pursuits. He rushed off on Sunday evenings for a walk with Leonard; and though Dr. May did not interfere, the daughters saw that the abstinence was an effort of prudence, and were proportionately disturbed when one day at dinner, in his father’s absence, Aubrey, who had been overlooking his fishing-flies with some reviving interest, refused all his sisters’ proposals for the afternoon, and when they represented that it was not a good fishing-day, owned that it was not, but that he was going over to consult Leonard Ward about some gray hackles.
‘But you mustn’t, Aubrey,’ cried Gertrude, aghast.
Aubrey made her a low mocking bow.
‘I am sure papa would be very much vexed,’ added she, conclusively.
‘I believe it was luckless Hal that the mill-wheel tore in your nursery rhymes, eh, Daisy,’ said Aubrey.
‘Nursery rhymes, indeed!’ returned the offended young lady; ‘you know it is a very wicked place, and papa would be very angry at your going there.’ She looked at Ethel, extremely shocked at her not having interfered, and disregarding all signs to keep silence.
‘Axworthy—worthy of the axe,’ said Aubrey, well pleased to retort a little teasing by the way; ‘young Axworthy baiting the trap, and old Axworthy sitting up in his den to grind the unwary limb from limb!’
‘Ethel, why don’t you tell him not?’ exclaimed Gertrude.
‘Because he knows papa’s wishes as well as I do,’ said Ethel; ‘and it is to them that he must attend, not to you or me.’
Aubrey muttered something about his father having said nothing to him; and Ethel succeeded in preventing Daisy from resenting this answer. She herself hoped to catch him in private, but he easily contrived to baffle this attempt, and was soon marching out of Stoneborough in a state of rampant independence, manhood, and resolute friendship, which nevertheless chose the way where he was least likely to encounter a little brown brougham.
Otherwise he might have reckoned three and a half miles of ploughed field, soppy lane, and water meadow, as more than equivalent to five miles of good turnpike road.
Be that as it might, he was extremely glad when, after forcing his way through a sticky clayey path through a hazel copse, his eye fell on a wide reach of meadow land, the railroad making a hard line across it at one end, and in the midst, about half a mile off, the river meandering like a blue ribbon lying loosely across the green flat, the handsome buildings of the Vintry Mill lying in its embrace.
Aubrey knew the outward aspect of the place, for the foreman at the mill was a frequent patient of his father’s, and he had often waited in the old gig at the cottage door at no great distance; but he looked with more critical eyes at the home of his friend.
It was a place with much capacity, built, like the Grange, by the monks of the convent, which had been the germ of the cathedral, and showing the grand old monastic style in the solidity of its stone barns and storehouses, all arranged around a court, whereof the dwelling-house occupied one side, the lawn behind it with fine old trees, and sloping down to the water, which was full of bright ripples after its agitation around the great mill-wheel. The house was of more recent date, having been built by a wealthy yeoman of Queen Anne’s time, and had long ranges of square-headed sash windows, surmounted by a pediment, carved with emblems of Ceres and Bacchus, and a very tall front door, also with a pediment, and with stone stops leading up to it. Of the same era appeared to be the great gateway, and the turret above it, containing a clock, the hands of which pointed to 3.40.
Aubrey had rather it had been four, at which time the office closed. He looked round the court, which seemed very dean and rather empty—stables, barns, buildings, and dwelling-house not showing much sign of life, excepting the ceaseless hum and clack of the mill, and the dash of the water which propelled it. The windows nearest to him were so large and low, that he could look in and see that the first two or three belonged to living rooms, and the next two showed him business fittings, and a back that he took to be Leonard’s; but he paused in doubt how to present himself, and whether this were a welcome moment, and he was very glad to see in a doorway of the upper story of the mill buildings, the honest floury face of his father’s old patient—the foreman.
Greeting him in the open cordial way common to all Dr. May’s children, Aubrey was at once recognized, and the old man came down a step-ladder in the interior to welcome him, and answer his question where he should find Mr. Ward.
‘He is in the office, sir, there, to the left hand as you go in at the front door, but—’ and he looked up at the clock, ‘maybe, you would not mind waiting a bit till it strikes four. I don’t know whether master might be best pleased at young gentlemen coming to see him in office hours.’
‘Thank you,’ said Aubrey. ‘I did not mean to be too soon, Hardy, but I did not know how long the walk would be.’
Perhaps it would have been more true had he said that he had wanted to elude his sisters, but he was glad to accept a seat on a bundle of sacks tremulous with the motion of the mill, and to enter into a conversation with the old foreman, one of those good old peasants whose integrity and skill render them privileged persons, worth their weight in gold long after their bodily strength has given way.
‘Well, Hardy, do you mean to make a thorough good miller of Mr. Ward?’
‘Bless you, Master May, he’ll never stay here long enough.’
‘Why not?’
‘No, nor his friends didn’t ought to let him stay!’ added Hardy.
‘Why?’ said Aubrey. ‘Do you think so badly of your own trade, Hardy?’
But he could not get an answer from the oracle on this head. Hardy continued, ‘He’s a nice young gentleman, but he’ll never put up with it.’
‘Put up with what?’ asked Aubrey, anxiously; but at that instant a carter appeared at the door with a question for Master Hardy, and Aubrey was left to his own devices, and the hum and clatter of the mill, till the clock had struck four; and beginning to think that Hardy had forgotten him, he was about to set out and reconnoitre, when to his great joy Leonard himself came hurrying up, and heartily shook him by the hand.
‘Hardy told me you were here,’ he said. ‘Well done, old fellow, I didn’t think they would have let you come and see me.’
‘The girls did make a great row about it,’ said Aubrey, triumphantly, ‘but I was not going to stand any nonsense.’
