
“Admirable!” he cried, in a bitterly ironical tone. “The union of a wealthy woman, who has a right to make a brilliant contract with some one of her own class, to a beggarly, penniless doctor, whose head is full of absurd crotchets. – Miss Raleigh, Miss Raleigh, where is your discrimination!”
“In my brains, I suppose,” said Aunt Sophia; “though I do not see how that portion of our organisation can make plans and plots.”
“Then you are plotting and planning to marry me to Lady Martlett.”
“It needed neither,” said Aunt Sophia. “You worked out the union yourselves. She is very fond of you.”
“Ha-ha-ha!” laughed the doctor harshly. “And you think her the most attractive woman you ever saw.”
“Granted. But that does not prove that I love her. No; I love my profession. James Scarlett’s health is my idol, until I have cured him – if I ever do. Then I shall look out for another patient, Miss Raleigh.”
“It is my turn now to laugh, doctor. Why, what a transparent man you are!”
“I hope so,” he replied. “But you will stay to dinner this evening?”
“No, madam; I shall go to town.”
“You will not!” said Aunt Sophia, smiling. “It would be too cowardly for you.”
“No, no; I must go,” he said. “She would make me her slave, and trample upon my best instincts. It would not do, Miss Raleigh. As it is, I am free. Poor enough, heaven knows! but independent, and – I hope – a gentleman.”
“Of course,” said Aunt Sophia gravely.
“Granting that I could win her – the idea seems contemptible presumption – what would follow? In her eyes, as well as in those of the whole world, I should have sacrificed my independence. I should have degraded myself; and in place of being spoken of in future as a slightly clever, eccentric doctor, I should sink into a successful fortune-hunter – a man admitted into the society that receives his wife, as her lapdog would be, at the end of a string. I couldn’t do it, my dear madam; I could not bear it; for the galling part would be that I deserved my fate.”
“I hope you do not exaggerate your patients’ cases as you do your own, doctor.”
“No exaggeration, my dear madam. Take another side of the question. Suppose I did sink my pride – suppose my lady did condescend from her high pedestal to put a collar round my neck – how then? What should I be worth, leading such a lapdog existence? What would become of my theories, my efforts to make discoveries in our grand profession? Oh, Miss Raleigh, Miss Raleigh, I did think I had won some little respect from you! What would you say if you saw me lower myself to such an extent as that?”
Aunt Sophia smiled. “There would be something extremely droll to a bystander, if he heard all this. You talking of stooping!”
“Well, would it not be?” he cried. “With some women, yes; but you don’t yet know Lady Martlett. – Oh, most apropos: she has come early, so as to have a pleasant afternoon without form. Doctor Scales, you are too late; you will have to stay.”
“Confound the woman!” cried the doctor, as he saw Lady Martlett, very simply dressed, coming towards the lawn in company with Scarlett and his wife.
“I’ll tell her you said so.”
“I’ll tell her myself.”
“No; you will not,” said Aunt Sophia quietly. “At one time, I thought that you needed a rival to bring you to your senses, but I venture to say that it will not be necessary.” As she spoke, she advanced to meet the visitor, who embraced her cordially, and then bowed coldly to the doctor, as he raised his straw hat and then walked away.
Lady Martlett bit her lip, but took no further notice, devoting herself to her hostess, and talking a great deal to Scarlett, who, however, met her advances only peevishly, and seemed as if he found some under-thought in everything that was said, watching Lady Scarlett suspiciously, and whenever he left the group, hanging about so as to be within hearing and then suddenly rejoining them. This went on for some time, and then they adjourned to the house, where Lady Scarlett was soon after called away, and the visitor was left alone.
Volume Two – Chapter Six.
How Lady Martlett Humbled the Doctor
“I hate him, and I’ll humble him yet!” said Lady Martlett, with her eyes flashing, as she saw Jack Scales coming along the path towards the drawing-room window. “How dares he assume such a high tone towards me! How dares he speak to me as if I were an inferior, or a woman at whom he laughs as unworthy of his notice! I will humble him, proud as he may be.” She watched him through the window as he walked very thoughtfully along the path; and probably it was anger that made her countenance show a higher colour than usual. The visit did not seem pleasant. The weather was all that could be desired; but there was to her something unrestful in the atmosphere. Kate Scarlett was nervous and excited, for some reason or other, and was constantly leaving her alone. Aunt Sophia had seemed more touchy than usual; and Naomi looked as if she were afraid of the visitor.
Lady Martlett had come, telling herself that she wanted company; now she was at The Rosery, she felt that she wanted to be alone. And now that, for the second time, Lady Scarlett had left her alone, she had been sitting fretfully, and thinking it very tiresome that she should be left.
Then came the sound of the footsteps of the doctor – a doctor who would have treated her complaint to perfection, had she not scornfully declared to herself that it was out of his power, and that he was an ignorant pretender, who did not understand her ailment in the least; and at last her eyes filled with tears.
“I’m a miserable woman!” she said to herself, as she called to mind the fact that she was a very rich young widow with beauty and a title; that there were scores of opportunities for making a good match, did she wish to wed; that she had only to give an order to have it obeyed; and – yes – here was this careless, indifferent young doctor, always ready to insult her, always treating her with a cool flippancy of manner, metaphorically snapping his fingers at her beauty of person, her title, and her wealth, and all the time utterly refusing to become her slave.
Just then, Lady Martlett uttered a low sigh, biting her lip directly after, in vexation at her weakness, for Scales had sauntered by the French window, engagingly open as it was like a trap, with her inside as a most attractive bait, and without so much as once glancing in.
“I believe he knows I’m in here alone,” she said to herself angrily; “and he has gone by on purpose to pique me. It is his conceit. He thinks I care for him. Oh, it is unbearable!” she cried impetuously. “I’ll bring him as a supplicant to my knees; and when I do,” she continued, with a flash of triumph in her dark eyes, “he shall know what it is to have slighted and laughed at me!”
She fanned her flaming cheeks, and started up to pace the room, when once more there was the sound of the doctor’s footsteps, as, in utter ignorance of Lady Martlett’s presence, he returned along the gravel walk, thinking deeply over the knotty points of his patient’s case.
Lady Martlett threw herself back in her seat, composed her features, but could not chase away the warm flush of resentment upon her checks. She, however, assumed an air of haughty languor, and appeared to be gazing at the landscape framed in by the open window.
“Heigh-ho-ha-hum!” sighed, or rather half-yawned Jack Scales, as he turned in at the window very slowly and thoughtfully, and for the moment did not see that the room was occupied.
Lady Martlett put her own interpretation upon the noise made by the doctor – she mentally called it a sigh, and her heart gave a satisfied throb as she told herself that he was touched – that her triumph was near at hand when she would humble him; and then – well, cast him off.
“Ah, Lady Martlett, you here?” he said coolly. – “What a lovely day!”
“Yes, doctor; charming,” she said, softening her voice.
“And this is a lovely place. – Your home, the Court, is, of course, far more pretentious.”
“I was not aware that there was anything pretentious about Leigh Court,” said Lady Martlett coldly.
“Well, pretentious is perhaps not the word,” said Jack, “I mean big and important, and solid and wealthy, and that sort of thing.”
“Oh, I see,” said Lady Martlett.
“And what I meant was, that this place is so much more charming, with its undulating lawn, its bosky clumps of evergreens, the pillar roses, and that wonderful clematis of which poor Scarlett is so fond.”
“You speak like a house-agent’s catalogue. Doctor Scales,” said Lady Martlett scornfully.
“Yes, I do; don’t I?” said Jack quietly, “But do you know, Lady Martlett, I often think that I could turn out a better description of a country estate than some of those fellows do?”
“Indeed?” said her Ladyship. “Yes, indeed,” said Jack, who eagerly assumed his bantering tones as soon as he was alone with Lady Martlett, telling himself it was a rest, and that it was a necessity to bring down her Ladyship’s haughtiness.
“Dang her! I’ll make her thoroughly disgusted with me,” he said to himself. “I hate the handsome Semiramis! – She’d like to drag me at her chariot-wheels, and she shall not.”
“I believe,” he continued, “that I could do something far better than the well-known specimen about the litter of rose-leaves and the noise of the nightingales.”
“Indeed, doctor,” said her Ladyship, with a curl of her lip.
“O yes,” cried Scales. “Now, for instance, suppose that Leigh Court were to be let.”
“Leigh Court is not likely to be let,” said her Ladyship haughtily.
“No?” said the doctor, raising his eyebrows slightly. “Well, perhaps not, though one never knows. Your Ladyship might take a dislike to it, say; and if it were to go into the estate-agent’s list – ”
“It never will, Doctor Scales! I should consider it a profanation,” said her Ladyship haughtily. “Pray, change the subject.”
“Oh, certainly,” said Scales politely. – “Been up to the Academy, of course?”
“Yes,” said Lady Martlett coldly. “There was nothing, though, worth looking at. I was terribly bored.”
“Hah! I suppose you would be. I had a couple of hours. All I could spare. There is some admirable work there, all the same.”
“I was not aware that Doctor Scales was an art critic.”
“Neither was I; but when I see a landscape that is a faithful rendering of nature in some beautiful or terrible mood, I cannot help admiring it.”
“Some people profess to be very fond of pictures.”
“I am one of those foolish people, Lady Martlett.”
“And have you a valuable collection, Doctor Scales?”
“Collection? Well, I have a folio with a few water-colours in it, given me by artist friends instead of fees, and I have a few photographs; that is about all. As to their value – well, if sold, they would perhaps fetch thirty shillings.”
Lady Martlett looked at him angrily, for she felt that he was assuming poverty to annoy her.
“Your Ladyship looks astonished; but I can assure you that a poor crotchety physician does not get much besides the thanks of grateful patients.”
“I noticed that there were a great many portraits at the Academy,” said her Ladyship, “portraits of great and famous men.”
“Yes; of men, too, who are famous without being great,” said the doctor, laughing.
“Indeed!” said Lady Martlett. “I thought the two qualities went together.”
“In anyone else,” said Jack, “that would be a vulgar error: in your Ladyship, of course, though it may be an error, it cannot be vulgar.”
“How dearly I should like to box your ears!” thought Lady Martlett, as she gazed at the provoking face before her. “He doesn’t respect me a bit. He doesn’t care for me. The man is a very stone.”
“Did you notice the portraits of some of the fashionable beauties, Doctor Scales?” she continued, ignoring his compliment, and leading him back to the topic on hand.
“O yes,” he said; “several of them, and it set me thinking.”
“No? Really!” said her Ladyship, with a mocking laugh. “Was Doctor Scales touched by the beauty of some of the painted canvases with speaking eyes?”
“No; not a bit,” he said cheerily – “not a bit. It set me wondering how it was that Lady Martlett’s portrait was not on the walls.”
“I am not a fashionable beauty,” said the lady haughtily.
“Well, let us say a beauty, and not fashionable.”
A flash of triumph darted from Lady Martlett’s eyes. He had granted, then, that she was beautiful – at last.
But Jack Scales saw the look.
“I have no desire to be painted for an exhibition,” said Lady Martlett quietly.
“But I thought all ladies loved to be admired.”
“Surely not all,” she replied. “Are all women so weak?”
“Well, I don’t know. That is a question that needs discussing. I am disposed to think they are. It is a woman’s nature; and when she does not care for admiration, she is either very old, or there is something wrong.”
“Why, you libel our sex.”
“By no means, madam. I did not say that they love the admiration of many. Surely she must be a very unpleasant woman indeed who does not care for the admiration of one man.”
“He is caught!” thought Lady Martlett, with a strange feeling of triumph. Perhaps there was something else in her sensation, but she would not own it then.
“Perhaps you are right,” she said quietly. “It may be natural; but in these days, Doctor Scales, education teaches us to master our weakness.”
“Which most of us do,” he said, with a bow, “But really, if your Ladyship’s portrait, painted by a masterly hand, had been hung.” – He stopped short, as if thinking how to say his next words.
“Well, doctor?” she said, giving him a look that he caught, weighed, and valued on the instant at its true worth.
“It would have had a crowd around it to admire.”
“The artist’s work, doctor?”
“No, madam; the beauty of the features the artist had set himself to limn.”
“Is this a compliment, doctor, or a new form of bantering Lady Scarlett’s guest?” said the visitor, rather bitterly.
“Neither the one nor the other, but the simple truth.”
Lady Martlett fought hard to conceal the exultation; nay, more, the thrill of pleasure that ran through her nerves as she heard these words; but though outwardly she seemed quite calm, her cheeks were more highly coloured than usual, and her voice sounded deeper and more rich.
Jack Scales told himself she was plotting to humble him to the very dust, so he stood upon his guard.
Perhaps he did not know himself. Who does? If he had, he might have acted differently as he met Lady Martlett’s eyes when she raised hers and said; “Ah, then, Doctor Scales has turned courtier and flatterer.”
“No; I was speaking very sincerely.”
“Ought I to sit here,” said Lady Martlett, “and listen to a gentleman who tells me I am more handsome than one of the fashionable beauties of the season?”
“Why not?” he said, smiling. “Is the truthful compliment so displeasing?”
“No,” she said softly; “I do not think it is;” and beneath her lowered lashes, the look of triumph intensified as she led him on to speak more plainly.
“It ought not to be,” he said, speaking warmly now. “I have paid you a compliment, Lady Martlett, but it is in all sincerity.”
“He will be on his knees to me directly,” she thought, “and then – ”
“For,” he continued, “woman generally is a very beautiful work of creation: complicated, wonderful – mentally and corporeally – perfect.”
“Perfect, Doctor Scales?”
“Yes, madam; perfect. Your Ladyship, for instance, is one of the most – I think I may say the most perfect woman I ever saw.”
“Doctor Scales?” she said quickly, as she drew herself up, half-angry, but thoroughly endorsing his words; and then to herself, in the triumph that flushed her as she saw the animation in his eyes and the colour in his checks: “At last he is moved; he never spoke or looked like that before.” Then aloud: “You are really very complimentary, Doctor Scales;” and she gave him a sharp arrow-like glance, that he saw was barbed with contempt.
“Well, yes, Lady Martlett, I suppose I am,” he said; “but it was truly honest, and I will be frank with you. Really, I never come into your presence – I never see you – But no; I ought not to venture to say so much.”
“Why not?” she said, with an arch look. “I am not a silly young girl, but a woman who has seen something of the world.”
“True, yes,” he said, as if encouraged; and Lady Martlett’s bosom rose and fell with the excitement of her expected triumph.
Still he hesitated, and asked himself whether he was misjudging her in his belief that she intended to lead him on to a confession of his love, and then cast him off with scorn and insult; but as he looked at her handsome face and shifting eager eyes, he told himself that there was something mingled with the partiality for him which she might possess, and he became hard as steel.
“Well,” she said, smiling, and that smile had in it a power that nearly brought him to her feet; “you were saying: ‘I never see you’ – ”
“Exactly. Yes,” he said quickly; “I will say it. You’ll pardon me, I know. I am but a weak man, with an intense love – ”
She drew a long breath, and half turned away her head.
“For the better parts of my profession.” Lady Martlett’s face became fixed, and she listened to him intently.
“Yes; I confess I do love my profession, and I never see you in your perfection of womanly beauty, without feeling an intense desire to dissect you.”
Lady Martlett started up from the seat, where, in a studied attitude, she had well displayed the graceful undulations of her figure, and stood before Jack Scales, proud, haughty, and indignant. Her eyes flashed; there was an ardent colour in her cheeks, which then seemed to flood back to her heart, leaving her white with anger.
“How dare you!” she began, in the mortification and passion that came upon her; and then, thoroughly mastered, and unable to control herself longer, she burst into a wild hysterical fit of laughter and hurried out of the room.
Jack Scales rose and stood watching the door as it swung to, and there was a look of tenderness and regret in his countenance as he muttered: “Too bad – too bad! Brutal and insulting! And to a woman – a lady of her position and refinement! I’ll go and beg her pardon – ask her to forgive me – make confession of why I spoke so. – No. Put my head beneath her heel, to be crushed by her contempt! It wouldn’t do. She goaded me to it. She wants to triumph over me. I could read her looks. If she cared for me, and those looks were real, I’d go down upon my knees humbly and tell her my sorrow; and then – then – then – What should I do then?
“Hah!” he cried, after a pause, “what would you do then, Jack Scales! Go away, and never set eyes upon her again, for it would not do. It is impossible, and I am a fool.” He stood with his brows knit for a few minutes, and then said, in quite a different mood: “And now I am a man of the world again. Yes; you are about the most handsome woman I ever saw; but a woman is but a woman to a doctor, be she titled or only a farmer’s lass. Blue blood is only a fiction after all; for if I blooded my lady there, pretty Fanny Cressy, and one of Brother William Cressy’s pigs into separate test tubes, and placed them in a rack; and if, furthermore, I left them for a few minutes, and some busybody took them up and changed their places, I might, when I returned, fiddle about for long enough with the various corpuscles, but I could not tell which was which. – Lady Martlett, I am your very obedient servant, but I am not going to be your rejected slave.”
Volume Two – Chapter Seven.
The Doctor Discourses
“My back’s a sight better, sir, wi’ that stuff you said I was to get, and I thank you kindly for it,” said John Monnick, as the doctor seated himself one day close by where the old man was busy weeding a bed in the flower-garden – a special task that he would not entrust to any one else.
“I’m glad of it, Monnick – very glad.”
“But master don’t seem no better, sir, if you’ll excuse me for saying so.”
“Yes, Monnick, I’ll excuse you,” said the doctor sadly. “As you say, he is very little better if any. I’m afraid that pond emptying began the work the accident finished.”
“It frets me, sir, it do – it do indeed. For only to think of it: him so stout and straight and hearty one day, and as wan and thin and bad the next as an old basket. Ah! it’s a strange life this here.”
“True Monnick, true,” said the doctor.
“I felt a bit cut up when his father died, sir, but thank the Lord he aren’t here now to see the boy as he ’most worshipped pulled down as he be. Why, I were down in Sucksix, sir, in the marshes, for two years, ’twix’ Hastings and Rye, and I had the ager awful bad, but it never pulled me down like this. Do try your best with Sir James, do, pray.”
“I will, Monnick, I will,” said the doctor.
Monnick went on with his weeding, and the doctor sat watching in a low-spirited way the motions of a beautiful little robin that kept popping down and seizing some worm which, alarmed by the disturbance of the ground, was trying to escape.
“What humbug popular favouritism is,” he exclaimed suddenly.
“Beg pardon, sir,” said Monnick, glad of an excuse to straighten his back.
“I say what humbug there is in the world,” said the doctor. “Look at that robin, Monnick.”
“Yes, sir; he be a pretty one too. There’s lots on ’em here, and welcome as rain.”
“Yes,” said the doctor, “but what humbug it is.”
Monnick stared, and the robin hopped on the top of a garden stick and chirruped a few notes.
“Just imagine,” said the doctor, who was in a didactic mood; “try and imagine a stout, well-built man, six feet high, a fine, handsome brawny savage, seizing a boa constrictor in his teeth, shaking the, say, eighteen feet of writhing bone and muscle till it had grown weak and limp, and, by a complete reverse of all rule, swallowing the lengthy monster without an effort. The idea partakes of the nature of the serpent, and is monstrous; but all the same, that little petted and be-praised impostor will hop up to a great earthworm three times his length, give it a few digs with his sharp beak, and then – as the Americans would say – get outside it apparently without effort or ruffling a feather, after which he will hop away, flit to a twig, and indulge in a short, sharp song of triumph over his deed. It is his nature to, no doubt, and so are a good many more of his acts; but in these days, when it has grown to be the custom to run tilt at no end of our cherished notions; when we are taught that Alfred did not burn the cakes; that Caractacus never made that pathetic speech about the wealth of Rome: it is only fair to strip the hypocritical feather cloak of hypocrisy off that flagrant little impostor, the robin.”
“The robin and the wren be God’s cock and hen,” said John Monnick solemnly, pairing according to old custom two birds of different kinds.
“Yes,” said the doctor, “and terrible are the penalties supposed to attach to the man or boy who takes the nest, steals the egg, or destroys old or young of their sacred progeny. As a matter of course, no one ever did take egg, nest, or destroy the young of this couple, inasmuch as they are two distinct birds.”
“Yes, sir, two of ’em,” said John Monnick solemnly. “The robin and the wren be God’s cock and hen, and nobody never takes their eggs but jays and magpies and such like, robins is always the friends of man.”
“Friend of man, eh?” said the doctor. “Well, go where you will, there is the pretty bird to be seen, with his orange-scarlet breast, olive-green back, and large, bright, intelligent eyes. Winter or summer, by the homestead, at the window-pane, amongst the shrubs of the garden, or in the wood, there is the robin ready to perch near you and watch your every act, while from time to time he favours you with his tuneful lay. All pure affection for man, of course – so the unobservant have it, and so poets sing; when the fact of the matter is that the familiarity of the bird comes from what Mr Roger Riderhood termed ‘cheek,’ for, the sparrow not excepted, there is no bird in which the sense of fear seems so small; while the motive power which brings the pretty little fellow so constantly in man’s society is that love which is known as cupboard. Probably the robin first learned from Adam that when man begins to garden he turns up worms; and, as these ringed creepers are this bird’s daily bread, he has attached himself to man ever since, and will come and pick the worms from his very feet, whether it be in a garden or during a botanical ramble in the depths of some wood.”