Cross with the brightness of her future prospects. For four or five
months she would be her own mistress, and would be so in London.
Her husband would be living on her money, but it would be the
delight of her heart that he should be happy while doing so. And all
this must be safe and wise, because it was to be done under the advice
of her father. Now it was proposed to her that she should abandon
all this and live in some smaller, poorer, duller country residence, in
which she would be the least of the family instead of the mistress of
her own house. She thought of it all for a moment, and then she
answered him with a firm voice.</p>
<p>"If you wish to give up the house in London we will do so."</p>
<p>"It would distress you I fear." When we call on our friends to
sacrifice themselves, we generally wish them also to declare that they
like being sacrificed.</p>
<p>"I should be disappointed of course, George."</p>
<p>"And it would be unjust," said he.</p>
<p>"If you wish it I will not say a word against it."</p>
<p>On that afternoon he rode into Brotherton to tell the tidings to the
Dean. Upon whatever they might among them decide, it was expedient
that the Dean should be at once told of the marriage. Lord
George, as he thought over it all on horseback, found difficulties on<!-- Page 39 -->
every side. He had promised that his wife should live in town, and
he could not go back from that promise without injustice. He understood
the nature of her lately offered sacrifice, and felt that it would
not liberate his conscience. And then he was sure that the Dean
would be loud against any such arrangement. The money no doubt
was Mary's own money and, subject to certain settlement, was at Lord
George's immediate disposal; but he would be unable to endure the
Dean's reproaches. He would be unable also to endure his own, unless—which
was so very improbable—the Dean should encourage him. But
how were things to be arranged? Was he to desert his mother and
sisters in their difficulty? He was very fond of his wife; but it had
never yet occurred to him that the daughter of Dean Lovelace could
be as important to him as all the ladies of the house of Germain.
His brother purposed to bring his wife to Manor Cross in May, when
he would be up in London. Where at that moment, and after what
fashion, would his mother and sisters be living?</p>
<p>The Dean showed his dismay at the marriage plainly enough.</p>
<p>"That's very bad, George," he said; "very bad indeed!"</p>
<p>"Of course we don't like her being a foreigner."</p>
<p>"Of course you don't like his marrying at all. Why should you?
You all know enough of him to be sure that he wouldn't marry the
sort of woman you would approve."</p>
<p>"I don't know why my brother should not have married any lady in
England."</p>
<p>"At any rate he hasn't. He has married some Italian widow, and
it's a misfortune. Poor Mary!"</p>
<p>"I don't think Mary feels it at all."</p>
<p>"She will some day. Girls of her age don't feel that kind of thing
at first. So he is going to come over at once. What will your mother
do?"</p>
<p>"She has Cross Hall."</p>
<p>"That man Price is there. He will go out of course?"</p>
<p>"With notice he must go."</p>
<p>"He won't stand about that, if you don't interfere with his land
and farm-yard. I know Price. He's not a bad fellow."</p>
<p>"But Brotherton does not want them to go there," said Lord
George, almost in a whisper.</p>
<p>"Does not want your mother to live in her own house! Upon my
word the Marquis is considerate to you all! He has said that plainly,
has he? If I were Lady Brotherton I would not take the slightest
heed of what he says. She is not dependent on him. In order that
he may be relieved from the bore of being civil to his own family she
is to be sent out about the world to look for a home in her old age!
You must tell her not to listen for a minute to such a proposition."</p>
<p>Lord George, though he put great trust in his father-in-law, did
not quite like hearing his brother spoken of so very freely by a man<!-- Page 40 -->
who was, after all, the son of a tradesman. It seemed to him as
though the Dean made himself almost too intimate with the affairs
at Manor Cross, and yet he was obliged to go on and tell the Dean
everything.</p>
<p>"Even if Price went, there must be some delay in getting the house
ready."</p>
<p>"The Marquis surely won't turn your mother out before the
spring?"</p>
<p>"Tradesmen will have to come in. And then I don't quite know
what we are to do as to the——expense of furnishing the new house.
It will cost a couple of thousand pounds, and none of us have ready
money." The Dean assumed a very serious face. "Every spoon and
fork at Manor Cross, every towel and every sheet belongs to my
brother."</p>
<p>"Was not the Cross House ever furnished?"</p>
<p>"Many years ago; in my grandmother's time. My father left
money for the purpose, but it was given up to my sister Alice when
she married Holdenough." He found himself explaining all the little
intricacies of his family to the Dean, because it was necessary that he
should hold council with some one. "I was thinking of a furnished
house for them elsewhere."</p>
<p>"In London?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not there. My mother would not like it, nor would my
sisters. I like the country very much the best myself."</p>
<p>"Not for the whole year?"</p>
<p>"I have never cared to be in London; but, of course, as for Mary
and myself that is settled. You would not wish her to give up the
house in Munster Court?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not. It would not be fair to her to ask her to live
always under the wing of your mother and sisters. She would never
learn to be a woman. She would always be in leading strings. Do
you not feel that yourself?"</p>
<p>"I feel that beggars cannot be choosers. My mother's fortune is
£2000 a year. As you know we have only 5000<i>l.</i> a piece. There is
hardly income enough among us for a house in town and a house in
the country."</p>
<p>The Dean paused a moment, and then replied that his daughter's
welfare could not be made subordinate to that of the family generally.
He then said that if any immediate sum of money were required he
would lend it either to the dowager or to Lord George.</p>
<p>Lord George, as he rode home, was angry both with himself and
with the Dean. There had been an authority in the Dean's voice
which had grated upon his feelings; of course he intended to be as
good as his word; but, nevertheless, his wife was his wife and subject
to his will; and her fortune had been her own and had not come from
the Dean. The Dean took too much upon himself. And yet, with all<!-- Page 41 -->
that, he had consulted the Dean about everything, and had confessed
the family poverty. The thing, however, was quite certain to him; he
could not get out of the house in town.</p>
<p>During the whole of that day Lady Sarah had been at work with
her mother, instigating her to insist on her own rights, and at last she
had succeeded.</p>
<p>"What would our life be, mamma," Lady Sarah had said, "if we were
removed altogether into a new world. Here we are of some use. People
know us, and give us credit for being what we are. We can live after
our own fashion, and yet live in accordance with our rank. There
is not a man or a woman or a child in the parish whom I do not know.
There is not a house in which you would not see Amelia's and Susanna's
work. We cannot begin all that over again."</p>
<p>"When I am gone, my dear, you must do so."</p>
<p>"Who can say how much may be done before that sad day shall
come to us? He may have taken his Italian wife back again to Italy.
Mamma, we ought not to run away from our duties."</p>
<p>On the following morning it was settled among them that the
dowager should insist on possession of her own house at Cross Hall,
and a letter was written to the Marquis, congratulating him of course
on his marriage, but informing him at the same time that the family
would remain in the parish.</p>
<p>Some few days later Mr. Knox, the agent for the property, came
down from London. He had received the orders of the Marquis, and
would be prepared to put workmen into the house as soon as her ladyship
would be ready to leave it. But he quite agreed that this could
not be done at once. A beginning no doubt might be made while they
were still there, but no painting should be commenced or buildings
knocked down or put up till March. It was settled at the same time
that on the first of March the family should leave the house.</p>
<p>"I hope my son won't be angry," the Marchioness said to Mr.
Knox.</p>
<p>"If he be angry, my lady, he will be angry without a cause. But I
never knew him to be very angry about anything."</p>
<p>"He always did like to have his own way, Mr. Knox," said the
mindful mother.</p>
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