The Evil Guest
The Evil GuestThe Evil GuestCopyright
The Evil Guest
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu
The Evil Guest
"When Lust hath conceived, it bringeth forth Sin: and Sin,
when it is finished, bringeth forth Death."About sixty years ago, and somewhat more than twenty miles
from the ancient town of Chester, in a southward direction, there
stood a large, and, even then, an old-fashioned mansion-house. It
lay in the midst of a demesne of considerable extent, and richly
wooded with venerable timber; but, apart from the somber majesty of
these giant groups, and the varieties of the undulating ground on
which they stood, there was little that could be deemed attractive
in the place. A certain air of neglect and decay, and an
indescribable gloom and melancholy, hung over it. In darkness, it
seemed darker than any other tract; when the moonlight fell upon
its glades and hollows, they looked spectral and awful, with a sort
of churchyard loneliness; and even when the blush of the morning
kissed its broad woodlands, there was a melancholy in the salute
that saddened rather than cheered the heart of the
beholder.This antique, melancholy, and neglected place, we shall call,
for distinctness sake, Gray Forest. It was then the property of the
younger son of a nobleman, once celebrated for his ability and his
daring, but who had long since passed to that land where human
wisdom and courage avail naught. The representative of this noble
house resided at the family mansion in Sussex, and the cadet, whose
fortunes we mean to sketch in these pages, lived upon the narrow
margin of an encumbered income, in a reserved and unsocial
discontent, deep among the solemn shadows of the old woods of Gray
Forest.The Hon. Richard Marston was now somewhere between forty and
fifty years of age—perhaps nearer the latter; he still, however,
retained, in an eminent degree, the traits of manly beauty, not the
less remarkable for its unquestionably haughty and passionate
character. He had married a beautiful girl, of good family, but
without much money, somewhere about eighteen years before; and two
children, a son and a daughter, had been the fruit of this union.
The boy, Harry Marston, was at this time at Cambridge; and his
sister, scarcely fifteen, was at home with her parents, and under
the training of an accomplished governess, who had been recommended
to them by a noble relative of Mrs. Marston. She was a native of
France, but thoroughly mistress of the English language, and,
except for a foreign accent, which gave a certain prettiness to all
she said, she spoke it as perfectly as any native Englishwoman.
This young Frenchwoman was eminently handsome and attractive.
Expressive, dark eyes, a clear olive complexion, small even teeth,
and a beautifully-dimpling smile, more perhaps than a strictly
classic regularity of features, were the secrets of her
unquestionable influence, at first sight, upon the fancy of every
man of taste who beheld her.Mr. Marston's fortune, never very large, had been shattered
by early dissipation. Naturally of a proud and somewhat exacting
temper, he actively felt the mortifying consequences of his
poverty. The want of what he felt ought to have been his position
and influence in the county in which he resided, fretted and galled
him; and he cherished a resentful and bitter sense of every slight,
imaginary or real, to which the same fruitful source of annoyance
and humiliation had exposed him. He held, therefore, but little
intercourse with the surrounding gentry, and that little not of the
pleasantest possible kind; for, not being himself in a condition to
entertain, in that style which accorded with his own ideas of his
station, he declined, as far as was compatible with good breeding,
all the proffered hospitalities of the neighborhood; and, from his
wild and neglected park, looked out upon the surrounding world in a
spirit of moroseness and defiance, very unlike, indeed, to that of
neighborly good-will.In the midst, however, of many of the annoyances attendant
upon crippled means, he enjoyed a few of those shadowy indications
of hereditary importance, which are all the more dearly prized, as
the substantial accessories of wealth have disappeared. The mansion
in which he dwelt was, though old-fashioned, imposing in its
aspect, and upon a scale unequivocally aristocratic; its walls were
hung with ancestral portraits, and he managed to maintain about him
a large and tolerably respectable staff of servants. In addition to
these, he had his extensive demesne, his deer-park, and his
unrivalled timber, wherewith to console himself; and, in the
consciousness of these possessions, he found some imperfect
assuagement of those bitter feelings of suppressed scorn and
resentment, which a sense of lost station and slighted importance
engendered. Mr. Marston's early habits had, unhappily, been of a
kind to aggravate, rather than alleviate, the annoyances incidental
to reduced means. He had been a gay man, a voluptuary, and a
gambler. His vicious tastes had survived the means of their
gratification. His love for his wife had been nothing more than one
of those vehement and headstrong fancies, which, in self-indulgent
men, sometimes result in marriage, and which seldom outlive the
first few months of that life-long connection. Mrs. Marston was a
gentle, noble-minded woman. After agonies or disappointment, which
none ever suspected, she had at length learned to submit, in sad
and gentle acquiescence, to her fate. Those feelings, which had
been the charm of her young days, were gone, and, as she bitterly
felt, forever. For them there was no recall they could not return;
and, without complaint or reproach, she yielded to what she felt
was inevitable. It was impossible to look at Mrs. Marston, and not
to discern, at a glance, the ruin of a surpassingly beautiful
woman; a good deal wasted, pale, and chastened with a deep, untold
sorrow, but still possessing the outlines, both in face and form,
of that noble beauty and matchless grace, which had made her, in
happier days, the admired of all observers. But equally impossible
was it to converse with her, for even a minute, without hearing, in
the gentle and melancholy music of her voice, the sad echoes of
those griefs to which her early beauty had been sacrificed, an
undying sense of lost love, and happiness departed, never to come
again.One morning, Mr. Marston had walked, as was his custom when
he expected the messenger who brought from the neighboring post
office his letters, some way down the broad, straight avenue, with
its double rows of lofty trees at each side, when he encountered
the nimble emissary on his return. He took the letter-bag in
silence. It contained but two letters—one addressed to
"Mademoiselle de Barras, chez M. Marston," and the other to
himself. He took them both, dismissed the messenger, and opening
that addressed to himself, read as follows, while he slowly
retraced his steps towards the house:—Dear Richard,I am a whimsical fellow, as you doubtless remember, and have
lately grown, they tell me, rather hippish besides. I do not know
to which infirmity I am to attribute a sudden fancy that urges me
to pay you a visit, if you will admit me. To say truth, my dear
Dick, I wish to see a little of your part of the world, and, I will
confess it, en passant, to see a little of you too. I really wish
to make acquaintance with your family; and though they tell me my
health is very much shaken, I must say, in self-defense, I am not a
troublesome inmate. I can perfectly take care of myself, and need
no nursing or caudling whatever. Will you present this, my
petition, to Mrs. Marston, and report her decision thereon to me.
Seriously, I know that your house may be full, or some other
contretemps may make it impracticable for me just now to invade
you. If it be so, tell me, my dear Richard, frankly, as my
movements are perfectly free, and my time all my own, so that I can
arrange my visit to suit your convenience.
—Yours, &c.,WYNSTON E. BERKLEYP.S.—Direct to me at —— Hotel, in Chester, as I shall
probably be there by the time this reaches you."Ill-bred and pushing as ever," quoth Mr. Marston, angrily,
as he thrust the unwelcome letter into his pocket. "This fellow,
wallowing in wealth, without one nearer relative on earth than I,
and associated more nearly still with me the—pshaw! not
affection—the recollections of early and intimate companionship,
leaves me unaided, for years of desertion and suffering, to the
buffetings of the world, and the troubles of all but overwhelming
pecuniary difficulties, and now, with the cool confidence of one
entitled to respect and welcome, invites himself to my house.
Coming here," he continued, after a gloomy pause, and still pacing
slowly towards the house, "to collect amusing materials for next
season's gossip—stories about the married Benedick—the bankrupt
beau—the outcast tenant of a Cheshire wilderness"; and, as he said
this, he looked at the neglected prospect before him with an eye
almost of hatred. "Aye, to see the nakedness of the land is he
coming, but he shall be disappointed. His money may buy him a
cordial welcome at an inn, but curse me if it shall purchase him a
reception here."He again opened and glanced through the letter."Aye, purposely put in such a way that I can't decline it
without affronting him," he continued doggedly. "Well, then, he has
no one to blame but himself—affronted he shall be; I shall
effectually put an end to this humorous excursion. Egad, it is
rather hard if a man cannot keep his poverty to
himself."Sir Wynston Berkley was a baronet of large fortune—a selfish,
fashionable man, and an inveterate bachelor. He and Marston had
been schoolfellows, and the violent and implacable temper of the
latter had as little impressed his companion with feelings of
regard, as the frivolity and selfishness of the baronet had won the
esteem of his relative. As boys, they had little in common upon
which to rest the basis of a friendship, or even a mutual liking.
Berkley was gay, cold, and satirical; his cousin—for cousins they
were—was jealous, haughty, and relentless. Their negative
disinclination to one another's society, not unnaturally engendered
by uncongenial and unamiable dispositions, had for a time given
place to actual hostility, while the two young men were at Oxford.
In some intrigue, Marston discovered in his cousin a too-successful
rival; the consequence was, a bitter and furious quarrel, which,
but for the prompt and peremptory interference of friends, Marston
would undoubtedly have pushed to a bloody issue. Time had, however,
healed this rupture, and the young men came to regard one another
with the same feelings, and eventually to re-establish the same
sort of cold and indifferent intimacy which had subsisted between
them before their angry collision.Under these circumstances, whatever suspicion Marston might
have felt on the receipt of the unexpected, and indeed
unaccountable proposal, which had just reached him, he certainly
had little reason to complain of any violation of early friendship
in the neglect with which Sir Wynston had hitherto treated him. In
deciding to decline his proposed visit, however, Marston had not
consulted the impulses of spite or anger. He knew the baronet well;
he knew that he cherished no good will towards him, and that in the
project which he had thus unexpectedly broached, whatever indirect
or selfish schemes might possibly be at the bottom of it, no
friendly feeling had ever mingled. He was therefore resolved to
avoid the trouble and the expense of a visit in all respects
distasteful to him, and in a gentlemanlike way, but, at the same
time, as the reader may suppose, with very little anxiety as to
whether or not his gay correspondent should take offence at his
reply, to decline, once for all, the proposed
distinction.With this resolution, he entered the spacious and somewhat
dilapidated mansion which called him master; and entering a sitting
room, appropriated to his daughter's use, he found her there, in
company with her beautiful French governess. He kissed his child,
and saluted her young preceptress with formal
courtesy."Mademoiselle," said he, "I have got a letter for you; and,
Rhoda," he continued, addressing his pretty daughter, "bring this
to your mother, and say, I request her to read it."He gave her the letter he himself had just received, and the
girl tripped lightly away upon her mission.Had he narrowly scrutinised the countenance of the fair
Frenchwoman, as she glanced at the direction of that which he had
just placed in her hand, he might have seen certain transient, but
very unmistakable evidences of excitement and agitation. She
quickly concealed the letter, however, and with a sigh, the
momentary flush which it had called to her cheek subsided, and she
was tranquil as usual.Mr. Marston remained for some minutes—five, eight, or ten, we
cannot say precisely—pretty much where he had stood on first
entering the chamber, doubtless awaiting the return of his
messenger, or the appearance of his wife. At length, however, he
left the room himself to seek her; but, during his brief stay, his
previous resolution had been removed. By what influence we cannot
say; but removed completely it unquestionably was, and a final
determination that Sir Wynston Berkley should become his guest had
fixedly taken its place.As Marston walked along the passages which led from this
room, he encountered Mrs. Marston and his daughter."Well," said he, "you have read Wynston's
letter?""Yes," she replied, returning it to him; "and what answer,
Richard, do you purpose giving him?"She was about to hazard a conjecture, but checked herself,
remembering that even so faint an evidence of a disposition to
advise might possibly be resented by her cold and imperious
lord."I have considered it, and decided to receive him," he
replied."Ah! I am afraid—that is, I hope—he may find our housekeeping
such as he can enjoy," she said, with an involuntary expression of
surprise; for she had scarcely had a doubt that her husband would
have preferred evading the visit of his fine friend, under his
gloomy circumstances."If our modest fare does not suit him," said Marston, with
sullen bitterness, "he can depart as easily as he came. We, poor
gentlemen, can but do our best. I have thought it over, and made up
my mind.""And how soon, my dear Richard, do you intend fixing his
arrival?" she inquired, with the natural uneasiness of one upon
whom, in an establishment whose pretensions considerably exceeded
its resources, the perplexing cares of housekeeping
devolved."Why, as soon as he pleases," replied he, "I suppose you can
easily have his room prepared by tomorrow or next day. I shall
write by this mail, and tell him to come down at
once."Having said this in a cold, decisive way, he turned and left
her, as it seemed, not caring to be teased with further questions.
He took his solitary way to a distant part of his wild park, where,
far from the likelihood of disturbance or intrusion, he was often
wont to amuse himself for the live-long day, in the sedentary sport
of shooting rabbits. And there we leave him for the present,
signifying to the distant inmates of his house the industrious
pursuit of his unsocial occupation, by the dropping fire that
sullenly, from hour to hour, echoed from the remote
woods.Mrs. Marston issued her orders; and having set on foot all
the necessary preparations for so unwonted an event as a stranger's
visit of some duration, she betook herself to her little
boudoir—the scene of many an hour of patient but bitter suffering,
unseen by human eye, and unknown, except to the just Searcher of
hearts, to whom belongs mercy—and vengeance.Mrs. Marston had but two friends to whom she had ever spoken
upon the subject nearest her heart—the estrangement of her husband,
a sorrow to which even time had failed to reconcile her. From her
children this grief was carefully concealed. To them she never
uttered the semblance of a complaint. Anything that could by
possibility have reflected blame or dishonor upon their father, she
would have perished rather than have allowed them so much as to
suspect. The two friends who did understand her feelings, though in
different degrees, were, one, a good and venerable clergyman, the
Rev. Doctor Danvers, a frequent visitor and occasional guest at
Gray Forest, where his simple manners and unaffected benignity and
tenderness of heart had won the love of all, with the exception of
its master, and commanded even his respect. The second was no other
than the young French governess, Mademoiselle de Barras, in whose
ready sympathy and consolatory counsels she found no small
happiness. The society of this young lady had indeed become, next
to that of her daughter, her greatest comfort and
pleasure.Mademoiselle de Barras was of a noble though ruined French
family, and a certain nameless elegance and dignity attested, spite
of her fallen condition, the purity of her descent. She was
accomplished—possessed of that fine perception and sensitiveness,
and that ready power of self-adaptation to the peculiarities and
moods of others, which we term tact—and was, moreover, gifted with
a certain natural grace, and manners the most winning imaginable.
In short, she was a fascinating companion; and when the melancholy
circumstances of her own situation, and the sad history of her once
rich and noble family, were taken into account, with her striking
attractions of person and air, the combination of all these
associations and impressions rendered her one of the most
interesting persons that could well be imagined. The circumstances
of Mademoiselle de Barras's history and descent seemed to warrant,
on Mrs. Marston's part, a closer intimacy and confidence than
usually subsists between parties mutually occupying such a
relation.Mrs. Marston had hardly established herself in this little
apartment, when a light foot approached, a gentle tap was given at
the door, and Mademoiselle de Barras entered."Ah, mademoiselle, so kind—such pretty flowers. Pray sit
down," said the lady, with a sweet and grateful smile, as she took
from the tapered fingers of the foreigner the little bouquet, which
she had been at the pains to gather.Mademoiselle sat down, and gently took the lady's hand and
kissed it. A small matter will overflow a heart charged with
sorrow—a chance word, a look, some little office of kindness—and so
it was with mademoiselle's bouquet and gentle kiss. Mrs. Marston's
heart was touched; her eyes filled with bright tears; she smiled
gratefully upon her fair and humble companion, and as she smiled,
her tears overflowed, and she wept in silence for some
minutes."My poor mademoiselle," she said, at last, "you are so very,
very kind."Mademoiselle said nothing; she lowered her eyes, and pressed
the poor lady's hand.Apparently to interrupt an embarrassing silence, and to give
a more cheerful tone to their little interview, the governess, in a
gay tone, on a sudden said—"And so, madame, we are to have a visitor, Miss Rhoda tells
me—a baronet, is he not?""Yes, indeed, mademoiselle—Sir Wynston Berkley, a gay London
gentleman, and a cousin of Mr. Marston's," she
replied."Ha—a cousin!" exclaimed the young lady, with a little more
surprise in her tone than seemed altogether called for—"a cousin?
oh, then, that is the reason of his visit. Do, pray, madame, tell
me all about him; I am so much afraid of strangers, and what you
call men of the world. Oh, dear Mrs. Marston, I am not worthy to be
here, and he will see all that in a moment; indeed, indeed, I am
afraid. Pray tell me all about him."She said this with a simplicity which made the elder lady
smile, and while mademoiselle re-adjusted the tiny flowers which
formed the bouquet she had just presented to her, Mrs. Marston
good-naturedly recounted to her all she knew of Sir Wynston
Berkley, which, in substance, amounted to no more than we have
already stated. When she concluded, the young Frenchwoman continued
for some time silent, still busy with her flowers. But, suddenly,
she heaved a deep sigh, and shook her head."You seem disquieted, mademoiselle," said Mrs. Marston, in a
tone of kindness."I am thinking, madame," she said, still looking upon the
flowers which she was adjusting, and again sighing profoundly, "I
am thinking of what you said to me a week ago; alas!""I do not remember what it was, my good mademoiselle—nothing,
I am sure, that ought to grieve you—at least nothing that was
intended to have that effect," replied the lady, in a tone of
gentle encouragement."No, not intended, madame," said the young Frenchwoman,
sorrowfully."Well, what was it? Perhaps you misunderstood; perhaps I can
explain whatI said," replied Mrs. Marston, affectionately."Ah, madame, you think—you think I am unlucky," answered the
young lady, slowly and faintly."Unlucky! Dear mademoiselle, you surprise me," rejoined her
companion."I mean—what I mean is this, madame; you date unhappiness—if
not its beginning, at least its great aggravation and increase,"
she answered, dejectedly, "from the time of my coming here, madame;
and though I know you are too good to dislike me on that account,
yet I must, in your eyes, be ever connected with calamity, and look
like an ominous thing.""Dear mademoiselle, allow no such thought to enter your mind.
You do me great wrong, indeed you do," said Mrs. Marston, laying
her hand upon the young lady's, kindly.There was a silence for a little time, and the elder lady
resumed:—"I remember now what you allude to, dear mademoiselle—the
increased estrangement, the widening separation which severs me
from one unutterably dear to me—the first and bitter disappointment
of my life, which seems to grow more hopelessly incurable day by
day."Mrs. Marston paused, and, after a brief silence, the
governess said:—"I am very superstitious myself, dear madame, and I thought I
must have seemed to you an inauspicious inmate—in short, unlucky—as
I have said; and the thought made me very unhappy—so unhappy, that
I was going to leave you, madame—I may now tell you frankly—going
away; but you have set my doubts at rest, and I am quite happy
again.""Dear mademoiselle," cried the lady, tenderly, and rising, as
she spake, to kiss the cheek of her humble friend; "never—never
speak of this again. God knows I have too few friends on earth, to
spare the kindest and tenderest among them all. No, no. You little
think what comfort I have found in your warm-hearted and ready
sympathy, and how dearly I prize your affection, my poor
mademoiselle."The young Frenchwoman rose, with downcast eyes, and a
dimpling, happy smile; and, as Mrs. Marston drew her affectionately
toward her, and kissed her, she timidly returned the embrace of her
kind patroness. For a moment her graceful arms encircled her, and
she whispered to her, "Dear madame, how happy—how very happy you
make me."Had Ithuriel touched with his spear the beautiful young
woman, thus for a moment, as it seemed, lost in a trance of
gratitude and love, would that angelic form have stood the test
unscathed? A spectator, marking the scene, might have observed a
strange gleam in her eyes—a strange expression in her face—an
influence for a moment not angelic, like a shadow of some passing
spirit, cross her visibly, as she leaned over the gentle lady's
neck, and murmured, "Dear madame, how happy—how very happy you make
me." Such a spectator, as he looked at that gentle lady, might have
seen, for one dreamy moment, a lithe and painted serpent, coiled
round and round, and hissing in her ear.A few minutes more, and mademoiselle was in the solitude of
her own apartment. She shut and bolted the door, and taking from
her desk the letter which she had that morning received, threw
herself into an armchair, and studied the document profoundly. Her
actual revision and scrutiny of the letter itself was interrupted
by long intervals of profound abstraction; and, after a full hour
thus spent, she locked it carefully up again, and with a clear
brow, and a gay smile, rejoined her pretty pupil for a
walk.We must now pass over an interval of a few days, and come at
once to the arrival of Sir Wynston Berkley, which duly occurred
upon the evening of the day appointed. The baronet descended from
his chaise but a short time before the hour at which the little
party, which formed the family at Gray Forest were wont to assemble
for the social meal of supper. A few minutes devoted to the
mysteries of the toilet, with the aid of an accomplished valet,
enabled him to appear, as he conceived, without disadvantage at
this domestic reunion.Sir Wynston Berkley was a particularly gentleman-like person.
He was rather tall, and elegantly made, with gay, easy manners, and
something indefinably aristocratic in his face, which, however, was
a little more worn than his years would have strictly accounted
for. But Sir Wynston had been a roué, and, spite of the cleverest
possible making up, the ravages of excess were very traceable in
the lively beau of fifty. Perfectly well dressed, and with a manner
that was ease and gaiety itself, he was at home from the moment he
entered the room. Of course, anything like genuine cordiality was
out of the question; but Mr. Marston embraced his relative with
perfect good breeding, and the baronet appeared determined to like
everybody, and be pleased with everything. He had not been five
minutes in the parlor, chatting gaily with Mr. and Mrs. Marston and
their pretty daughter, when Mademoiselle de Barras entered the
room. As she moved towards Mrs. Marston, Sir Wynston rose, and,
observing her with evident admiration, said in an undertone,
inquiringly, to Marston, who was beside him—"And this?""That is Mademoiselle de Barras, my daughter's governess, and
Mrs.Marston's companion," said Marston, drily."Ha!" said Sir Wynston; "I thought you were but three at home
just now, and I was right. Your son is at Cambridge; I heard so
from our old friend, Jack Manbury. Jack has his boy there too.
Egad, Dick, it seems but last week that you and I were there
together.""Yes," said Marston, looking gloomily into the fire, as if he
saw, in its smoke and flicker, the phantoms of murdered time and
opportunity; "but I hate looking back, Wynston. The past is to me
but a medley of ill-luck and worse management.""Why what an ungrateful dog you are!" returned Sir Wynston,
gaily, turning his back upon the fire, and glancing round the
spacious and handsome, though somewhat faded apartment. "I was on
the point of congratulating you on the possession of the finest
park and noblest demesne in Cheshire, when you begin to grumble.
Egad, Dick, all I can say to your complaint is, that I don't pity
you, and there are dozens who may honestly envy you—that is
all."In spite of this cheering assurance, Marston remained
sullenly silent. Supper, however, had now been served, and the
little party assumed their places at the table."I am sorry, Wynston, I have no sport of any kind to offer
you here," said Marston, "except, indeed, some good trout-fishing,
if you like it. I have three miles of excellent fishing at your
command.""My dear fellow, I am a mere cockney," rejoined Sir Wynston;
"I am not a sportsman; I never tried it, and should not like to
begin now. No, Dick, what I much prefer is, abundance of your fresh
air, and the enjoyment of your scenery. When I was at Rouen three
years ago—""Ha!—Rouen? Mademoiselle will feel an interest in that; it is
her birth-place," interrupted Marston, glancing at the
Frenchwoman."Yes—Rouen—ah—yes!" said mademoiselle, with very evident
embarrassment.Sir Wynston appeared for a moment a little disconcerted too,
but rallied speedily, and pursued his detail of his doings at that
fair town of Normandy.