Two days later Dolores returned with her father to her childhood’s home—to the parsonage with its fulness of memories, its emptiness of younger voices. Her three-and-thirty troubled years had taught her much; and nothing, if not to live a trivial life for a worthier within her grasp, in brave knowledge of their difference; but her spirit all but quailed before the seeing her service to her father so bitterly far from seeming essential and great. He seemed to be changing further from the silent, deeply - needing man; whose doings were always, and whose thoughts were never, open to his family’s questioning; who craved for earnest fellowship, and cherished dying memories. He talked more freely and more lightly than of old; was often from home without accounting for his absence; and seemed to be in all things falling from the old, elusive personality, which was woven with the fibres of her tenderness. But with all the pain of seeing the change, she saw it only as one who, with eyes straining after a beloved, fading form, sees other things that render his vision vexed. Her inner sight could not waver from the life, beloved and fading, she had forsaken at its lonely close; and there were times when she felt sadly near the end of her power of accepting bitterness. For the times had to come, when she opened the letters from Sophia—always written to herself, and carrying the folded paper in the delicate, scholar’s hand—with a touch that did not tremble; when she wrote the answers—with their message, with its bitter impotence, to be entrusted to the same faithfulness—with no sign of the inward passions; when she spoke of her sisters in their married life, as a woman content that love should not be for herself. So far was her life from what it seemed, that when a letter was brought her, some two months after her return, with the narrow border of the mourning of a friend, her heart gave a throb of thankfulness. It was over. There were no more days to awaken to living in the worn spirit’s trouble. It was gone to its long home; and the future had the ease of unvexed grief.
She read the few restrained words, in which sorrow was given no place, as lending no meaning to sympathy for a bitterer, subtler form; and folded the letter calmly.
“Father, I must go to Oxford,” she said, in a quiet voice, but rising from her seat. “Claverhouse, the dramatist, is dead; and it is my wish to be present at the burial.”
Her father met her eyes for a moment; and then seemed to rouse himself as though for some effort; as if finding the moment meet for some difficult and needful words; but hesitating beyond the limit, answered in his usual, neutral manner.
“My daughter, I have neither the right nor the desire to put restraint on your actions. I fully understand a wish to attend the funeral of a man whose works and teaching you valued. If you feel you have lost a friend, you may feel sure of my sympathy.”
Dolores made no response to the question in the last words. She went to the duty of ensuring her father’s welfare in the days of her absence; and in two hours she was gone.
Two months!—the length of a visit or a journey!—and lived alone! The thankfulness had grown to fierce rebellion, before she reached her sister’s home. Ah! that she had left her father for these empty days, while she cheered the path to the grave of the creature whose life she saw as dark and great! It was not until some sad hours were behind, that her nature reasserted its power; and she saw her actions with unshrinking survey, as her best with the knowledge that was hers; saw that, with the past to live again with the same understanding, she must do again as she had done.
Walking from the graveyard, with her sister and her sister’s husband, she felt a further change. She felt come over her with the old force, the old tenderness for her kind. Looking forward, she looked on years, when personal griefs would be passive under the old flowing of feeling for her race. Sophia’s sister’s tenderness, given with sensitive forbearance of question as to one bereaved; and Soulsby’s unworded sympathy, and shrinking from allusion to the truth of the cry of his own sorrow, “it might be such a little while;” and even the dumb devotion of Julia, who had fallen suddenly into aged feebleness, and been taken into Soulsby’s household, to give nominal service while she lived, grew in her thought to things that called for gratefulness of heart; and the life of care for her father became an ennobling filial tendance.
When she reached the changeless village, and saw the grey-headed, slow-moving figure lonely in its waiting, a great wave of pitiful lovingness came over her.
She joined her father with words of tender thanks; and tried to brighten the walk to the parsonage, by telling of Sophia and her married content.
But he seemed uneasy and absent; and she found that in spite of herself her feelings were becoming chilled. He looked away into the hedges while she spoke; threw covert glances at her face when she was silent; asked already-answered questions; and seemed not to follow words of inquiry or narrative.
When they were walking through the churchyard,—as if driven to the point by the approaching end of an hour sought with a purpose, he suddenly spoke, in tones that came strangely from his lips.
“Dolores, I expect what I have to say will be something of a shock to you; but I know you have nothing but welcome for what makes for another’s happiness; and this, I believe, will be greatly for mine. I am going very soon to be married. It was settled while you were away; though of course I—we had had thoughts of it before. I am sure you are generous enough, to acknowledge that this does not alter my gratitude for what you have done for me, and been to me. I know it is always your happiness to see the happiness of others; and I am sure you will find little else in seeing mine.”
He broke off; and walked on rapidly, with his eyes averted. There was something in his tone, which betrayed that some of the convictions he expressed were of a wavering quality. Dolores followed in silence, finding that no words came, until she saw, or rather felt, his glance drawn to herself. Then she spoke in an earnestly sympathetic tone.
“Father, you are far too much to me, for me to feel regret over anything that will make your life fuller. You will understand anything that was the result of surprise? I shall find it easy to rejoice with you.”
The Reverend Cleveland made an involuntary pause, and met his daughter’s eyes. She read in his own the words he did not speak—the old pregnant words, “You are a good woman, Dolores.” She spoke again, with no purpose but the easing of his task.
“Is it any one I can guess, father? Not that it makes any difference, who it is. There is no one I can think of whom we know, for whom I do not already feel friendship.”
“It is Mrs Merton-Vane,” said Mr Hutton, in a tone with a rather peculiar easiness.
They had reached the parsonage door. They looked into each other’s faces. Their hands met; and Dolores gave her father an embrace of earnest wishing of good. Then she went to her room, and stood at the window.
No thoughts of her altered future or her father’s came. One sentence seemed to be burning itself on her soul. “So it was for nothing that she had left him.” Her father’s cheering—for these two months!—was other than her own. Ah, that he had told her in time—that either had known—that both had known—what there was to know! Her face grew old and hard; and, as never before in her life, she felt her heart fail.
It was long before weeping came, to give the sad courage of looking forward. There was this left to her—to work, and pity, and be just.
When she sought her father, she found him sitting in his study, quiet and ponderous. A knowledge of the gulf between them came almost invincibly repelling, as she met his look and words, and read his belief that her time had been given to household dealings. She took the seat that faced him, and spoke with her hands laid out on the table clasped, and her eyes drooping.
“Father, it is better that I should leave your home for good before your marriage. I shall take up teaching again. I think of spending a time with Sophia and her husband; and looking for suitable work from there. So your way will be clear of all impediments. I was the last and the chief one, was I not? “She ended with a touch of playfulness, and met her father’s eyes with a smile, unconscious of the look in her own.
But the Rev. Cleveland saw it; and, though its meaning was hidden from him, it pierced his heart with pain that was heavy with the past. As he rose and hastened from the room, a word came muttered and helpless in the voice of an old man—a word which his daughter heard, and knew as not uttered as her own name—“Dolores!”
A few weeks later there was another mistress at the parsonage. The marriage took place at a neighbouring parish, where Mrs Merton-Vane was staying with some friends. Dolores came to witness it with her married sisters and their husbands, as a one-time member of the household returned for presence at its festival. Many times before the parting, she felt the wisdom of the course she had chosen. The new Mrs Hutton’s manner to herself had a coldness that was absent from her words to the sisters, who had given up claim to their father’s roof; and her father gave her the same unemotional greeting and parting that he yielded them all; having assumed the veil over his deeper feelings, which he was to wear for the remainder of his days.
The wedding was an hour of uneasiness for all who saw it, in spite of the countenance given it by the sons and daughters of the earlier marriages. The guests adapted their deportment to their common, unflattering sense, that the purpose of their presence was simply the disproving the occasion a ground for sensitive feelings. Dr Cassell hardly opened his lips; and rested his eyes on the little gold cross, which Mr Hutton still saw reason for including in his daily equipment, with a doubtful aspect of regarding ritualism and third marriages as having some subtle and repellent connection; not so much as moving his eyes, when Elsa nudged him, and begged for the anecdote he had told at the last wedding. Mr Blackwood’s “Well, Vicar, good-bye. You have every good wish from us all for many years of happiness,” had a forced, unemphatic ring: and Elsa’s words, “Oh, Uncle Cleveland, I am sure you ought to be quite ashamed of having three wives! It is a good thing you did not live in the time, when the clergy were not allowed to marry. I suppose I ought not to call you uncle any longer?” had the unwonted effect of provoking a less ready smile on the face of Mr Hutton, than of any other of her hearers.
When it was over, Dolores returned to Oxford with Soulsby and Sophia. In the evening she wandered alone in the graveyard, where there stood the tombstone which drew her to read its words: “In sorrowing remembrance of ‘Perdita,’ wife of Sigismund Claverhouse”; and below the simple inscription, “Also of Sigismund Claverhouse, husband of the above.” As she wandered, she was startled by a touch and voice at her elbow.
“Is it——? Yes it is. It is Dolores!”
“Felicia?” said Dolores, with surprise and welcome. “After all this time?”
“More in name than in nature, after seven years of nurturing the youthful mind for daily bread,” said the voice whose familiar qualities carried so much. “But in both at this moment. How pleasant to see you, Dolores I Why have you kept me so long without your address?”
“Because you have kept me for the same time without yours,” said Dolores, finding herself with the old, light, student manner. “On your conscience be the guilt; for you knew my father’s address, which would have found me always.”
“I knew it was some vicarage somewhere, but I forgot the rest. And I had some doubt whether ‘The Vicarage’ would reach you. I daresay ‘The Hovel’ would not have reached me. If it would have, why did you not write?”
“I did write,” said Dolores; “but the letter was returned. It seems that your family moved soon after I saw you last.”
“Oh yes; no doubt. As often as the rent of one house is too large to be paid, we move to another. It is the series of steps to ‘the House.’”
“How little you have changed!” said Dolores, looking down at the merry face, as a tender woman might look at a child.
“And you have changed more than a little?” said Felicia, her tone betraying for the first time that she had grown older. “You look as if you had had trouble, Dolores. What have you been doing these last years; and what made you give up your post at the college? To think of our meeting like this, at poor Perdita’s grave! I am teaching here, and came to look at it. But what of yourself? You are not married or a widow, I suppose?”
“I have been at home,” said Dolores. “I gave up the post, because my father needed me. No, I have not been married.”
“My father needs me too,” said Felicia. “But he needs my help with the rent more. He told me I was one of this world’s heroines; and I see I am not a heroine in any more interesting world. But I can tell you of some one who is going to be married. Miss Butler!”
“Is that so?” said Dolores. “She said nothing of it in her last letter. I hear from her two or three times a year.”
“It all came to pass very suddenly,” said Felicia. “I suppose no one who recognised such worth, would waste time in making his position secure. I had always looked on Miss Butler as wedded to the classics. I wonder who will succeed to her post. But don’t let us part as suddenly as we met. When can I see you again?”
“Will you come with me now?” said Dolores. “I am spending a time here with a married sister; and there is welcome for my friends.”
They turned from the tombstone side by side—these women whose ways had met, and parted, and met.