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CHAPTER II. POVERTY VILLA.
 Barnstead was a moderately large village, which had not increased in population or size since the Middle Ages. In fact, it was less important now than it had been in medieval times, for then several battles, detrimental2 to a kingly dynasty, had been fought in its vicinity. Now it was a quiet, somnolent4 spot, which had nothing to do with the affairs of the nation; at all events, these were not transacted5 within its neighbourhood. Ten miles distant, the roaring manufacturing town of Marborough responded to the business spirit of the century, and was connected by rail with the metropolis6, but the iron way came no further; and to reach Barnstead it was necessary to drive or ride. For the convenience of chance visitors a coach ran daily between the Herne Arms in Barnstead and the William Pitt Hotel in Marborough. This was the sole link which connected the village with the outside world.  
The surrounding country was flat and alluvial7 and agricultural, with prosperous farms set here and there in the extent of its plain. In the centre of these rich cornlands, which formed the wealth of the region, Barnstead was placed beside a sluggish8 little stream, too small to be called a river. The quaint9 houses of the village clustered round a beautiful minster of ornate architecture. This was St. Dunstan's Church, and dated from Saxon times, although its design was Norman, and the greater part of it had been built in the thirteenth century. The Rev10. Francis Chaskin, ex-cavalry officer, was its vicar, and the living had been presented to him by Darcy Herne, squire11 and lord of Barnstead Manor12, and the firm friend of this soldier turned priest.
 
Herne Grange, the great house of the district, was situated13 a quarter of a mile from Barnstead, and nestled amid the trees of its park, some little way back from the high road leading to Marborough. Its present owner, a man of thirty, was devoured14 by religious fanaticism15, and was subject to trances like those recorded of the Catholic saints. He was tall, meagre, pale, and--so far as could be seen--quite detached from worldly pleasures; so why such a saint should have engaged himself to frivolous16 Millicent Lester was a problem which no one could solve. Yet eight months before the beginning of this tale the ascetic17 and the coquette--to describe them by their most pronounced characteristics--became engaged, and the wedding was to take place shortly.
 
Whatever Herne's reason might have been for the match, his bride-elect made no secret that her consent was based on solely18 monetary19 grounds. Her father was poor, her home--owing to the domineering of the inconvenient20 Iris21 Link--was disagreeable; and to escape from these ills she was content to become Mrs. Herne, of the Grange. Secretly she would have preferred Lucas Lovel as a husband, as he was good-looking and pleasant, but in the face of his avowed22 poverty she chose to marry Darcy Herne. Nevertheless, she recompensed herself for this dutiful compliance23 with necessity by flirting24 with Lovel whenever she could do so without such behavior coming to the ears of her future husband. With Darcy's strict views, he was quite capable of breaking off the match did he learn of her conduct; and Milly was too anxious to complete this rich marriage to run such a risk. So she coquetted discreetly26 with Lovel, and assumed a demure27 demeanor28 when in the saintly presence of Herne.
 
Who Lovel was no one knew. He had come from London with an introduction to Herne some eight months previously29; and since that time he had remained in the village sketching30 and fishing, and amusing himself at Barnstead tea-tables. After remaining a month at the Grange he had taken rooms at the Herne Arms, and was quite accepted as a friend and equal by the gentry31 in and about the village. He was dark, and, as has before been stated, very handsome; also, he had apparently32 travelled a good deal, and spoke33 several foreign languages excellently well. His dress and manner were both irreproachable34; and he was voted quite an acquisition to Barnstead society. Nevertheless, he had his detractors, and it was hinted by these that the man was an adventurer, in search of a rich wife. But Lovel's friends always pointed36 out that this could not be so, else he would have married Miss Clyde.
 
Selina Clyde was a masculine young woman who farmed her own lands and looked after her own monetary affairs. She was tall, raw-boned, and fair, with a contempt for feminine fripperies, which led her to dress in a somewhat mannish way. Wet or dry, she was out riding or walking over her lands, and knew all about draining, top-dressing, manuring, and such like agricultural matters; also, she was a shrewd business woman, and boasted with good reason that no one had ever got the better of her in a bargain. In her farmhouse37, a comfortable old homestead some two miles on the other side of Barnstead, she dwelt with Mrs. Drass, her former governess, who was said to be the greatest gossip in the neighborhood. Until the appearance of handsome Lucas Lovel, Miss Clyde had made up her mind to live and die a spinster; but, with his advent35, she had yielded to the influence and charm of his manner to such a degree that without inquiring into his antecedents she was quite prepared to marry him. Lovel saw this, and in other circumstances might have seized the chance of a comfortable future; but being in love with Milly, he wanted to make her Mrs. Lovel, and endow her with his poverty. Miss Clyde saw this, felt herself scorned for the frivolous beauty of the doctor's daughter, and soon came to hate Milly with all her heart. And Miss Clyde, as everyone knew, was an admirable hater.
 
For the last few days Herne had been in London on some business connected with religious missions; and during his absence Milly had contrived39 to meet Lovel once or twice in what was presumably a casual manner. She was now coming home from the meeting at which Gran Jimboy had prophesied40 misfortune; and was rather alarmed when she recalled her promise to meet Lucas the next evening at half-past eight. She felt that to keep such an appointment would be indiscreet.
 
"But I shan't go! I shan't go!" she kept saying to herself on the way home to Poverty Villa1. All the same, such was her curiosity to know if there was any truth in Lovel's statements regarding the profligacy41 of her future husband, she knew very well she would keep the appointment. "I owe it to myself to learn the truth about Darcy before it is too late," she said several times in order to quiet her conscience; and in this frame of mind she arrived at the house of her father.
 
Poverty Villa, as Milly nicknamed the place, was a scrubby little house with two acres of neglected ground, and was located in the poorest part of the village. Dr. Lester should have had a flourishing practice, but had not, for two causes; the first being that the other medical man had been established for a longer time in Barnstead; the second and more serious reason being that he was an habitual42 drunkard. All day long he was sip38, sip, sipping43 at brandy; and although never aggressively intoxicated44, his brain was always in a confused state, which rendered people distrustful of his judgment45 in diagnosing cases and prescribing drugs.
 
"It's a wonder he hasn't killed the few patients he has long ago," said Mrs. Drass, who made no secret of her dislike for the doctor; "but some day he'll give someone the wrong medicine and poison him; then he'll be hanged, and that will be a judgment on him for letting his minx of a daughter flirt25 with young Lovel," the truth of which speech being that Mrs. Drass, who was something of a toady46, wanted Milly to release Lovel from her fascinations47, that he might marry Selina Clyde.
 
But other people shared this opinion, and it was only of a few patients that Dr. Lester could boast, these being mostly amongst the poorer classes of agricultural labourers. Consequently the fees were small, and but that Lester had a few hundreds of his own, it might have gone hard with himself and his daughters. As it was the Lester household was hard up for all but the barest necessities of life. Iris Link, who managed the domestic affairs, did her best to make both ends meet, and to present a fairly decent outside to the world; but all to no purpose. The world of Barnstead knew the truth about Poverty Villa, and openly pitied the trio who lived in it. But it was admitted on all hands that Dr. Lester spent on drink what he should have devoted48 to the nourishment49 and clothing of his daughters--or rather, his daughter and stepdaughter.
 
Milly entered the house in the full expectation of having trouble with Iris, and in this she was not disappointed. Iris met her as she closed the door, and beckoned50 her into the shabby little drawing-room, where for a moment or so the two girls eyed one another in silence. As Milly had told Lovel, there was no kin3 between them, for Iris was the daughter of the second Mrs. Lester by her first husband; and when that lady had married the doctor she found him already provided with a child by his first wife. Milly was twenty years of age, Iris twenty-five; and while the first was a beautiful girl with many admirers, the second was dark and quiet, with no grace of form or face, and, as yet, had not gained one lover. Her small accomplishments51 were quite extinguished by the brilliance52 and beauty of Milly. Yet Iris possessed53 the better nature of the two, and would make a better wife, in spite of her looks. The dispositions54 of the two girls were antagonistic55; and they disliked one another exceedingly. Only the narrowness of their circumstances compelled them to live under the same roof, else they would have parted long since. Luckily--as both thought--the marriage of Milly would bring about the wished-for separation; yet even in this there was an element of bitterness to Iris. What that element was may be seen from the slightly acidulated conversation which ensued.
 
"Really, Milly!" said Iris with a weary sigh. "I do think you might stay at home and help me with the house. There is such a lot to do, and Eliza"--the one servant of the Lesters--"is worse than useless."
 
"Then get another servant!" retorted Milly, throwing down her hat. "I am not going to stay in on this fine day."
 
"What would Darcy say if he knew you were wandering about by yourself?"
 
"Bother! Who cares what he says! Besides," added Milly, defiantly56, "I have not been by myself."
 
"Milly," cried Iris, with a dark shade on her face, "have you been again with Mr. Lovel?"
 
"For the last hour, my dear."
 
"Then you ought to be ashamed of yourself."
 
Milly laughed, and examined herself critically in the mirror over the fireplace. She was used to the scoldings of Iris, and cared very little for them. So long as Darcy did not hear of her flirtations with Lovel she had no fear, and treated the expostulations of Iris and the doctor with cool disdain57. She did not trouble herself to reply to the last remark, but continued to admire her beauty with critical eyes, while Iris continued:
 
"You know Mr. Lovel is almost engaged----"
 
"To Miss Clyde, I suppose you mean. Oh, dear! no, he isn't! He has just told me that he cares nothing for her and a good deal for me."
 
"But you are engaged to Mr. Herne."
 
"I am, my dear; I am!" retorted Milly swinging round on the tips of her toes. "Don't you wish you were?"
 
Iris flushed crimson58, for Milly knew well enough that she more than admired the squire. "If I were," she said, evading59 the question, "I should act in a more honourable60 way towards him."
 
"Pooh! pooh! A few words with Mr. Lovel won't hurt him."
 
"A few words, as you call them, will hurt both men. You can't marry Mr. Lovel."
 
"I don't want to; nor can you marry Darcy. Look here, my love," continued Milly coolly: "please don't lecture me any more. If you think Darcy ought to know, tell him about Mr. Lovel, then he'll break off the match with me, and perhaps you'll catch him."
 
"I would not think of doing such a thing!" cried Iris vehemently61.
 
"Why not? I'd do it in your place. You are too good, my dear; too, too good!"
 
"I'll speak to father," said Iris, who from habit called the doctor so.
 
"What good will that do? In the first place, he'll probably not be sober; and, in the second, he's too anxious for me to marry Darcy to tell on me. Oh, dear! I wish you were to marry Darcy, Iris; he is just the prig for you!"
 
Iris looked at the fire with a frown, and not caring to trust herself to speech, ran out of the room and into the garden. There was something so shameless about Milly's speeches and actions with regard to Lovel that she was almost tempted62 to tell Herne and prevent the match. But then she loved Herne, and her intervention63 would be put down to jealousy64.
 
"I can do nothing, nothing," she thought; "if Mr. Lovel----"
 
At this moment the man himself passed slowly down the road in close conversation with Gran Jimboy. His face was quite pale, and he looked as though he had received a shock--as indeed he had. Mrs. Jimboy had revealed something connected with the meeting of the next night!
 


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