“’Tis a farewell I bid the place,” he had said, “though I may see it again. I came here as a boy, and in the first years of my young manhood, and he was always here to bid me welcome. One of my earliest memories”—they stood in the large saloon together, and he raised his eyes to a picture near them—“one of my first recollections here is of this young face with its blushing cheeks, and of my lord’s sorrowful tenderness as he told me that she had died and that his little son—who, had he lived, might have been as myself—had died with her.”
Whereupon Mistress Anne, with innocent tears and lowered voice, told him a story of how the night before her lord had been laid to rest, his widow had sat by his side through the slow hours, and had stroked his cold hands and spoken softly to him as if he could feel her lovingness, and on the morning before he left her, she had folded in his clasp a miniature of his young dead wife and a lock of her soft hair and her child’s.
“And ’twas, indeed, a tender, strange thing to see and hear,” said Anne, “for she said with such noble gentleness, that ’twas the first sweet lady who had been his wife—not herself—and that when she and her child should run to meet him in heaven he would forget that they had ever parted—and all would be well. Think you it will be so, your Grace?” her simple, filled eyes lifted to him appealingly.
“There is no marrying or giving in marriage, ’tis said,” answered his Grace, “and she whom he loved first—in his youth—surely——”
Mistress Anne’s eyes dwelt upon him in quiet wondering.
“’Tis strange how your Grace and her ladyship sometimes utter the same thoughts, as if you were but one mind,” she said. “’No marrying or giving in marriage,’ ’twas that she herself said.”
Dunstan’s Wolde passed into the hands of the next heir, and the countess and her sister went to their father’s estate of Wildairs in Gloucestershire, where, during the mourning, they lived in deep seclusion. ’Twas a long mourning, to the wonder of the neighbourhood, who, being accustomed to look upon this young lady as likely to furnish them forth with excitement, had begun at once to make plans for her future and decide what she would do next. Having been rid of her old husband and left an earl’s widow with a fine fortune, a town house, and some of the most magnificent jewels in England, ’twas not likely she would long bury herself in an old country house, hiding her beauty in weeds and sad-coloured draperies. She would make her period of seclusion as brief as decency would permit, and after it reappear in a blaze of brilliancy.
But she remained at Wildairs with her sister, Mistress Anne, only being seen on occasions at church, in her long and heavy draperies of black.


