Search      Hot    Newest Novel
HOME > Classical Novels > A Changed Man and Other Tales > CHAPTER VI
Font Size:【Large】【Middle】【Small】 Add Bookmark  
CHAPTER VI
 Some fifteen years after the date of the foregoing incidents, a man who had dwelt in far countries, and viewed many cities, arrived at Roy-Town, a roadside hamlet on the old western turnpike road, not five miles from Froom-Everard, and put up at the Buck’s Head, an inn at that spot.  He was still barely of middle age, but it could be seen that a of grey was settling upon the locks of his hair, and that his face had lost colour and curve, as if by exposure to climates and strange atmospheres, or from incidental thereto.  He seemed to observe little around him, by reason of the intrusion of his musings upon the scene.  In truth Nicholas Long was just now the creature of old hopes and fears consequent upon his arrival—this man who once had not cared if his name were out from that district.  The evening light showed wistful lines which he could not smooth away by the worldling’s of that he had learnt to fling over his face.  
The Buck’s Head was a somewhat unusual place for a man of this sort to choose as a house of in preference to some Casterbridge inn four miles further on.  Before he left home it had been a lively old at which High-flyers, and , and Tally-hoes had changed horses on their stages up and down the country; but now the house was rather cavernous and , the stable-roofs were hollow-backed, the landlord was asthmatic, and the traffic gone.
 
He arrived in the afternoon, and when he had sent back the fly and was having a nondescript meal, he put a question to the waiting-maid with a of .
 
Everard, of Froom-Everard , has been dead some years, I believe?’
 
She replied in the affirmative.
 
‘And are any of the family left there still?’
 
‘O no, bless you, sir!  They sold the place years ago—Squire Everard’s son did—and went away.  I’ve never heard where they went to.  They came quite to nothing.’
 
‘Never heard anything of the young lady—the Squire’s daughter?’
 
‘No.  You see ’twas before I came to these parts.’
 
When the waitress left the room, Nicholas pushed aside his plate and gazed out of the window.  He was not going over into the Froom Valley altogether on Christine’s account, but she had greatly his in coming that way.  Anyhow he would push on there now that he was so near, and not ask questions here where he was liable to be wrongly informed.  The fundamental he had not ventured to make—whether Christine had married before the family went away.  He had because of an absurd of extinguishing hopeful .  That the Everards had left their old home was bad enough intelligence for one day.
 
Rising from the table he put on his hat and went out, towards the upland which divided this district from his native vale.  The first familiar feature that met his eye was a little spot on the distant sky—a of trees on a barrow which a yet more remote upland—a point where, in his childhood, he had believed people could stand and see America.  He reached the further of the plateau on which he had entered.  Ah, there was the valley—a greenish-grey stretch of colour—still looking and , as though it had not much missed him.  If Christine was no longer there, why should he pause over it this evening?  His uncle and aunt were dead, and to-morrow would be soon enough to inquire for remoter relatives.  Thus, disinclined to go further, he turned to his way to the inn.
 
In the backward path he now perceived the figure of a woman, who had been walking at a distance behind him; and as she drew nearer he began to be startled.  Surely, despite the variations introduced into that figure by changing years, its ground-lines were those of Christine?
 
Nicholas had been enough to write to Christine immediately on landing at Southampton a day or two before this, addressing his letter at a venture to the old house, and merely telling her that he planned to reach the Roy-Town inn on the present afternoon.  The news of the of the Everards had dissipated his hope of hearing of her; but here she was.
 
So they met—there, alone, on the open down by a pond, just as if the meeting had been carefully arranged.
 
She threw up her veil.  She was still beautiful, though the years had touched her; a little more matronly—much more .  Or was it only that he was much less homely now—a man of the world—the sense of being relative?  Her face had grown to be pre-eminently of the sort that would be called interesting.  Her habiliments were of a and sober cast, though she was one who had used to dress so airily and so .  Years had laid on a few shadows too in this.
 
‘I received your letter,’ she said, when the of their first approach had passed.  ‘And I thought I would walk across the hills to-day, as it was fine.  I have just called at the inn, and they told me you were out.  I was now on my way homeward.’
 
He hardly listened to this, though he intently gazed at her.  ‘Christine,’ he said, ‘one word.  Are you free?’
 
‘I—I am in a certain sense,’ she replied, colouring.
 
The announcement had a magical effect.  The intervening time between past and present closed up for him, and moved by an impulse which he had combated for fifteen years, he seized her two hands and drew her towards him.
 
She started back, and became almost a acquaintance.  ‘I have to tell you,’ she , ‘that I have—been married.’
 
Nicholas’s rose-coloured dream was immediately toned down to a greyish .
 
‘I did not marry till many years after you had left,’ she continued in the tones of one confessing to a crime.  ‘Oh Nic,’ she cried reproachfully, ‘how could you stay away so long?’
 
‘Whom did you marry?’
 
‘Mr. Bellston.’
 
‘I—ought to have expected it.’  He was going to add, ‘And is he dead?’ but he checked himself.  Her dress unmistakably suggested widowhood; and she had said she was free.
 
‘I must now hasten home,’ said she.  ‘I felt that, considering my shortcomings at our parting so many years ago, I owed you the initiative now.’
 
‘There is some of your old in that.  I’ll walk with you, if I may.  Where are you living, Christine?’
 
‘In the same house, but not on the old conditions.  I have part of it on lease; the farmer now tenanting the found the whole more than he wanted, and the owner allowed me to keep what rooms I chose.  I am poor now, you know, Nicholas, and almost friendless.  My brother sold the Froom-Everard estate when it came to him, and the person who bought it turned our home into a .  Till my father’s death my husband and I lived in the manor-house with him, so that I have never lived away from the spot.’
 
She was poor.  That, and the change of name, accounted for the inn-servant’s ignorance of her continued existence within the walls of her old home.
 
It was growing dusk, and he still walked with her.  A woman’s head arose from the before them, and as she drew nearer, Christine asked him to go back.
 
‘This is the wife of the farmer who shares the house,’ she said.  ‘She is accustomed to come out and meet me whenever I walk far and am .  I am obliged to walk everywhere now.’
 
The farmer’s wife, seeing that Chr............
Join or Log In! You need to log in to continue reading
   
 

Login into Your Account

Email: 
Password: 
  Remember me on this computer.

All The Data From The Network AND User Upload, If Infringement, Please Contact Us To Delete! Contact Us
About Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Tag List | Recent Search  
©2010-2018 wenovel.com, All Rights Reserved