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- FALLEN FORTUNES
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
-Title: Fallen Fortunes
-Author: Evelyn Everett-Green
-Release Date: March 24, 2014 [EBook #45201]
-Language: English
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FALLEN FORTUNES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The scheming kinsman (page 46).]
-
-
-
-
- FALLEN
- FORTUNES
-
-
- E. EVERETT-GREEN
-
-
-
- THOMAS NELSON AND SONS, LTD.
- LONDON, EDINBURGH, AND NEW YORK
- 1906
-
-
-
-
- *CONTENTS.*
-
- I. On the Field of Ramillies
- II. Hartsbourne
- III. The Scheming Kinsman
- IV. On the Road
- V. A High-born Dame
- VI. The Pastimes of the Town
- VII. A Fair Face
- VIII. A Startling Discovery
- IX. "A Mad World, my Masters"
- X. "The Old Lion"
- XI. The Lion's Den
- XII. Triumph
- XIII. The Hero of the Hour
- XIV. Fickle Fortune
- XV. Dark Days
- XVI. A Night Adventure
- XVII. In the House of the Duke
- XVIII. "Good Queen Anne"
- XIX. Love's Triumphing
- XX. Merry as a Marriage Bell
-
-
-
-
- *LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.*
-
-The scheming kinsman. . . . . . . Frontispiece
-
-The old garden was another favourite haunt of hers.
-
-He stood quite still to watch Lord Sandford lead away the fair
-Geraldine.
-
-The hero of the hour.
-
-
-
-
- *FALLEN FORTUNES.*
-
-
- *CHAPTER I.*
-
- *ON THE FIELD OF RAMILLIES.*
-
-
-"By the beard of the Prophet, we are in luck's way at last, Dicon; for
-if that be not the armies of the French and the Allies drawn up in
-battle array, my name is not Grey Dumaresq!"
-
-The speaker had just pushed his horse over the brow of a slope which he
-and his servant had for some time been mounting, through the steamy
-warmth of a foggy May morning. The thick haze which lay heavy in this
-region of marshy ground had hidden the surrounding country from them
-hitherto; but as they reached the summit of the gradual rise they had
-been ascending, the cloud wreaths suddenly drifted away, and the sun
-began to shine out upon the undulating plain stretched before their
-eyes; and lo, the plain was alive with squadrons of soldiers--infantry,
-cavalry, artillery--drawn up in battle array; and the note of the bugle
-rang through the air, whilst away in the distance, on the opposite side
-of the plain, there was a movement which told that already the battle
-had begun. A sullen roar from the guns boomed forth, and the whole
-plain shook with the reverberation. Great masses of smoke rolled along
-and slowly dispersed after each salvo; but it was upon the evolutions of
-the bodies of horsemen and footmen that the keen eyes of the youthful
-traveller were intently fixed.
-
-"Dicon," he cried, "this is in all sooth a battle; and where the battle
-rages, there will the great victor of Blenheim be. We have not chanced
-upon this route in vain. Men warned us of the perils of seeking passage
-through a country which has become the theatre of war; but fortune's
-star has befriended us thus far, and now, if I mistake me not, we stand
-within sight of the greatest warrior of the age. For greatly shall I be
-astonished if the Duke of Marlborough himself be not conducting the
-evolutions of yonder squadrons."
-
-The brilliant dark eyes of the young man lighted with a great glow of
-excitement and admiration. He shaded them with his hand, and intently
-followed the evolutions of the moving masses in the plain stretched
-before his eyes. He was looking upon the village of Tavieres and the
-mound of Ottomond, and the waters of the Mehaign rolled below at his
-feet. The right wing of the French army rested here, as he quickly saw;
-but for the moment the main activity lay over in the distance beyond
-Ramillies and Offuz, in the direction of Anderkirk. Yet as the
-traveller stood intently gazing, he saw a movement in the line of the
-allied army on this nearer side, and he exclaimed aloud in his
-excitement,--
-
-"See, Dicon, see! That attack yonder is but a feint. The key of the
-position lies here beneath us at Tavieres, with its Tomb of Ottomond.
-See yonder those regiments of marching soldiers creeping round beneath
-the shelter of that rising ground! They will fling themselves upon the
-enemy's right, whilst the French general is diverting his available
-forces to protect his left. Villeroi, my friend, you did not well to
-dispose your forces in concave lines. You lose time in passing from
-place to place; and with such a general as our English Duke pitted
-against you, you cannot afford to lose any point in the game. Ha! See
-that? The Dutch and English soldiers are charging down upon Tavieres!
-Watch how they come on--a great resistless tide of well-drilled
-veterans. See how they sweep all before them! See how the French fly
-forth! Ha, Villeroi, what think you now? Yes, you see your error; fain
-would you hurry back your reserves from left to right. But the time has
-gone by. They are miles away, and here are the Allies carrying all
-before them! Hurrah for old England! hurrah for the great Duke! Dicon,
-have you stomach for the fight? Do you remember Barcelona and
-Mountjuich? If we were men enough to help there, why not here too?"
-
-The fellow thus addressed grinned from ear to ear, and looked to the
-pistols in his holsters and the sabre slung at his side. It would not
-have been easy to define by a glance the nationality of this pair, who
-evidently stood to each other in the relation of master and man. Their
-faces were tanned by sun and wind, their dress, which was somewhat
-travel-stained and worse for wear, had plainly been purchased as need
-suggested--a piece here, and a piece there, and not all in the same
-land.
-
-The speaker wore upon his fair curling hair--which was his own, and not
-one of the immense periwigs then in vogue at home and abroad--a Spanish
-sombrero of picturesque shape. His faded doublet, with its gold
-lacings, might have been English made, and was well cut, showing off the
-graceful lines of the slender, well-proportioned figure; but he wore
-buskins of soft Spanish leather with gold eyelets, and the short cloak
-slung across the saddle-bow had been purchased in Italy. He rode a
-strong, mettlesome barb, whose glossy bay coat shone like satin in the
-sunlight. The horse of the servant looked somewhat jaded, but that of
-the master might have just been taken from the stable. He was one of
-those splendid chargers, half Irish, half Spanish by blood, whose
-sureness of foot, untiring energy, and unquenchable spirit and mettle,
-made them at once the pride and joy of their owners. Young Dumaresq
-might have cut a finer figure in his own person, had he not elected to
-spend so large a portion of his remaining fortune upon the beast he now
-bestrode. But he had never for a moment regretted the purchase; and he
-boasted that Don Carlos had saved his life on more occasions than one.
-
-The young man's eyes were full of fire; his hand was upon the hilt of
-his sword, which lay loose in its scabbard; the horse was pawing the
-ground and pulling on the rein, for the sound of battle was in his ears,
-and he was snorting with eagerness to hurl himself into the ranks of the
-combatants. The blare of the bugles, the roar of the guns, the shouts,
-screams, cheers of soldiers, the clash of sabres and the rattle of
-musketry, were as music to his ears. Suddenly flinging up his head, and
-uttering something between a snort and a neigh, the creature was off
-like an arrow from a bow, heading wildly, yet with a restraint and
-self-control which spoke worlds for his training, towards the
-hurly-burly raging through the battlefield below. Grey Dumaresq cast a
-half-laughing glance in the direction of his servant behind, who had set
-spurs to his steed and was following.
-
-"Needs must, where the devil drives!" he said with a laugh. "Don Carlos
-will make soldiers of us, whether we will or no."
-
-The battle of Ramillies was now raging. Marlborough's generalship had
-already made its mark. Tavieres was in his hands; the right wing of the
-enemy was shaken, and the Dutch and English soldiers were preparing to
-charge the closely-serried lines of the French, even before the
-travellers had reached the scene of action. They heard whilst they were
-yet half a mile away the concussion of that charge, the yells of the
-soldiers, the cheers of the Allies as they felt the wavering of their
-foes. But the French, though the first line had been broken, were not
-vanquished yet. The second line was composed of the pick of the young
-nobility--men careless of personal peril, disdainful of death, desirous
-only of glory and of victory. Upon these picked troops the Allies flung
-themselves in fury; but they stood their ground and hurled back the
-attacking lines, as the rocks of an iron-bound coast fling back the
-oncoming waves of the ocean. It was now impossible for the traveller to
-gauge what was happening. He was too near the scene of the tumult; but
-he was in the very nick of time to bear a share in one of the minor
-incidents of the day, which might have proved one of infinite disaster
-to the cause of his country.
-
-The Duke of Marlborough, who had been directing the attack upon the
-French right, saw that this second charge was less successful than the
-first, and giving orders for reinforcements to be hurried up, he himself
-galloped in the direction of the fight, to encourage with his own
-presence the wavering soldiers, and direct the next critical operations
-in person. He was exceedingly well mounted, and his horse, wild with
-excitement, and feeling all that sympathy with his master's mood which
-is natural to these noble creatures, carried him so swiftly forward,
-that after he had galloped along the lines, giving orders here, there,
-and everywhere as he passed, he overshot his position, and without
-noting it in the confusion, was almost alone and at some small distance
-from his own lines. Before he could pull up his excited horse, there
-was a sudden rush from the French lines. Several young nobles and
-gentlemen had recognized the Duke, had taken in the accidental isolation
-of his position, and galloping forward with one consent, surrounded him
-before he was well aware what had happened.
-
-It was just at this critical moment that the two travellers, half
-stunned by the noise of the battle, ignorant of what was happening, but
-eager for a share in the fray, topped a little rise in the ground which
-hid the plain from them, and came full upon the scene of the Duke's
-danger. The great General never lacked presence of mind, was never
-daunted by personal peril. He had realized his position, and setting
-his horse at a furious gallop, he had already broken through the ring of
-would-be captors, and was charging furiously for his own lines. At the
-very moment when Grey Dumaresq and his servant took in the meaning of
-what they saw, he had put his horse at a wide ditch which lay across his
-path, and the animal was rising to the leap.
-
-"Zounds! but the beast is down! They will have him again!"
-
-This shout rose from Dicon's throat. Grey set his teeth hard.
-
-"It is the Duke himself; they shall never take him. Don Carlos shall
-save him from that!"
-
-The Duke's horse had fallen heavily, throwing his rider over his head.
-Others besides his foes were heading wildly for the spot. All who saw
-it knew how much hung upon the turn of the next few seconds. First of
-all came the young stranger, who flung himself from his splendid horse,
-just as Marlborough rose to his feet, bruised and shaken, but with every
-faculty alert.
-
-"Mount, sire, mount!" cried the traveller, holding the horse by the head
-to still his excited plunging. "The enemy are closing round; but only
-mount, and he will carry you safely. I will stake my last ducat upon
-it!"
-
-The Duke had hold of the saddle by now; one of his own officers sprang
-forward to hold the stirrup. Next instant the General was in the saddle;
-but the head of the Colonel who stood at the stirrup was rolling upon
-the ground. A cannon ball had carried it off. How the Duke had escaped
-was a marvel and a mystery.
-
-Excitement and lust of battle had fast hold of Grey Dumaresq and his
-horse. The gallant animal carried the Duke safely back to his own
-lines, amid the cheers of his soldiers. The young man swung himself
-upon the back of the riderless horse belonging to the killed Colonel,
-and followed him, scarce thinking what he was doing. None forbade him.
-Many had seen his prompt and timely action; many watched him as the tide
-of battle raged this way and that, and saw that, whether a trained
-soldier or not, this young stranger was no novice in the art of war.
-The Duke himself turned more than once to watch him, as he joined in
-some headlong charge, and turned and wheeled, or gave thrust or parry
-with the ease of practice and the skill which only comes through
-experience. Once in a pause he beckoned the young man to his side, and
-said,--
-
-"I would speak with you, sir, when I am at leisure. Come to my
-quarters, wherever they may be, when the battle is over. I have
-somewhat to say to you."
-
-The young man bowed low, and promised compliance with this request; but
-it was many long hours before he and the victorious General stood face
-to face. The battle itself had been won in less than four hours, but
-the pursuit had been long, lasting far into the night; and the dawn was
-well-nigh breaking in the eastern sky when Grey received a message that
-the Duke desired speech of him in the house at Meklert, where he had
-stopped short, whilst his soldiers continued the pursuit of the flying
-foe almost up to the walls of Louvain.
-
-Marlborough was sitting at a table, whereon stood the remains of a hasty
-meal; and from the writing materials before him, it was plain that he
-had been penning one of those dispatches to his wife without which he
-could never rest, even after the most arduous day's campaigning. He had
-changed some of his clothes, and though pale and somewhat jaded,
-preserved that air of elegance and distinction which was always one of
-his most marked characteristics. But even without spotless linen and
-fine array, there was something in the high-bred courtesy of
-Marlborough's manner, and in the singular beauty of his face and person,
-which always won the hearts of those about him, and particularly so
-during those years when the magnificence of his military genius was
-making him the man of greatest mark in Europe.
-
-He rose as the young stranger was ushered in, and offered his hand with
-a frank and gracious courtesy free from any alloy of condescension or
-patronage.
-
-"I wish to thank you in person, sir, for the great service you this day
-rendered me with such timely promptitude. I have never bestridden a
-better horse, and owe you much for the loan. I would fain learn the
-name of the gentleman to whom I am so deeply indebted."
-
-"My name, your Grace, is Grey Dumaresq; and that of my horse, Don
-Carlos. I thank you for your gracious words. We shall feel honoured
-for all time in that kind Fortune gave us the chance of rendering you
-some small aid in a moment of peril. The world would have been terribly
-the poorer by this day's work, had mischance touched the Duke of
-Marlborough!"
-
-The General smiled, and motioned the young man to be seated. He himself
-took a seat opposite, and studied him with some attention.
-
-"If you and your good horse are in any sort disposed to put your
-strength and skill at the service of your country, Mr. Dumaresq, I think
-I can promise you a position not far from my own person, which will not
-be without opportunities of profit, and will give scope to your prowess
-with sword and lance, which I have had the opportunity of observing more
-than once this day."
-
-The young man's face flushed with pleasure. He looked eagerly into the
-face of the great man.
-
-"Were I a free agent, your Grace, most gladly would I take advantage of
-your offer, asking nothing better at Fortune's hands than to serve you
-faithfully. But I am on my way to England to learn news of my father.
-For three years I have been absent from my native shores. For three
-years I have been a wanderer, and, I fear me, a spendthrift to boot. I
-have spent or squandered the fortune with which I started forth. Rumour
-has reached me that my father's health has given way, and that I am
-needed at home. I fear me I have not been a good son to him heretofore.
-I must therefore seek to be the solace of his declining years, if the
-reports I have heard concerning him be true."
-
-Marlborough mused awhile with a slight smile upon his lips. He had a
-good memory for names, and had an idea that Sir Hugh Dumaresq, the
-probable father of the youth before him, had not been a man to inspire
-any very deep affection in the heart of his son. He bore the reputation
-of being a rake of the first order. It was said that he had broken his
-wife's heart, and cared nothing for the boy who would succeed him.
-
-"That is a pious resolution on your part, my friend. I trust you may be
-rewarded, and I will not seek to stay you. Methinks your mother was a
-good and gentle woman. Her son will live to do her credit yet."
-
-The young man's eyes lighted, and his face softened.
-
-"My mother was an angel upon this earth. Would God I had not lost her
-so soon! Did you know her, my lord? She was kinswoman to the hapless
-Lord Grey, who took up the cause of the Duke of Monmouth twenty years
-since, and whom your Grace defeated and routed on the field of
-Sedgemoor, fatal to so many. She gave me her name, and she bequeathed
-to me the small fortune which passed into my keeping three years ago,
-when I came of age. Since then I have been a wanderer in many lands. I
-have seen hard blows given and taken; I have been in many perils and
-battles. I was with Lord Peterborough when he fell upon the fort of
-Mountjuich, and made himself master of Barcelona, just when all hope of
-taking it seemed at an end. I have fought in the ranks of the Duke of
-Savoy against the veterans of France. I have been a soldier of fortune
-for this year or more, and though often in peril and hard pressed, have
-never received aught but a scratch now and again. I did hope that I
-should not travel northwards without seeing something of the campaign
-under the great Duke, whose name is in all men's mouths; but I did not
-dare to ask or hope for the honour which has been mine to-day."
-
-Marlborough's eyes lighted as the young man spoke, and he asked many
-quick and pertinent questions of the traveller anent those lands of
-Spain and Italy, in whose politics and disposition of parties he was so
-keenly interested. He had desired above all things to prosecute this
-summer an Italian campaign. Difficulties with the Dutch field-deputies
-alone hindered the more dashing and offensive policy which he would so
-gladly have adopted. He listened with keen interest to Grey's account
-of his journey through Savoy, his interview with Victor Amadeus, and his
-successful feat of carrying important dispatches into Turin, though
-hemmed in by the French, and waiting sorrowfully for relief; and his
-escape thence, and journey to the camp or Prince Eugene, who was seeking
-to carry relief to the Duke of Savoy, and eventually to drive the French
-back over their own borders.
-
-All this was intensely interesting to Marlborough, and he more than ever
-felt a desire to keep in his service a youth who seemed to possess so
-many of the qualifications which he most prized. But he was a man, too,
-who never undervalued the domestic side of life, or willingly interfered
-with the duties engendered by filial or conjugal ties. So he checked
-the words which had well-nigh risen once again to his lips, and only
-said graciously,--
-
-"You have indeed been smiled upon by Dame Fortune, Mr. Dumaresq. Many a
-young blood would give half his fortune for the chances you have had.
-Methinks the world will hear of you yet. The brow of a poet, the thews
-of a warrior, a head calm and well-balanced, and a soul that shrinks not
-in the hour of peril--"
-
-He paused a moment, and the young man's cheek glowed.
-
-"Your Grace thinks too highly of my poor merits, I fear me. I trust I
-have not spoken as a braggart; for, in sooth, it is little I have to
-boast me of. A good horse beneath me, a faithful comrade by my side, a
-keen Toledo blade in mine hand, and all else came of itself. I have
-been happy in my days of peril and adventure; but now I must lay aside
-my weapons and my roving habits, and strive to show myself a good son,
-and take up my duties as my father's right hand and helper, if it be
-true that he is laid aside from active life, and needs me with him
-henceforth."
-
-Marlborough had taken up a pen, and was writing a few lines upon a sheet
-of paper which lay upon the table. When he had finished, he handed it
-open to the young man.
-
-"A pass for yourself and your servant, Mr. Dumaresq; you may find it
-useful in passing through a disturbed country. But you will be wise to
-avoid the French frontier, and all cities where they have garrisons, and
-to confine yourself to the Dutch Netherlands, to make your way to the
-Hague, and thence to England. With this pass in your possession, you
-should then have small difficulty in travelling without molestation.
-And let me ask you if you have funds sufficient for your needs, since it
-is dear work at times travelling through a country devastated by war,
-and I would not have my benefactor crippled for lack of a few pieces of
-gold."
-
-The young man's face flushed slightly, but his eyes were frank and
-smiling. He laid his hand upon an inner breast pocket, and tapped it
-significantly.
-
-"I thank your Grace from my heart; but, albeit I have squandered my
-fortune something too lavishly, I have yet enough and to spare to take
-me home. Were it otherwise," he added, with a very engaging look upon
-his handsome features, "there is nobody to whom I would be more gladly
-indebted than to his Grace of Marlborough."
-
-The Duke's face was pleasant to see. He had taken a great liking for
-this young man. He hesitated a moment, and said,--
-
-"You would not care to sell your horse? I would give a goodly price for
-such a charger."
-
-"My lord, if I loved him less, most gladly would I beg your Grace's
-acceptance of him, and would rejoice that Don Carlos should be thus
-honoured. As it is, he is the greatest friend and best comrade I
-possess in the world. I trow I must needs take him home with me."
-
-"You are right, boy, you are right. And it is better so; for he might
-meet a bloody end any moment in these rough campaigning days. But you
-must not go hence without some token of the good will and gratitude John
-Churchill bears you. Take this ring, and wear it for my sake. And
-should ever trouble, or loss, or misfortune fall upon you, and you be in
-need, in my absence abroad, of a friend at home, take it and show it to
-my wife. I shall write to her of this day's peril, and how I was saved
-in the nick of time; and when she sees that ring in your hands, she will
-know who was her husband's deliverer, and will know, too, how to receive
-and reward him."
-
-The ring held out was a large amethyst of great brilliance and beauty,
-with a curious oriental-looking head engraved upon it, with what might
-be a legend in some Eastern tongue. It was a trinket which, once seen,
-would not easily be forgotten, and Grey Dumaresq slipped it upon his
-finger with a smile of gratification. It was no small thing to feel
-himself thus honoured by Europe's greatest general.
-
-He rose to his feet and bowed low; but Marlborough held out his hand and
-pressed his fingers warmly. "I shall not forget you, my friend. I trust
-that yours will be one of the faces that will greet me first, when I
-shall return home to England after the close of the campaign."
-
-The young man's face lighted with pleasure at these words.
-
-"I think your Grace may rely upon that," he said. "I thank you with all
-my heart for this most gracious reception."
-
-"The thanks are mine to give--yours to receive," spoke the Duke with his
-winning graciousness. "Farewell, my friend. May Dame Fortune continue
-to smile upon your career; and may you live to be prosperous and famous,
-and find one to love and be loved by faithfully--for, believe me,
-without true conjugal love, a man's life is desolate and empty, and
-nothing can fill the ache of a heart that has no loving ones at home to
-rejoice with him in his joy and weep at his misfortunes. Ambition may
-go far, success may be sweet; but it is love which is the true elixir of
-life. A man who loves and is loved can defy misfortune, poverty, even
-age and sickness and death; for love alone is eternal."
-
-He spoke like one inspired, and his whole face kindled. Grey Dumaresq
-never forgot the smile upon the face of the great victorious General, as
-he saw it in that little room at Meldert on the morrow of the victory of
-Ramillies.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER II.*
-
- *HARTSBOURNE.*
-
-
-The soft June dusk was falling with dewy freshness over smiling meadow
-and forest glade, and the long, long shadows were melting away in the
-dimness of a night that would never be dark, when Grey Dumaresq halted
-upon the brow of a little hill, and gazed before and around him with
-eager pleasure, not untinged with wistfulness.
-
-Somewhere amid those swelling woodlands lying to the south-west lay his
-childhood's home. He had hoped to make this spot ere the sun sank; and
-then he knew he could have traced the gleam of the shining streamlet,
-slipping like a silver streak between masses of sombre green. He might
-even, if the leaves had not made too thick a screen, have descried the
-twisted chimneys and timbered gables of the old house itself. His heart
-beat and his throat swelled as he gazed out over the darkening prospect.
-How he had loved that home of his so long as it had been blessed by his
-mother's presence there! With what proud delight had he sometimes
-pictured to himself the time when it might be his own, his very own!
-From childhood he had been called "the little master--the little heir."
-If his mother had not dubbed him so, the servants had. For Sir Hugh
-Dumaresq, alas, had not been a man to inspire either affection or
-respect in the hearts of servants or of son, and the child had dreamed
-dreams of the golden days which he and his mother might some day enjoy,
-when he should be lord of all, and live to wipe away tears from her
-eyes, and ensure that nothing should trouble or harass her again.
-
-That fond dream had died its own death when the mother was laid to sleep
-beneath the churchyard sod, and the boy, broken-hearted and indifferent
-to his fate, had gone forth first to school and then to college, and had
-known the sweet word "home" no longer.
-
-It was years now since he had seen Hartsbourne. At first he could not
-bear the idea of revisiting it, to find it empty of the one loved
-presence which had made it what it was to him. Afterwards his father
-had ceased to dwell there, had lived more and more in London, had even
-let the old Manor, as Grey heard before he quitted England for the
-roving life of the past three years.
-
-He had been somewhat hurt and angry when this was told him; for he had
-planned to go and bid the old place farewell, and he no longer cared to
-do so then. True, it was a kinsman who dwelt there now. His father had
-spoken of him with a cynical smile.
-
-"He is next of kin, after you, my son; and he has a greater gift of
-thrift than will ever be mine or yours, I take it. If anything should
-befall you on these wanderings upon which your heart is set, he would be
-the one to come after me, and take title and estates in his own right.
-If he like now to pay me my price, he may share the old house with the
-rats and the bats, for all I care. I love not to spend good money upon
-leaking roofs and bowing walls. Give me the parks and the
-coffee-houses, the Mall and the play-house! The devil may fly away with
-that rotten old house, for all I care!"
-
-This sentiment, rapped out with a good many of the fashionable oaths of
-the time, had been Grey's first intimation that his beloved old home was
-falling into decay. As a child it had seemed all the more perfect from
-that lack of newness or primness, the wildness of the garden, the
-encroachments of weed and woodland, which mark the first stages of
-decay. These words had opened his eyes to the fact that his father was
-letting the old place take care of itself, without regard to the future,
-and even then he had been conscious of the stirrings of a certain vague
-resentment. But he had been powerless to act; for although he had just
-received a small fortune which his mother had hoarded for him, and which
-had been nursed for him by a kinsman on the Grey side, he had no power
-to take over Hartsbourne and expend his wealth upon the old home;
-moreover, by that time the longing for travel and adventure was keen
-upon him, and he had made every arrangement for a tour of the then known
-world. His father rather encouraged than lamented his proposed absence;
-and the youth longed to be his own master, and to feel the strength of
-his wings.
-
-Yet now, after three years' wandering about the world, Grey found
-himself gazing with a swelling heart upon the familiar outlines of the
-region of his childhood's home, and the voices of the past seemed
-calling him aloud--tender, sweet-toned voices, which had been silent for
-long, but which awoke now to cry aloud with strange insistence.
-
-The solemn moon rose over the tree-tops as Grey gazed breathlessly upon
-the dim panorama before him, and instantly the world became flooded with
-a mystic radiance. A church spire stood suddenly out like a silver
-beacon, and Grey caught his breath as he watched; for his mother's grave
-lay beneath the walls of that little church, and the cross upon its apex
-seemed like a finger beckoning to him to come.
-
-"Yonder is our goal, Dicon," spoke the young man, as his servant, whom
-he had outridden in his eager haste, spurred up the ridge to his side.
-"You cannot see the house in this uncertain light; but it lies in yon
-deep hollow, away to the right from the church. The river winds about
-it, guarding it from ill, as I used to think in my boyish fantasy. I
-have seen the harts and does come down from the forest to drink at its
-waters. Hartsbourne was the name they gave the house, and methinks it
-was well named. Ah me!--to think how many years have passed since I
-beheld it all! Hark! Can you not hear the old familiar voices calling
-the wanderer home?"
-
-The honest servant nodded his head with a smile upon his rugged
-features. He loved his young master devotedly, and was not unaccustomed
-to share his musings, whether they were dashed with poetic melancholy or
-were full of reckless daring. Whatever his master's mood, honest Dick
-admired him with equal fervour. As their horses picked a way down the
-descent in the darkness, he hazarded a question.
-
-"You think you will find your noble father there, sir?"
-
-"Why, surely yes, Dicon. Where should a man be when failing in health
-and strength, if not at his own home?"
-
-"As for that, sir, I know nothing. But you have told me how that he
-loved not his own house, but gave it over into the hands of his kinsman,
-that he might take his pleasure elsewhere."
-
-"Very true, Dicon; but that was when he was hale and strong. When
-ill-health and feebleness overtook him, I doubt not that all was
-changed. True, I have not heard from him these many months; but that is
-no marvel, since I myself have been a very wandering Jew. But the
-gentleman who brought me news of him unawares did say that he was about
-to quit London, for whose giddy round he had no longer strength or
-inclination. I have never doubted but that Hartsbourne would be the
-place of his choice; and hither have I come. I might have learned news
-of him by going straight to London; but why turn aside from our way for
-that, when I feel so sure that it is here we shall find him? Doth not
-nature call every man home to his bed at night, and to his own home at
-the close of his life? My father is not old--Heaven send he may live
-long yet; but if disease has crippled his powers and robbed him of his
-zest of life, I doubt not but that it is here we shall surely find him."
-
-Two days previously the travellers had landed safely at the port of
-Harwich, having had a safe and speedy crossing from the Hague. The pass
-given them by the Duke of Marlborough had rendered their journey from
-Louvain an easy one. From the seaport, Grey had taken the direct road
-into Hertfordshire, feeling certain that here, and not in London, would
-he now find his father. He had hoped to arrive ere set of sun; but a
-few mischances along the road, and the sultry heat of the midday hours,
-had delayed them. Nevertheless, being now so near, he pressed on
-steadily. He could not rest so near to home, save beneath the old
-roof-tree. As the windings of the path grew more familiar, his heart
-throbbed in his breast. Here they passed the boundary of his father's
-estate. That broken cross marked the spot. And yonder, sleeping in the
-moonlight, hoary and beautiful, lay the ruined fragments of what had
-once been an old priory. He could see that the walls had crumbled away
-during his years of absence; but one beautiful arch still stood as of
-old, the delicate tracery showing clear in the moonlight. White owls
-flitted from the thick wreaths of ivy, and hooted weirdly as they sailed
-by on noiseless wing. A wild cat leaped out with a menacing yell, and
-both horses snorted and plunged at the sight and sound. Dick's hand was
-on his pistol stock; but seeing what it was, he uttered a half uneasy
-laugh.
-
-"A bad omen, my master," he spoke, as he quieted his horse. "That wild
-black thing was liker some witch or devil than aught I have clapped eyes
-on this many a day. Saints preserve us from spell or charm!"
-
-For Dick, albeit a good Protestant by profession, had caught some of the
-phrases of the people in whose lands he had dwelt, and he was by no
-means free from superstition, though a bold enough rogue to meet any
-peril that he could combat with sword or bullet.
-
-"Tush, Dicon! Dost fear a cat, man? For my part, I love all the wild
-things of the woods, and would be the friend of all. See yonder! There
-should be a tangled path leading down through the forest glade, and
-across the stream by a ford to the house itself. Methinks I cannot lose
-the way, though the path be overgrown, and the light
-treacherous.--Onward, good Carlos! Fodder and rest are nigh at hand.
-Within the space of half an hour you and I should both be installed
-safely at home."
-
-Home! The word was as music to his ears. It seemed to set itself to
-the beat of the horses' hoofs along the tangled path, which Grey had
-some trouble in finding. But once found, he was able to trace it
-without difficulty; and soon the soft whisper of the water fell upon his
-ears, and the stream lay before him shining in the moonlight.
-
-How beautiful it was upon this still June night! The young green of the
-trees could not shut out the silvery beams of the moon. The forest was
-full of whispering voices, and every voice seemed to be welcoming back
-the stranger-son. The warblers amid the sedges and the fringe of alders
-along the course of the winding stream filled the air with soft music,
-not less sweet, if less powerful, than that of the nightingale pouring
-out his heart in song a little farther away. Sometimes a sleeping deer
-in some deep hollow sprang up almost from beneath their feet, and
-dashed, phantom-like, away into the dim aisles of the wood.
-
-And now the wall loomed up before them which separated the house and its
-precincts from the wilderness of wood and water beyond. Grey well knew
-this mouldering wall, from which the coping had fallen in many places,
-and which showed more than one ill-repaired breach in the once sound
-masonry. The ivy had grown into a tangled mass upon it, and was helping
-to drag it down. Any active marauder could have scaled it easily. But
-Grey turned his horse, and skirted round it for some distance. For he
-knew that a door at the angle gave entrance into the stable-yard, and
-from thence to the courtyard and entrance-hall of the old house; and as
-it was already past midnight, he preferred to take this way rather than
-approach by the avenue to the front of the house.
-
-He turned the angle of the wall, and there was the entrance he was
-making for. But how desolate it all looked! The double doors had
-rusted from off their hinges, and stood open, none seeming to care to
-close them at night. The courtyard was so grass-grown that the feet of
-the horses scarcely sounded as they entered. A range of stables stood
-half open, some mouldy straw rotting in the stalls, but no signs of life
-either in the stables below or the living-rooms above. Grey directed
-Dicon to the forage store, and bade him look if there were not something
-to be found there for the horses; and whilst the man was thus engaged,
-finding enough odds and ends to serve for a meal for the beasts, the
-master passed through an inner door into a second courtyard, and gazed
-upward at a range of lancet windows which, in former days, had belonged
-to the rooms occupied by the servants.
-
-Not a light glimmered in any casement; not a dog barked challenge or
-welcome. It was not wonderful that the house should be dark and silent
-at such an hour; but it was more than darkness which reigned here.
-There was a look of utter desolation and neglect brooding over the
-place. Broken casements hung crazily, and swung creaking in the night
-air. Tiles had slipped from the roof, chimney stacks seemed tottering to
-their fall. True, the great nail-studded oaken door, which Grey well
-remembered as leading through a long arched passage past the servants'
-quarters and into the front entrance-hall, was closed and locked; but
-rust had eaten deep into all the iron work, and cobwebs hung in festoons
-from the eaves of the dilapidated porch.
-
-In vain Grey beat upon the door with the pommel of his sword. Not a
-sound from within betokened the presence of living creature. A sudden
-fear shook him lest he had come too late. This idea had never troubled
-him before. His father was still young in years. Dissipation might
-have weakened him, made him an easy prey to disease; but surely, surely
-had aught worse than that befallen, he would have heard it--he would
-have been summoned back. It was not any very tender bond that had
-existed betwixt father and son; but after all, they had no one else.
-Grey felt his heart grow suddenly cold within him.
-
-Then a new idea entered his head. He turned away from the door, and
-passed hastily through the courtyard into a walled enclosure beyond,
-which had plainly once been a fine kitchen-garden, where giant espaliers
-still lined the paths, and masses of apple blossom glimmered ghostly in
-the moonlight. Striding along one of the paths under the house wall,
-where shuttered windows, looking like blind eyes, gave back a stony
-stare, he reached at last a quaint little offshoot of the house, set in
-an angle where house and garden wall joined; and he uttered a short
-exclamation of satisfaction as he saw that here there were traces of
-habitation in clean, bright window panes, flowers in a strip of border
-beneath, and a door that looked as though it could move upon its hinges.
-Upon this door he thumped with hearty good will.
-
-"Jock! Jock! Wake up, man--wake up! Don't tell me that you are a
-ghost too--that the old house is peopled only with ghosts of the
-past.--A dog's bark! Good! Where there is dog, there is man.--Wake up,
-Jock! Wake up and open the door. Have no fear. It is I--the young
-master."
-
-"God bless my soul! Ye don't say so!" cried a cracked voice from
-within.--"Quiet, Ruff; be still, man!--Yes, yes, I'm comin', I'm
-comin'."
-
-The sound of a bolt slipped back gave evidence of this, and next moment
-the door was opened from within, a shaggy head was thrust forth, and an
-old man, evidently just risen from his bed, gazed for a moment at the
-intruder, who stood plainly revealed in the moonlight and uttered a
-heartfelt exclamation.
-
-"Heaven be praised!--it is Sir Grey himself!"
-
-The young man fell back as though before a blow. "Sir Grey! What mean
-you by that, Jock? Sir Grey!"
-
-"Why, master dear, you surely have heard the news! You have been Sir
-Grey since the week after Christmas."
-
-"You mean--my father--nay, Jock--how can I speak the words?"
-
-"He died two days after Christmas, Sir Grey. He had me with him to the
-last. He never trusted that knave of a kinsman, not he, though he had
-let himself get fast into his clutches. Ah, if you had but been with us
-then! Woe is me! for we wanted you sorely. It was hard upon All
-Saints' Day that the old master came back. He was sick; he had lost the
-use of his limbs. The leeches said they could do naught for him, but
-that he might live to be an old man yet. He made light of it at first.
-He vowed he would cheat them all. But we all saw death in his face. In
-two months he lay over yonder by the side of our sweet lady."
-
-Jock, though no great speaker at ordinary times, had made, for him, a
-long speech, because the young master said not a word, but stood leaning
-against the angle of the wall as though overcome by the news he had
-heard.
-
-"And why was I not sent for?" The words were a whisper.
-
-"You were, Sir Grey, you were--leastways the master told me so. He said
-that Mr. Barty had written many letters, and sent them after you by
-trusty messengers. But Lord, if 'twere only what that rogue said,
-belike the trusty messenger was nothing better than the fire, into which
-he dropped his own letters after satisfying the master by writing them."
-
-"What mean you, Jock?" asked Grey, with dry lips. "And who is this Mr.
-Barty of whom you speak?"
-
-"Faith, none other but him as hopes one day to style himself Sir
-Bartholomew Dumaresq--your father's cousin, Sir Grey, and next of kin
-after you. 'Tis he as has got his grip so fast upon Hartsbourne that
-it'll be a tough bit of work to shake it off. He's got mortgages on the
-place, the old master told me at the last, and he's been squeezing it
-like a sponge these many years--cutting the timber, grinding the
-tenants, living like a miser in one corner of the house, letting all
-else go to wrack and ruin, that there may be nothing for the heir to
-come into. Oh, the master saw through him at the last, that he did; but
-'twas too late then. Here he is, stuck fast like a leech to the old
-place, and sucking its life-blood dry, and protected by the law, so that
-even you can't touch him; the master told me that before he died. He'd
-got him to sign papers when he was merry with wine, and knew not nor
-cared what he signed. So long as Mr. Barty supplied him with money, he
-cared for naught else; and now he's got such a grip on house and lands
-that it'll be a matter of years before ever he can be got out, if ever
-that day come at all."
-
-A numb feeling began to creep over Grey. He felt like one walking in a
-bad dream. The blow of hearing of his father's death was a heavy one.
-It seemed to shake the foundations of his life to their very base. And
-now his home was lost to him! Little as he understood the machinations
-of his kinsman, he grasped that he had come into nothing but a barren
-title and nominal possession of a ruinous and dilapidated old house, the
-revenues of which were in some way alienated to another. He had heard
-such tales before. He did not discredit old Jock's recital. It fitted
-in only too well with what he knew of his father's recklessness and
-selfish expenditure, and his kinsman's artful grasping policy. So,
-after all, he had come to a home that was not his; and he would have to
-face the world again as something very like a beggar.
-
-Old Jock's hand upon his arm aroused him to a sense of outward things.
-Dicon had come up, and was listening with wide eyes and falling jaw to
-the recital of the same story as had been told in outline to Grey. The
-fuller details only made it sound more true and lifelike.
-
-"Come in, Sir Grey, come in. There's bite and sup for you in the
-cupboard. The old master didn't forget me, and I can make shift to earn
-my bread by hook or by crook even without regular wage. Come in, come
-in, and I'll give ye what I've got for ye. 'Twas all the old master had
-left from his hoard; but he said it would give you a start in life, and
-that your wits must do the rest. He gave it me private like, when Mr.
-Barty was off the place, and I buried it beneath the hearthstone that
-same day. 'Tis all safe for you, Sir Grey; and you won't go penniless
-into the world, for all that this villain of a kinsman reigns at
-Hartsbourne, where you should be."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER III.*
-
- *THE SCHEMING KINSMAN.*
-
-
-They sat face to face in a room which Grey well remembered. It had been
-lined with folios in those days--great tomes in which he had dug with
-breathless delight, for the treasures of wood-cuts and the strange
-stories they possessed--and illuminated missals, where, amid a mass of
-gilding and wonderful colours, the story of saint or martyr could be
-traced. Other and more modern works had been also there, specimens of
-the art of printing as carried on through the days of the Stuarts. But
-where were all these tomes and scrolls and books now? Grey swept the
-empty shelves with quick, indignant glances. A motion of his hands
-seemed to ask the question his lips were too proud to speak.
-
-A small and wizened man sat before him, his eyes furtively scanning the
-young man's face with an unwinking attention. He could not have been
-old, this parchment-faced kinsman--not more than five-and-forty at the
-most--and yet he wore the look of an old man, and was fond of speaking
-of himself as such. The unhealthy pallor of his face bespoke a life of
-inaction, and the lines and wrinkles on the puffy skin, and the
-emaciation of the frame and claw-like hands, seemed either to indicate
-some wasting disease, or else a miser-like habit of life which denied
-its owner the common necessaries of existence. Grey fancied that
-perhaps this latter surmise might be the right one; for he himself would
-have fared ill at breakfast that morning, had it not been for the fish
-which Dicon had caught and cooked for the pair, ere he presented himself
-at the meal to which his kinsman invited him on hearing of his advent to
-the old house. That meal had been so frugal that Grey almost disdained
-to partake of it. And now he and Mr. Dumaresq sat facing each other in
-the green light which fell through the big north window, against which
-the trees almost brushed, rather like combatants in a duel, each of
-which measures the strength and skill of the other before attempting to
-strike.
-
-The wizened man made a deprecating gesture with his hand, and answered
-the unspoken question.
-
-"Sold, sold--every one of them! I did my best to keep them in the
-family, but it was of no avail. Your father would have money--no matter
-at what cost. I was toiling all I knew for him, as it was. Everything
-that could be got out of the estate I squeezed out for him. Never man
-had so faithful a steward as I was to my poor cousin. But it was like
-pouring water through a sieve. Nay, you need not look so fiercely at
-me. I am not traducing the dead. Ask those with whom he consorted. Ask
-the boon companions he made in gay London town. Ask his very servants,
-an you will. You will hear the same tale from all. He spent money like
-water. Never did he trouble his head where it was to come from. I have
-papers; I can show them if you have knowledge of the law enough to
-understand. I advanced him sum after sum, on such poor security as this
-tumble-down house and impoverished estate has to offer. I beggared
-myself for his sake. He was the only kinsman left me. I could deny him
-nothing. And when my funds were gone, I must needs squeeze all that
-could be squeezed out of the house and land. The books went; the timber
-was felled; the pictures were taken away; the best of the furniture went
-to adorn the houses of merchants and parvenus. I argued and entreated
-in vain. When the wild fit was upon him, Hugh would listen to nothing.
-I had to content myself with serving him, by seeing that he was not
-cheated beyond bearing by the crew of harpies he had around him. At
-least I secured him equitable prices for family heirlooms; but it went
-to my heart to see them vanish one by one. And now, what is left save
-the shell of the old house, and an estate burdened and impoverished
-well-nigh beyond the power of redemption?"
-
-He heaved a great sigh, looking cunningly at the young man out of the
-corners of his ferret-like eyes. Grey's glance was stern and direct.
-His words were quietly and coldly spoken.
-
-"We will see about that. I am here to take up my burden. I will learn
-whether or not Hartsbourne be past redemption."
-
-"You!" cried 'Mr. Dumaresq quickly; "and pray what can you do?"
-
-"I can live here quietly, and see what can be done towards retrieving
-the past. Even if I toil with my own hands, I shall think it no shame,
-if it be for the home of my forefathers."
-
-"You live here!" sneered the other, seeking to mask the sneer by a
-smile; "and by what right will you do that, pray?"
-
-"I am the owner," answered Grey proudly. "I presume that I have the
-right to live in my own house, and to administer such revenues as may be
-left to the estate?"
-
-"Oh yes, fair kinsman, so soon as the mortgages be paid. I will get
-them out for your high mightiness to examine. Pay them off, and house
-and manor are yours to do with as you will. But till that time come, I,
-and not you, am master here. The revenues are mine; the house I have
-the right to occupy, to the exclusion of any other. It is all writ fair
-to see--signed and sealed. Will you see the papers for yourself? They
-will make pleasant study for a summer morning."
-
-"I will look at the papers anon," answered Grey quietly; "but first I
-would know from you what it all means. It is you, not I, to whom
-Hartsbourne belongs, then? You are the master, and I am the guest?"
-
-"For the present, yes; but a welcome guest, none the less," spoke the
-older man with a repulsive leer. "The situation, my bold young cousin,
-is easily understood. Your father loved not the old family house. I did
-love it. Could he have sold it, it would have been mine long since; but
-he had not the power to alienate it from the title. But he did all else
-that was possible. He raised mortgage upon mortgage upon it--first on
-the house, then on the land. I came to live in the house, and paid him
-rent for it once. Then I supplied him with money and took up the
-mortgages. He and I had been boys together. The tie between us was
-strong. I verily believe he was glad to have me here, and when he was
-sick and smitten with mortal disease he came hither to die, and I was
-with him to the last. He was grateful for my devoted service. He was
-glad to think that I should live on here afterwards. 'It is no life for
-a young man,' he said almost at the last. 'Grey will carve out a career
-for himself. Here he could only rot and starve like a rat in a hole.'
-And I pointed out that you were my natural heir, and that you might not
-have very long to wait before coming a second time into your
-inheritance."
-
-Grey sat silent and baffled. It was little he knew of the law; but he
-had heard before this of men who had left nothing save debts and
-troubles for those who came after them. Many a fair manor and estate
-passed into alien hands for years, or even for generations, when trouble
-fell upon the owners. He understood only too well how it had been here
-at Hartsbourne--everything squeezed out of the estate, nothing put in,
-till at last the house was falling into ruin, and the rights of the lord
-of the manor had passed away from the owner. It was no consolation to
-Grey that a Dumaresq had supplanted him. He was cut to the heart by the
-selfish extravagance of his father, and the way in which he had played
-into the hands of this schemer. He saw how impossible it would be to
-attempt to live here himself, even if he could establish a legal right
-to do so. He was not certain if his father could have done anything
-which should actually hinder him from claiming possession of the house
-which was his, but to find money to pay off the mortgages--he might as
-well have sought for money to buy the moon! And even then, how could he
-live in a house without money, without servants, without friends? No;
-he must seek to carve out a fortune for himself. His fair dream of a
-peaceful life in England as a country squire was shattered into a
-thousand pieces. Some day perhaps--some day in the dim and distant
-future, when fortune and fame were his--he might come back to take
-possession of his own. It should be his dream--the goal of his
-ambition--to dwell at Hartsbourne as its lord and master. But for the
-present he could call nothing his own save the good horse cropping the
-lush June grass in the paddock, and that casket so carefully hidden
-beneath the hearthstone of old Jock's living-room. He would look at the
-papers. He would make careful study of them. He would take notes as to
-the amount necessary to clear the estate and make him master in reality.
-And then he would go; he would not be beholden to this kinsman, whose
-shifty face he distrusted heart and soul, though his words were smooth
-and fair. He would ride forth into the fair world of an English
-midsummer, and would see what the future held there for him.
-
-It was not an exhilarating hour which he spent over the parchments
-spread out before his eyes, which were eagerly explained to him by the
-lynx-eyed kinsman, who seemed half afraid to trust them out of his own
-claw-like clutches. But Grey perused them with attention, making notes
-the while; and after studying these at the close, whilst the deeds were
-being locked away, he said,--
-
-"Then when I return with thirty thousand pounds in my pocket, I can take
-over Hartsbourne, house and lands and all, and be master of my own
-estate in deed as well as in word?"
-
-"And how are you to come by this thirty thousand pounds, fair coz?"
-asked Mr. Dumaresq, with something slightly uneasy in his shifty glance.
-"Right gladly would I receive mine own, and make way for a gallant
-gentleman like you; but where are these riches of Aladdin to come from?"
-
-"Perchance from the same source as yours did come, sir," answered Grey,
-looking full at his interlocutor. "The Dumaresqs have not ranked as a
-wealthy family since the days of the Civil War, when they lost so much.
-But you seem to have found fortune's golden key; and if you, why not I?"
-
-Did he shrink and cower under these words, or was it only Grey's fancy
-that he did so? The young man could not be sure, though he had his
-suspicions. At any rate he spoke suavely enough.
-
-"Thrift and care, my young friend, care and thrift--these qualities are
-better than any golden key of hazard. My father was a careful, saving
-man, and at his death bequeathed me greater wealth than I dreamed he did
-possess. I followed in his footsteps until, for your father's sake, I
-elected to prop the falling fortunes of the house rather than live in
-selfish affluence on my own revenues. Well, I did what seemed right;
-and my reward shall be the hope of seeing Hartsbourne one day restored
-to its former glories. But for the present I must needs live like a
-poor man, though that is no trouble to one who has ever made thrift the
-law of life."
-
-Grey went forth from the presence of his kinsman with a cloud on his
-brow and a fire in his heart.
-
-"Why doth he speak of himself as poor?" he asked of himself. "He takes
-to himself all the revenues of the estate; and when I was a boy, I
-always heard that the farms were prosperous, the land fertile, the
-timber fine, game and deer plentiful, and the tenants able to pay their
-dues. If all that comes in goes into his pocket, wherefore doth he live
-like a miser? wherefore doth he let the house fall into decay? he ruined
-himself for my father's sake? Tush! A man with that face sacrifice
-himself for another! Nay; but he is hoarding up gold for himself, or I
-greatly mistake me. Truly do I believe that he is playing some deep
-game of his own. Well, I can but wait and see what time will bring
-forth. It is a shame that the old house should be left to go to ruin
-like this, with its revenues falling regularly into the hands of a
-Dumaresq! Why doth he not spend them upon the fine old structure, to
-make it what it was before? Why, now I see. He thinks it would
-stimulate me to fresh desire to make myself master. He may haply think
-that I care not for a habitation given up to rats and ghosts and
-cobwebs. He little thinks that every fallen stone seems to cry out
-aloud to me, and that the lower falls the old house in ruin and neglect,
-the more urgent is the voice with which it urges me to come and save
-it."
-
-The young man was walking up and down the grass-grown avenue as he thus
-mused. From thence he could see in perspective the long south front,
-with its many mullioned windows, its beautiful oriels, and the terrace
-up and down which he had raced in the days of his happy childhood.
-Straight in front was the eastern portion of the house, with its great
-entrance doors, led up to by a fine double stairway, beneath which a
-coach could stand, and its occupants in wet weather enter by a lower
-door. But the stone work was chipped and broken; the balustrade had
-lost many of its balls, which lay mouldering in the long grass that grew
-up to the very walls. Moss and lichen and stone-crop clothed all, and
-the creepers which clung about the house itself were wild and tangled,
-and in many cases had completely overgrown the very windows, so that
-scarce a trace of them could be seen.
-
-Yet even in its decay the old house was strangely beautiful, and Grey's
-heart was stirred to its depths. He wandered through the tangled garden,
-and out towards the fish-ponds beyond and then by a winding pathway he
-made his way to the churchyard, and stood bare-headed at his mother's
-grave.
-
-"I will win it back, mother; I will win it back!" He spoke the words
-aloud, in a low-toned, earnest voice. "You loved the place, and you
-taught me to love it. For that alone I would seek to call it one day
-mine own. I will win it back, and methinks your heart will rejoice when
-your son is ruling there at last."
-
-Grey had meant to leave that very day; but there was much he longed to
-see, and his kinsman had given him an earnest invitation to pass the
-night beneath the old roof-tree. Repugnant as this man was to him, and
-bitterly as he resented his conduct and distrusted his motives, it was
-not in the young man's nature to be churlish. Every hour of daylight he
-spent wandering about the place, revisiting his boyish haunts, and
-chatting with old Jock, who, without being able to give any exact reason
-for it, distrusted and despised the present master as heartily as Grey
-himself.
-
-"The old master did too, at the last. I am main sure of it," he said;
-"else for why should he have given me yon box, sir? And why should he
-have bidden me hide it and guard it, and let none see it till Sir Grey
-should claim it himself? For years he had thought him a friend; but I
-trow he knew him for a false one at the last. You'll best him yet, Sir
-Grey--see if you don't. A villain always outwits himself in the end.
-You'll be master here one day, please God, or my name's not Jock
-Jarvis!"
-
-Grey had taken out the casket, and found that it contained three hundred
-golden guineas--the remnant of his father's fortune, and all that he had
-been able to preserve to his son of what had once been a fine estate. A
-few words cautioned Grey to be careful of the hoard, and let no one know
-of its existence--"no one" plainly meaning his kinsman. It also
-contained a few faintly traced words of farewell, and just a plea for
-forgiveness--evidently written when mortal weakness was upon the
-writer--which brought sudden tears to the eyes of the son, and blotted
-out the bitterness of heart which had been growing up as he mused upon
-his fallen fortunes and his lost inheritance.
-
-That evening Grey supped with his kinsman in a corner of the despoiled
-library, which seemed the only room in the house now lived in. He had
-walked through some of the other state apartments, denuded of their
-pictures and the best of the furniture, and looking ghostlike with
-closed shutters and overgrown windows. He had not had heart to pursue
-his investigations far; and all that he carried away with him were
-saddened memories, and one little mouldering volume of poems, with his
-mother's name on the fly leaf, which he had found lying in a corner of
-the little room with the sunny oriel, where she had passed the greater
-part of her time. He thought he even remembered the book in her hands;
-and he slipped it into his breast as though it were some great treasure.
-The sneering smile of his kinsman as he bade him keep the volume, and
-saw where he placed it, did not endear him any the more. He wished he
-could get rid of his companionship, but that seemed impossible; and Grey
-soon gave up the tour of the house, and let himself be led back to the
-library.
-
-"No, I have no plans," he said briefly, as they sat at their frugal
-supper, to which, in honour of the occasion, a small flagon of wine had
-been added. "I think I shall remain in England. I have been a wanderer
-something too long. A homely saying tells us that the rolling stone
-gathers no moss. I have youth and health and strength, and the world
-lies before me. Men have won success with more against them before
-this, and why not I?"
-
-"I should have thought the battlefield would have tempted you. There is
-honour and renown to be won there, to say nothing of the spoils of a
-vanquished foe," spoke Mr. Dumaresq, looking at him in a peering, crafty
-fashion. "Surely a gallant young gentleman of your birth and training
-would not lack for opportunities of distinction amid the perils and
-glories of war!"
-
-Suddenly Grey became aware that his kinsman was anxious for him to go
-and fight in the cause of the Allies. It could not be that he had heard
-of the happy chance which had made Marlborough his friend, for he had
-spoken of that to none; and even if Dicon had boasted to old Jock,
-neither cared to have aught to do with the deaf and cross-grained
-serving-man who waited upon the master within doors. A moment more and
-Grey had found the clue, and realized that his own death would make
-Bartholomew Dumaresq not only absolute master of Hartsbourne, but a
-baronet to boot; and in every battle thousands of brave soldiers were
-left dead upon the field, whilst many fell victim to wounds and the
-ravages of disease caught during the hard weeks of campaigning.
-
-"I think I shall remain in England," he answered quietly. "I have seen
-something of war, but a career of peace has more attractions for me;"
-and he smiled to see the look of chagrin which played for a moment over
-the crafty face of his kinsman.
-
-Grey did not find it easy to sleep when he had climbed up into the great
-canopied bed in the guest chamber allotted to him. He scarcely
-remembered this room. It was very large, and before he went to rest
-Grey drew aside all the mouldering draperies from the windows, and
-opened every casement wide to the summer night. Even so the place felt
-musty. There were strange creakings and groanings of the furniture, and
-the owls without hooted and hissed in the ivy wreaths. More than one
-bat flew in and out, circling over his head in uncanny flight; and had
-it not been that the previous night had been an almost sleepless one,
-Grey would scarce have closed an eye. As it was, he grew drowsy
-gradually, and felt a strange swimming in his head to which he was a
-stranger. He was just wondering whether the wine he had taken at
-supper, the taste of which seemed curious to him at the time, could have
-anything to do with this, when sleep suddenly fell upon him like a pall,
-and for a space he could not gauge he remained lapped in the
-unconsciousness of oblivion.
-
-What was it roused him? Or was he indeed awake? The moonlight streamed
-into the room, and lay like bars upon the floor. Its radiance was
-sufficient to light every corner of the room, and Grey found himself
-lying still as a stone, yet sweeping every corner with his gaze, for
-surely he was not alone. He felt some presence close beside him, yet
-where could it be?
-
-Suddenly his gaze travelled upwards, and for a few awful seconds he lay
-gazing as the bird before the gaze of the snake.
-
-A shining poniard hung, as it were, over his head. He saw the gleaming
-silver of the blade. Its haft was grasped by a hand--a lean, claw-like
-hand. Its point was aimed at his own heart.
-
-For a few endless seconds Grey lay staring up helplessly. Then the
-blade moved swiftly downwards. With a motion as swift, the young man
-threw himself sidewise out of bed and upon the floor, and turning,
-sprang to his feet to meet the murderous foe.
-
-Behold there was nothing! He was alone in the great moonlit room. The
-curtains behind the bed's head were slightly shaken--nothing more.
-
-Horrified and bewildered, Grey dashed them aside. Behind was a wall
-panelled like the rest of the room in black oak. Was it his fancy, or
-had he heard just as he sprang to his feet the click as of a closing
-spring? Grey passed his hand over and over the woodwork, but could find
-nothing to give a clue. Old memories of secret sliding panels, unknown
-passages to hiding-places, and ghostly visitants to sleeping guests,
-rose in succession before him. But this was something more than an
-ordinary ghostly visitor. Grey saw again the murderous gleam of cold
-steel over his head--saw the claw-like hand in its faded russet sleeve,
-the fierce downward sweep of the weapon.
-
-"It was my kinsman, and he sought to do me to death--here in the haunted
-chamber, where perhaps some infernal machinery exists whereby the corpse
-could have been quickly and quietly removed and heard of no more. Who
-would care save Dicon, and what could a poor varlet like that do if the
-master of Hartsbourne were to assert that his kinsman had ridden off in
-the early hours of the morning, he knew not whither? Did he drug the
-wine? Was this in his head all the while? Or was the idea suggested
-only by my refusal to place my neck in peril at the wars? O Barty,
-Barty Dumaresq, a pretty villain art thou! Before this I might perhaps
-have been tempted to return to the Duke, and seek to win my spurs at his
-side; but now--no. I will take the safer, if the slower, path to fame
-and fortune, and I will live to make you rue the day you sought to rid
-yourself, by secret assassination, of the man in whose shoes you hope
-some day to stand."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER IV.*
-
- *ON THE ROAD.*
-
-
-With the first streak of midsummer dawn Grey Dumaresq was in the
-paddock, looking well to the condition of his horse, and grooming the
-soft, satin coat lovingly with his own hands.
-
-"We must be up and away, my beauty, ere the sun be high. This is no
-place for either you or me, albeit every foot of ground is mine own, and
-it will go hard if I let that weasel-faced scoundrel filch it altogether
-from me. I know him now in his true colours. Heaven send the day may
-come when I shall repay with interest that which I owe him."
-
-The horse tossed his head and neighed as though in response; and perhaps
-Dicon heard the sound from where he slept, for almost at once he was at
-his master's side; and old Jock came cautiously out by the doorway
-leading towards the house, and looked relieved and gratified to see the
-young master abroad.
-
-"Eh, but I have been sore troubled with bad dreams this night," he said,
-as he shambled up. "Yon house is full of such, I take it. How slept
-you, my master? and how fare you this morn? It is good to see you
-looking so spruce and sound. Bad luck to the dreams that drove sleep
-from my pillow at last."
-
-"I had my dreams too, Jock, and I have not slept since," answered Grey,
-with a significant glance at the old man. "Tell me, good fellow, what
-know you of the panelled guest-chamber, with the row of windows looking
-south over the park? Ha! why look you so, man? What know you of the
-chamber?"
-
-"Did he put you there, my master? Then Peter lied to me, the
-false-tongued knave. If I had known that! No wonder the dreams were
-bad that came to me. The haunted room! Tush! it is not ghosts that
-hurt, but men who come and go at will and leave no trace behind."
-
-"I thought so," spoke Grey composedly. "Then there is a secret way of
-entrance into that room?"
-
-"Ay, behind the bed. I do not know the trick, but I have heard of it.
-Men have been done to death in that room ere this, and none the wiser
-for it. Oh if I had but known!"
-
-Grey's eyes were fixed full upon the pallid face of the old man. He put
-the next question gravely and almost sternly.
-
-"Tell me truly, my friend. Think you that this kinsman of mine would
-plot to do me hurt? He made profession of friendship."
-
-"He made the same to Sir Hugh," answered Jock in a trembling voice, "and
-for long the master believed in him. But methinks he never would have
-died as he did, had he not come to live here with Mr. Barty at
-Hartsbourne."
-
-Grey started and changed colour, clinching his hand,
-
-"You think that this kinsman of ours compassed his death?"
-
-Jock looked over his shoulder as though fearful of listening ears. He
-drew a step nearer; and Dicon, with fallen jaw and staring eyes, came up
-close to listen.
-
-"How can I tell? I was seldom in the house. I work in the garden, and
-because I am a cheap servant, asking no money, but making a pittance by
-what I can sell, Mr. Barty has kept me here where he found me. But when
-the old master came, he often sent for me. Before he became too ill, he
-sometimes crawled to my little cottage yonder for a bit of chat. He told
-me the doctors and leeches told him he had but to rest and live simply
-in the country for a few years to be a sound man again. But for all
-that he dwindled and dwindled away, and was gone in two months."
-
-"Did no leech attend him here?" asked Grey breathlessly.
-
-"Not till the very last, when they sent me to Edgeware to fetch one who
-could do naught. Mr. Barty professed to know many cures, and the master
-believed in him. He eased his pain, but he sank into an
-ever-increasing, ever-mastering drowsiness, and he shrank away to skin
-and bone. It went to my heart to see him. Many's the time when I have
-wondered whether it would have ended so if he had not taken Mr. Barty's
-simples and draughts."
-
-"Was he poisoned, then?" asked Grey, between his shut teeth.
-
-Jock looked nervously over his shoulder; the word seemed to frighten
-him. He shook his old head from side to side.
-
-"Nay, nay, how can I tell--a poor old ignorant man like me? But he used
-to say that you would likely never come home again (travellers met such
-a deal of peril, he would say), and then his eyes would gleam and
-glisten, for there was but the old master's life and yours betwixt him
-and the title and all."
-
-Grey ground his teeth, and his eyes flashed. Somehow he did not doubt
-for a moment that foul play had been used to compass his father's death.
-Had he not escaped assassination himself that night only by the skin of
-his teeth?
-
-"Could any man living throw light upon this matter?" he asked. "The
-leech from Edgeware, or any other?"
-
-"I misdoubt me if any could, save wall-eyed Peter, Mr. Barty's man; and
-I trow his master makes it worth while for him to hold his tongue and
-know nothing."
-
-"Gold will sometimes unloose a miscreant's tongue."
-
-"Ay, ay, maybe; but Mr. Barty's purse is longer than yours, Sir Grey,
-and his mind is crookeder and his ways more artful. Don't you go for to
-anger him yet: hurt might come to you an you did. Get you gone from the
-place, and that right soon; for the sooner you leave Hartsbourne behind
-you, the safer it will be for you."
-
-"Yes, my master; let us indeed be gone," pleaded Dicon earnestly. "This
-is a God-forsaken hole, not fit for you to dwell in. Take the store of
-gold pieces, and let us begone, for I trow that harm will come to you if
-you linger longer here."
-
-It took little to persuade Grey to be off and away. Old Jock provided
-them with a meal, and they could break their fast at the old inn at
-Edgeware, through which they would pass. He had no desire to go through
-the farce of a farewell to his kinsman. He only desired to shake off
-the dust of his feet against him; and ere the chimes of the church rang
-out the hour of six, Grey was turning on the crest of a ridge of rising
-ground, to look his last for the nonce upon the old home he had dreamed
-of so many a time, and round which so many loving thoughts centred.
-
-"Let kind Fortune but smile upon me, Dicon, and show me the way to
-affluence and fame, and I will yet be lord and master there, and the
-manor of Hartsbourne shall be one of the fairest in the land!"
-
-"Why, so you shall, Sir Grey, and that right speedily!" cried honest
-Dick, who had an unbounded admiration for his young master, and an
-immense confidence in his luck, albeit no special good fortune had
-befallen him since he had taken service with him.
-
-Dick had led a seafaring life during his earlier years, and Grey had
-picked him up in a shipwrecked, ragged, and starving condition on the
-coast of Spain some two years previously. In those days ship-wrecked
-sailors often had a hard time of it, even though the terrors of the
-galleys or the Inquisition did not loom quite so perilously before them
-as had been the case a century before. To find himself taken into the
-service of a young English gentleman of quality, and to be the companion
-of his travels, had been a piece of luck that Dick thanked Providence
-for every day of his life. He had been one of four servants at the
-outset; but as Grey's resources diminished, or his roving life took him
-into perils for which some men had little stomach, he gradually lost his
-retinue, till, for the past year, Dick alone had followed him, and the
-two had become friends and comrades, as well as master and servant. Now
-at their first halting-place, where they paused to let the horses
-breathe after a steady half-hour's gallop, Grey opened the wallet at his
-side, which he had filled with gold pieces from the casket (the rest he
-had sewn carefully into his clothes for safety), and counted out a
-certain number, which he shook in his fist as he spoke.
-
-"Dicon, I am going to London to try my luck there. But, as I have
-ofttimes heard, fortunes are as easily lost there as won, wherefore it
-may be that I shall become a beggar instead of growing in wealth and
-greatness."
-
-"Heaven forbid!" ejaculated Dick in passionate protest.
-
-"Well, Heaven watches over the undeserving as well as the virtuous, so
-there is e'en hope for me," answered Grey with his winning smile. "But
-look ye here, Dicon. You have been a faithful rogue, and have served me
-well, and I hope we may company together many a long day yet. But
-inasmuch as there are uncertainties in life, and we are going forth into
-a new world, where perchance I may sink rather than swim, I desire to
-give you six months' wage in advance, whilst I have my pockets lined
-with gold, so that should any untoward chance befall me, as it has
-befallen better men than myself, I shall not have to turn you adrift
-unrewarded, nor will you, if you can be a wise varlet, and husband your
-resources, be thrown on the world without some means of support."
-
-Dick seemed about to protest, but either the look on his master's face
-or some idea which had entered his own head held him silent. He took
-the coins without counting them, and producing a greasy leathern pouch,
-such as sailors often carry with them, he dropped the gold pieces into
-it one by one, tied it up, and fastened it safely in an inner pocket.
-
-"That pouch stuck by me when I lost everything else in the world, and
-well-nigh my own life," said the fellow with a grin. "My mother did
-give it me when I first went to sea, and she told me as a wise witch
-woman had given it her. She thought 'twas the caul of a child; and like
-enough it be, for salt water never hurts it, and I was the only one
-saved of all the crew that went down off the Spanish coast. I'd sooner
-part with the gold pieces than with the pouch that holds them."
-
-They both rode on with thoughtful faces after this brief interlude.
-Grey was turning over a dozen different schemes in his mind; but all
-were vague and chimerical. Now and again he looked at an amethyst ring
-upon his finger, and it came over him that the shortest cut to fortune
-might be to present himself as a suppliant for favour at the feet of the
-great Duchess of Marlborough, who was said to rule the Queen with a rod
-of iron, and whose known devotion to her husband would be certain to
-raise high in her favour any person who had rendered him so timely a
-service as that which Grey had been able to offer on the day of
-Ramillies.
-
-But then, again, it seemed to Grey that to claim reward for that chance
-service, which had cost him nothing, was little better than playing the
-beggar or the sycophant. There was in his nature a strong strain of
-chivalrous romance--of love of adventure for its own sake, without
-thought of reward or favour. That encounter with the great Duke, the
-interview which had followed, the consciousness that he had done his
-country a notable service that day--all these things were very sweet to
-him, forming an episode pleasant to look back upon. If he now presented
-himself on the strength of it as a petitioner for place or favour, at
-once the whole thing would be vulgarized--he would be lowered in his own
-estimation, sinking to the level of one of the crowd of greedy
-flatterers and place-hunters who thronged the antechambers of the rich
-and great, and fawned upon them for the crumbs of patronage which they
-were able to dispense as the price of this homage.
-
-Grey had seen this sort of thing at foreign courts, and his soul had
-sickened at it. Doubtless, in this great world of London it was the
-same. As a baronet, a young man of parts, with an attractive person,
-and, at present, a well-filled purse, he might not improbably please the
-fancy of the Duchess, and obtain some post in her household or about the
-Court that would give him a chance at least to rise. But the more he
-thought of this the less he liked the idea, and at last he flung it from
-him in scorn.
-
-"I would sooner live in Grub Street, and drive a quill!" he said half
-aloud. "I could praise a hero with my pen, but I cannot fawn and
-flatter with my lips. And methinks I am not fit for the life of a
-place-man: I have been too long mine own master. Surely there are ways
-by which a man may rise in the world without abasing himself in his own
-esteem first. I will go to London, and look about me with open eyes.
-There are the world of politics, the world of art and literature, and
-the theatre of war, if other spheres should fail. Surely there must be
-a place for me somewhere; but I will not choose the latter if I can help
-it. I fear not death on mine own account; but I desire to live, and to
-grow rich, that I may square matters with yonder villain, and avenge
-upon him my father's untimely death!"
-
-For that his father had been in some sort done to death by his false
-kinsman, Grey did not now doubt, though whether he would be able to
-bring that crime home to him later, he could not at present surmise.
-Much might be possible to a man with friends in high places; but these
-would have to be found and won ere any step could be taken.
-
-Grey often felt within himself the stirrings of ambition. He had shown
-promise of something akin to genius in his Oxford days, and there had
-not been lacking those among his companions and tutors who had declared
-that he could win fame and fortune through academic laurels. But Grey
-had then turned a deaf ear to such propositions. He desired to travel
-and see the world, and he had done this with much zest. But the muse
-within had not been altogether silent, and he had many times covered
-sheets of paper with flowing stanzas or stately sonnets, which bore
-witness to the fire that burned within. His pencil, too, was not
-without cunning; and his study of the treasures of many an art gallery,
-many a foreign church, had given him knowledge and culture beyond what
-the average gallant of the day could boast. The double strand in his
-nature was very marked--a reckless love of adventure, and a delicate
-appreciation of the beautiful. Often he longed after the days of the
-early troubadours, when the two walked hand in hand. He pondered these
-matters in his busy brain as he rode onward in the sunny brightness of
-the June morning, and found it in his heart to wish that he was not thus
-possessed by such conflicting passions. He felt he would have had a
-better chance of success had his bent in any one direction been more
-decided.
-
-They pulled up at the quaint old inn at Edgeware, and rode into the
-courtyard, where lackeys and hostlers were making merry together, and
-where some handsome horses were being groomed down, prior to being put
-into the cumbersome but very handsome coach that stood beneath the
-protecting galleries which ran round the court. The lackeys wore a
-livery of snuff-coloured cloth, with a quantity of gold lace about it.
-The panels of the coach were snuff-coloured, and there was much heavy
-gilding about it, which was being polished with great zeal by the
-servants of the inn. It was plainly the equipage of some person of
-quality, and had evidently put up there for the night, but was likely to
-be wanted shortly for the road again.
-
-Grey dismounted, and leaving Dick in charge of the horses, made his way
-in through the low-browed entrance, along a sanded passage, and so to
-the public room, the door of which stood open. As a boy he had known
-this house, and it still seemed familiar to him, though it had changed
-hands since he had been there last, and his face was not known to mine
-host.
-
-"Your pardon, sir," spoke this functionary, bustling forward on his
-entrance, "but this room is bespoke for my Lord Sandford. If you are
-wanting a meal, it shall be quickly served elsewhere--"
-
-But at that moment a rollicking voice from the foot of the adjacent
-staircase broke in upon the excuses of the host.
-
-"Gadzooks, man, but it shall be nothing of the sort. Set a cover for
-the gentleman at my table. Gosh! is a man so enamoured of his own
-company that he must needs drive all the world away?--Come in, sir, come
-in, and take pot-luck with me.--Landlord, see you give us of your best,
-or I'll spit you on your own jack! I've a great thirst on me, mind you;
-and let the dishes be done to a turn.--Take a seat in the window, sir;
-the air blows fresh and pleasant, but it will be infernally hot ere
-noon. I must be off and away in good time. In London streets you can
-find shade; but these country roads--hang them all!--get like
-What's-his-name's fiery furnace seven times heated if they don't chance
-to run through forest land!"
-
-The speaker was a young man of perhaps seven-and-twenty, though reckless
-dissipation had traced lines in his face which should not so early have
-been there. He was dressed according to the most extravagant fashion of
-the day, with an immense curled wig, that hung half-way down his back; a
-coat of velvet, richly laced, the sleeves so short that the spotless
-lawn and ruffles of the shirt showed half-way up the forearm; a
-wonderful embroidered vest, knee breeches of satin equally gorgeous, and
-silk stockings elaborately gartered below the knee with bands of gold
-lace. He carried a fashionably cocked hat beneath his arm, with a
-gold-headed cane; and a small muff was suspended from his neck by gold
-chains. The muff held a golden snuff-box, with a picture on the lid
-which modesty would refuse to describe; and the young spark took snuff
-and interlarded his talk with the fashionable oaths of the day as a
-matter of course.
-
-He looked curiously at Grey when they had taken their seats; for the
-traveller, though dressed with exceeding simplicity, and wearing his own
-hair in loose, natural curls, just framing his face and touching his
-shoulders, was so evidently a man of culture and of gentle blood that
-the dandy was both impressed and perplexed by him. For high-bred look
-and instinctive nobility of bearing Lord Sandford could not hold a
-candle to Grey Dumaresq.
-
-"I saw you ride into the yard just now. Fine horse that of yours,
-sir--very fine horse! If he's ever for sale, mind you let me know of
-him. Lord Sandford--your very humble servant--always to be heard of at
-Will's Coffee House or the Mohawk Club. Seem to remember your face; but
-dash me if I can give it a name. Awful memory for names I have--know
-too many fellows, I suppose. Not that there are so many like you,
-either; but hang me, I must have met you somewhere before."
-
-Grey had caught the fleeting memory, and answered at once,--
-
-"We were at Oxford together, my lord. Not at the same college, though;
-but we have met, doubtless. My name is Grey Dumaresq--"
-
-"Why, to be sure. Gad! but that's strange! Thought I wasn't wrong about
-a face! I heard you spout forth a poem once. Lord, it was fine, though
-I didn't understand one word in ten! Latin or Greek--rabbit me if I
-know which! And I knew your father, too; met him in London now and
-again. He's not been seen anywhere these eight or nine months."
-
-"My father died last Christmas," spoke Grey gravely. "I did not know it
-myself, being abroad." And led on by Lord Sandford's questions, which,
-if not very delicately put, showed a real interest in the subject, Grey
-gave him a bare outline of his own life since quitting Oxford, and of
-the position in which he now found himself.
-
-"Oddsfish, man--as our merry monarch of happy memory used to say--but
-yours is a curious tale. The ladies will rave over the romance of
-it--coupled with that face of yours. Oh, never say die, man! You've the
-world before you. What more do you ask than such a face, such a story,
-and a few hundred pounds in your pocket? Why, with decent luck, those
-hundreds ought to make thousands in a very short time. You trust
-yourself to me, my young friend. I know my London. I know the ropes.
-I will show you how fortunes are made in a night; and you shall be the
-pet of the ladies and the envy of the beaux before another month has
-passed. We will find you an heiress for a wife, and--heigh,
-presto!--the thing is done."
-
-Grey started, and made a gesture as of repulsion, whereat Lord Sandford
-roared with laughter; and there was something so heartwhole and
-infectious in his laugh that Grey found himself joining in almost
-without knowing it. The man had a strong personality, that was not to
-be doubted, and at this moment Grey felt himself singularly lonely,
-singularly perplexed about his own immediate future. He did not know
-London. He had scarcely set foot within its precincts, save on the
-occasion when he went to bid his father farewell, and when it seemed to
-him that he stepped into Pandemonium itself. Since then he had visited
-many foreign capitals, and had accustomed himself to the life there to
-some extent; but only to the life of a traveller--an onlooker. Now he
-felt that something more lay before him--that it was as a citizen and a
-unit in the great hive that he must go. And how to steer his bark
-through the shoals and quicksands of the new life, he had very small
-idea. To win fame and fortune was his wish; but how were these good
-things to be achieved? Never had it entered his head to look upon
-marriage as a way of gaining either.
-
-"Zounds, man, don't look like that! Better men than you or I have not
-been shamed to thank their wives for their promotion. But there are
-more ways of killing a cat than hanging. We'll look about and see. You
-put yourself in my hands, and I'll show you the ropes. No, no; no
-thanks. I want some diversion myself. Poor Tom Gregory, my boon
-companion, made a fool of himself over the wine the other night, and got
-spitted like a cockchafer by Captain Dashwood. I've felt bad ever
-since. I tried what a trip into the country would do for me. But dash
-it all, I can't stand the dreariness of it. I am on my way back to town
-as fast as may be. And you shall come with me. Nay, I'll take no
-denial. A man must have something to do with his time, or he'll get
-into a pretty peck of mischief. I've taken a liking to you; and I
-always get my own way, because I won't listen to objections."
-
-So an hour later, when the coach rumbled out from under the archway of
-the old inn, Grey Dumaresq sat within by Lord Sandford's side, and Dick,
-with a puzzled but satisfied face, led his master's horse behind.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER V.*
-
- *A HIGH-BORN DAME.*
-
-
-Westward from Whitehall, just after one had left behind the streets and
-lanes of the fashionable westerly portion of London town, and emerged
-into a fair region of smiling meadows, blossoming fruit-trees, orchards,
-and woodlands, were in those days to be found many pleasant and stately
-houses, varying in size and splendour according to the condition of the
-owner, but fair mansions for the most part, and inhabited by persons of
-quality, many of whom held posts at Court, and found this proximity to
-Whitehall a matter of no small convenience.
-
-Some of the fairest and seemliest of these mansions were those which lay
-along the river banks, with gardens terraced to the water's edge, where
-light wherries could deposit gay gallants at the foot of the steps
-leading to the wide gravelled walks, and where a gay panorama of
-shipping could be seen by those who paced the shady walks, or sat in the
-little temples and bowers which made a feature of so many of these
-gardens.
-
-There was one house in particular that in these days had a notoriety of
-its own. It had been an old manor house in the time when London had not
-extended so far to the west, and it lay embosomed in a quaint old
-garden, where fair and tall trees made a pleasant shade through the hot
-summer days, where the turf was emerald green and soft to the foot, and
-roses flourished in wild abundance. Now there was a formal Dutch garden
-set in the midst of the old-time wilderness, where clipped box edges
-divided the parterres of brilliant-hued blossoms sent from Holland, and
-where nymphs disported themselves around marble fountains, and heathen
-divinities on pedestals kept watch and ward over the long terraces which
-lined the margin of the river. But in spite of these innovations of
-modern taste, the silvan charm of the old garden had by no means been
-destroyed, and there were many who declared that not even Hampton Court
-itself could hold a candle to Lord Romaine's riverside garden for beauty
-and brightness and the nameless fascination which defies analysis. Lord
-Romaine was accounted a rising man. The friend of Marlborough and
-Godolphin, a moderate Whig in politics, a courtier above all else, and
-loyal to the backbone, he had been regarded with favour by the late
-King, who had given him some appointment about the Court, which had been
-confirmed by the Queen on her accession. And although Queen Anne was
-herself of such strong Tory leanings, she was beginning to find that the
-moderate Whigs were the men most useful and most to be depended upon;
-and the shrewd Duchess Sarah--her dear "Mrs. Freeman"--herself a convert
-from high Tory principles to those of their moderate opponents, was
-using her influence steadily and strongly to bring the Queen round to
-the same state of mind.
-
-So Lord Romaine's star was likely to rise with the rising tide of Whig
-supremacy; and as he was a man of very large private means, and kept
-open house in a lavish fashion, it was likely enough that he would make
-his mark in the world. It would be certainly no fault of his wife if he
-did not.
-
-Truth to tell, Lady Romaine's head had been somewhat turned when, three
-years before, her husband succeeded to his father's title and estates,
-and from being Viscount Latimer, with moderate means and only a measure
-of Court favour to depend upon, became an earl with a very large
-rent-roll, and a great fortune in ready money, which his father, who
-lived a secluded existence in the country, had amassed during the later
-years of his life. As Lord and Lady Latimer this couple had lived at
-the riverside house they still occupied when in town; but it had not
-then worn the aspect that it did to-day, albeit the garden had been
-something of a hobby to its owner for many years.
-
-The lady cared little for the garden, save for the admiration it aroused
-in others; but she longed with a mighty longing to furbish up the old
-house after her own design, and as soon as the funds for this were in
-their hands, not a moment was lost in the carrying out of her cherished
-plans and projects. With a rapidity that astonished the town, a great
-new front was added to the old building, converting it into a
-quadrangle, in the centre of which a great fountain threw its waters
-high into the air. All the new rooms were large, stately, and imposing,
-and furnished according to the latest mode. Inlaid cabinets from the
-far East, crammed with curios of which my lady knew not even the names;
-crooked-legged chairs and sofas of French make; furniture in the new
-mahogany wood, just beginning to attract attention and admiration; rich
-carpets and hangings from India, Persia, or China; embroideries from all
-quarters of the globe; Italian pottery, Spanish inlaid armour, silver
-trinkets from Mexico, feather work from the isles of the west--all these
-things, jostled and jumbled together in rich confusion, made Lady
-Romaine's new house the talk of the town; and her tall powdered lackeys
-and turbaned negro pages were more numerous and more sumptuously attired
-than those of any other fashionable dame of her acquaintance.
-
-My lady was at her toilet upon this brilliant June morning; and as
-custom permitted the attendance of gentlemen at this function, in the
-case of married ladies, the hall and staircase leading up to her suite
-of private apartments were already thronged by a motley crew.
-
-There were dandies, fresh from their own elaborate toilets, reeking of
-the perfume in which they had bathed themselves, displaying in their own
-persons all the hues of the rainbow, and all the extravagant fripperies
-of the day, laughing and jesting together as they mounted the
-softly-carpeted stairs, their cocked hats under their arms, or descended
-again after having paid their _devoirs_ to my lady, often cackling with
-mirth over some _bon mot_ they had heard or uttered. There were
-chattering French milliners or French hair-dressers, with boxes or
-bundles of laces, silks, perfumes, or trinkets, wherewith to tempt the
-fancy of their patroness. There were gaily-dressed pages running to and
-fro with scented notes; turbaned negro boys carrying a lap-dog or monkey
-or parrot to the doting mistress, who had suddenly sent for one of her
-pets. Tire-women pushed themselves through the throng, intent on the
-business of the toilet, which was such an all-absorbing matter; and the
-whole house seemed to ring with the loud or shrill laughter and the
-ceaseless chatter of this motley throng, bent on killing time in the
-most approved fashion.
-
-Some of the dandies about to depart, who were sipping chocolate from
-cups of priceless Sevres china, and talking in their free, loose fashion
-with each other, kept looking about them as though in hope or
-expectation, and more than once the name of "Lady Geraldine" was bandied
-about between them. One young blood asked point blank why she was never
-to be seen at her mother's toilet. A laugh broke from his companions.
-
-"If it's Lady Geraldine you come to see, you can save yourself the
-trouble of the visit. They say she was brought up by a Puritan
-grandmother, who died last year, and left her all her fortune. However
-that may be, the Lady Geraldine never appears when she can escape doing
-so. My lady gives way to her. They say she does not care to have a
-grown-up daughter at her heels, she who might pass for four-and-twenty
-herself any day, but for that damning evidence. But they say the father
-is beginning to declare that his daughter is no longer to be kept in the
-background. I suppose the next thing will be that they will marry her
-to some young nobleman. Gadzooks! with that face and that fortune--if
-the fortune be not a clever myth--they ought not to find it a difficult
-task!"
-
-"I heard it said at the club that Sandford was the favoured suitor for
-the hand of Lady Geraldine," said one young exquisite, speaking with a
-lisp and taking snuff.
-
-There was a laugh from the group of men standing by.
-
-"Oh, Sandford is my lady's favourite! They say he is a kinsman; and he
-amuses her vastly, and gives her all the homage her heart desires. But
-Lord Romaine may have something to say to that. Sandford is going the
-pace that kills, and is playing old Harry with his fortune and estate.
-And as for my Lady Geraldine--well, 'tis said the pretty little Puritan
-will look at none of us. Split me! but it will be a pretty comedy to
-watch! The awakening of Aphrodite; isn't that the thing to call it?
-But Aphrodite is not generally credited with much coyness--ha, ha, ha!
-Perhaps it is but a pose on the part of the pretty maid. The sweet
-creatures are so artful in these days, one can never be too cautious."
-And a roar of laughter answered this sally, caution being about the last
-quality ever cultivated by the speaker.
-
-Whilst all this was going on within doors, the object of these latter
-remarks was enjoying a silvan solitude in the most secluded portion of
-the beautiful old garden.
-
-Far away from the house, far out of earshot of all the fashionable
-clamour resounding there, set in the midst of a dense shrubbery of ilex
-and yew, was an arbour--itself cut out of a giant yew-tree--commanding a
-view of a portion of the river, slipping by its alder-crowned banks, and
-overlooking a small, square lawn, sunk between high turf walls, in the
-centre of which stood an ancient moss-grown sundial, whose
-quaintly-lettered face was a source of unending interest to the fair
-girl, who had made of this remote and sheltered place a harbour of
-refuge for herself.
-
-She was seated now just within the arbour, an open book of poetry upon
-her knee; but she was not reading, for her chin rested in the palm of
-her hand, as she leaned forward in an unstudied attitude of grace, her
-elbow on her knee, her wonderful dark eyes fixed full upon the shining
-river, a dreamy smile of haunting sweetness playing round her lips. At
-her feet a great hound lay extended, his nose upon his paws, his eyes
-often lifted to the face of his mistress, his ears pricked at the
-smallest sound, even at the snapping of a twig. Nobody could surprise
-the Lady Geraldine when she had this faithful henchman at her side.
-
-The girl was dressed with extreme simplicity for the times she lived in,
-when hoops were coming in, stiff brocades, laces and lappets,
-high-heeled coloured shoes, and every extravagance in finery all the
-rage. True, the texture of her white silk gown was of the richest, and
-it was laced with silver, and fastened with pearl clasps that must have
-cost a great sum; but it was fashioned with a simplicity that suggested
-the rustic maiden rather than the high-born dame. Yet the simple
-elegance of the graceful, girlish figure was displayed to such advantage
-that even the modish mother had been able to find no fault with the
-fashion in which her daughter instructed that her gowns should be cut;
-and surmises and bets were freely exchanged by the gallants crowding
-Lord Romaine's house as to whether it were a deep form of coquetry or
-real simplicity of taste which made the Lady Geraldine differ so much
-from the matrons and maids about her.
-
-She wore no patches upon her face, though the dazzling purity of her
-complexion would thereby have been enhanced. And in days when the hair
-was dressed into tower-like erections, and adorned with powder, laces,
-ribbons, and all manner of strange fripperies, this girl wore her
-beautiful waving golden tresses floating round her face in the fashion
-of the ladies of Charles the Second's reign, or coiled them with
-careless grace about her head in a natural coronet. With powder or
-pomatum, wires or artificial additions, she would have nothing to do.
-She had been brought up in the country by her grandmother, a lady of
-very simple tastes, who would in no wise conform to the extravagant
-fashions which had crept in, and were corrupting all the old-time grace
-and simplicity of female attire.
-
-"Leave those fripperies to the gallants," had been the old lady's
-pungent remark; "what do we want with powder and periwigs, patches and
-pomatum?"
-
-She remembered the simple elegance of the court-dresses of the ladies in
-the Stuart times, and had no patience with the artificial trappings that
-followed. Moreover, albeit not a Puritan in any strict sense of the
-word--being a loyal advocate of the Stuart cause--she was a woman of
-great piety and devotion, and studied her Bible diligently; so that she
-took small pleasure in the adornment of the person in gaudy clothing,
-and the broidering of the hair, and in fine array. She taught her
-granddaughter to think more of the virtue of the meek and quiet spirit,
-and to seek rather to cultivate her mind, and store it with information
-and with lofty aspirations, than to give her time and thoughts to the
-round of folly and dissipation which made up the life of the lady of
-fashion.
-
-Geraldine was so happy in the care of her grandmother, and felt so
-little at home with her fashionable mother, that her visits had been few
-and far between hitherto, until the sudden death of Mrs. Adair six
-months previously had obliged her to return permanently to her father's
-roof.
-
-Here she found a state of things which amazed and troubled her not a
-little, and greatly did she marvel how her mother could be the daughter
-of the guardian of her childhood. True, Lady Romaine had married very
-young, and early escaped from the watchful care of her judicious mother;
-but it seemed marvellous that so close a tie could have existed between
-them, and the girl would look on with amaze and pain at her mother's
-freaks and follies, wondering how any woman could find entertainment in
-the idle, foolish, and often profane vapourings of the beaux who
-fluttered about her, and how any sane persons could endure such a life
-of trivial amusement and ceaseless meaningless dissipation.
-
-Pleading with her father her grief at her grandmother's death, she had
-obtained a six months' respite from attendance at the gay functions
-which made up life to Lady Romaine. Those six months had been spent,
-for the most part, in the privacy of her own apartments, which she had
-furnished with the dim and time-honoured treasures of her grandmother's
-house, all of which were now her own, and which made her quarters in the
-old part of the house like an oasis of taste, and harmony, and true
-beauty in an ocean of confused and almost tawdry profusion. The old
-garden was another favourite haunt of hers, for there were portions of
-it which were seldom invaded by the gay butterflies who often hovered
-about the newer terraces and the formal Dutch garden, and the hound
-always gave her ample warning of any approaching footstep, so that she
-could fly and hide herself before any one could molest her.
-
-So here she prosecuted her studies, read her favourite authors, and when
-the house was quiet--her mother having flown off to some gay rout or
-card-party or ball--she would practise her skill on the lute, virginal,
-spinet, or harp, and her fresh young voice would resound through the
-house, drawing the servants to the open windows to hear the sweet
-strains.
-
-Lady Romaine would have humoured the girl's fancy for seclusion
-indefinitely. She felt almost humiliated by the presence of a daughter
-so stately and so mature. Geraldine was nineteen, but might have passed
-for more, with her grave, refined beauty, and her lack of all the
-kittenish freakishness which made many matrons seem almost like girls,
-even when their charms began to fade, and nature had to be replaced by
-art. Lady Romaine fondly believed that her admirers took her for
-four-and-twenty; and now to have to pose as the mother of a grown-up
-daughter was a bitter mortification, and one which disposed her to make
-as speedy a marriage for Geraldine as could well be achieved. Lord
-Romaine had at last insisted that his daughter should appear in the
-world of fashion, and she had been once or twice to Court in her
-parents' train, where her striking beauty and unwonted appearance had
-made some sensation. Geraldine had little fault to find with what she
-saw and heard there. Good Queen Anne permitted nothing reprehensible in
-her neighbourhood, and her Court was grave to the verge of dullness.
-She was a loving and a model wife; and the Duchess was devoted to her
-husband, though often making his life a burden by her imperious temper.
-Anything like conjugal infidelity was not tolerated therefore by either
-of these ladies, and decorum ruled wherever the Queen was to be found.
-
-But at other places and in other company matters were far different, and
-already Geraldine began to shrink with a great disgust and distaste from
-the compliments she received, from the coarse, foolish, affected talk
-she heard, and from the knowledge of the senseless dissipation which
-flowed like a stream at her feet, and which seemed to encircle the span
-of her life in a way that made escape impossible.
-
-But she had been taught obedience as one of the cardinal virtues, and
-the days of emancipated daughters were not yet. When her father bade
-her lay aside her mourning and join in the life of the house, she knew
-she must obey. But she had asked from him the favour of being permitted
-to design her own dresses, and to follow her own tastes in matters
-pertaining to her own toilet, and also that she might be excused
-attendance at her mother's morning levee; for the spectacle of crowds of
-men flocking in and out of her mother's apartments, and witnessing the
-triumphs of the coiffeurs and tire-women, was to her degrading and
-disgusting; and though Lord Romaine laughed--being himself so inured to
-the custom--and told her she was a little fool, and must get the better
-of her prudery, he gave way to her in this, and the more readily because
-she represented to him how that these morning hours were now the only
-ones she could command for study; and he was proud to find in his
-daughter an erudition and talent very rare amongst women in those days.
-
-[Illustration: The old garden was another favourite haunt of hers (page
-96).]
-
-But now an approaching footstep warned the girl that her pleasant
-morning was over. The dog sprang up, but did not growl. It was
-Geraldine's own serving-woman approaching with the girl's white-plumed
-hat and long silver-laced gloves.
-
-"My lady's coach waits, and she desires your presence," was the message
-that reached her. Geraldine sat down to let the woman fasten the hat
-upon her head, and with a sigh she put away her books in their basket,
-and gave it to the charge of the faithful hound. She had found that her
-treasures were far more carefully safeguarded by him than when left in
-the care of a giddy maid, who was more bent on having the same kind of
-amusement with the men-servants that her mistress had with the gallants
-than of seeking to discharge her duties faithfully and well.
-
-"Hasten, child, hasten!" cried Lady Romaine's shrill voice from the
-entrance-hall, as Geraldine approached. She was a wonderful object as
-she stood there in the full light of the June sunshine, her stiff amber
-brocade sweeping round her in great billows, her waist laced in like
-that of a wasp, and accentuated by the style of the long-pointed bodice;
-her high-heeled shoes, ornamented to extravagance, the heels being
-bright red and the uppers sewed with precious stones; gems glittering in
-the mass of laces at her throat, and in a number of clasps fastened to
-the bodice; her hair towering upwards to such a height that she could
-scarce sit comfortably in her lofty coach, and could wear nothing in the
-way of head-gear save the laces and ribbons which were worked in with
-much skill by the French hair-dresser. She was redolent of perfume;
-gloves, lace handkerchief, dainty muff, every little knickknack, of
-which she possessed so many, all emitted the same cloying sweetness.
-Geraldine felt herself heave a sigh of oppression as she followed this
-grotesque object into the coach. She was growing used to the aspect
-presented by the dames of fashion, but there were moments when her first
-disgust came over her in great waves.
-
-"I marvel that you like to make yourself such a figure of fun, child,"
-remarked the mother, as she settled herself in her coach, smirked
-towards the piece of looking-glass let in opposite, and turned a
-sidelong glance upon her daughter; "'tis enough to set the gallants
-laughing to see how you habit yourself. Well, well; you are a lucky
-girl to have found a suitor so soon. Now take good heed to show him no
-saucy airs, should he present himself at our box at the play to-day. He
-has been away these last days, but he can never long absent himself from
-town. Mind you have a smile for him when he appears, or I shall have
-somewhat to say to you later, Miss Impertinence." And the lady's ivory
-fan came down somewhat smartly upon Geraldine's arm.
-
-"Of whom are you speaking, ma'am?" she asked, whilst the colour mounted
-suddenly in her fair face.
-
-"Oh, come now; so we are already posing as a belle of many beaux! Pray
-who has ever cast a glance upon you save my good kinsman Sandford? And,
-mind you, he is a man of taste and fashion, and it is a great compliment
-that he has singled you out for notice. There be girls would give their
-ears for a kind glance from his eyes, and there are as good fish in the
-sea as ever came out of it; so mind your manners, miss, and treat him to
-no tricks. It is high time you were wed, and had a husband to look
-after you, and that is why I take you about. For, as for pleasure in
-such company, one might as well play bear-leader to a snow queen!"
-
-"I did not know that Lord Sandford had done me any favour," spoke
-Geraldine quietly. "I have seen him but seldom, and he has spoke not
-over much to me. But I will bear your wishes in mind, madam, should he
-appear to-day."
-
-"Ha! there he is!" suddenly cried my lady, becoming excited, and rapping
-smartly with her fan on the glass of the window. The next minute the
-coach had pulled up, and Lord Sandford, attired in the very height of
-the fashion, was bowing over her hand with his courtliest air.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VI.*
-
- *THE PASTIMES OF THE TOWN.*
-
-
-"The sun shines once again," quoth Lord Sandford, as he raised the
-extended hand of Lady Romaine to his lips, and dropped a light kiss upon
-her scented glove. "The sun shines in the sky; but let him beware and
-look to his laurels, for there are stars abroad of such dazzling lustre
-that Phoebus must have a care lest the brightness of his shafts be
-quenched in a more refulgent glow." And the young man gazed into the
-lady's eyes with a bold laughing stare that pointed the meaning of the
-compliment.
-
-"La! but you talk the greatest nonsense!" cried Lady Romaine, highly
-delighted, as she tapped him smartly with her fan. "Come, tell me where
-you have been these many days. Some said you had been a-wooing in the
-country, and others that your dolts of tradesmen were dunning you to
-distraction, and others that you had fought a duel and had need to fly;
-but, pardieu! if one believed all the gossip of the town, one would have
-enough to do. I know there has been a duel, and I am aching to hear all
-about it. I'll warrant you know all the story, since he was your
-friend. Come, get into the coach, and tell me all about it. Were you
-there? What was it all about? And what sort of an end did he make?"
-
-Lady Romaine's face expressed the eager pleasure and curiosity of a
-child talking over some trivial pleasure; she flirted her fan, cast
-languishing glances, and played off upon the young Earl all those
-countless little airs and graces which characterized the fine lady of
-the period.
-
-But Geraldine drew back in her corner, her face growing cold and pale.
-She had scarcely acknowledged Lord Sandford's presence, only just
-bending her head in response to his bow. He had not addressed her as
-yet, and he appeared engrossed by the mother; but he flashed one quick
-glance upon her now, and possibly read something of the pain and disgust
-which possessed her, for he answered,--
-
-"Nay, madam, let us not talk of what is past and done. How can thought
-of gloom and death dwell in so radiant a presence? In sooth, all dark
-thoughts take to themselves wings in this company, and will not be
-caught or caged. I forget that we are not in the bowers of Arcadia;
-for, in sooth, I am transported thither so soon as these poor eyes be
-dazzled by the light of those twin stars of love and beauty!"
-
-Again Lady Romaine tapped him with her fan. She loved a compliment,
-however fulsome; but she wanted at this moment to be entertained by the
-account of the duel, which had made a little stir in the town, from the
-fact of one of the combatants having been the boon companion and friend
-of Lord Sandford.
-
-"You dear, tormenting devil! But I will have the story yet! And we are
-all dying to know how you will get on without your Fidus Achates. By my
-troth, you do not look as though you had wasted away in fruitless
-longing. Perchance you have found already another to fill his place?"
-
-"Perhaps I have, madam," was the negligent reply. "I had not known the
-town had so much thought to spare for worthless me. I' faith, I am a
-bigger man than I thought for. But I must not keep your coach standing
-in this blaze of sunshine. Whither are you bound, fair ladies? To some
-Arcadian bowers of Paphos, I doubt not, where Orpheus will charm you
-with his lyre, and nymphs will cluster round in envy, marvelling at
-those charms which not even Aphrodite herself can rival."
-
-"Oh fie! you are a sad flatterer!" cried Lady Romaine, sinking back upon
-her cushions and waving her hand. "We are bound to Lady Saltire's
-hazard table for an hour's play. Shall we meet you there, my lord?
-Afterwards, we take supper at our favourite India house, and then to the
-play--Wynstanly's water theatre. He has a new piece--monstrous fine,
-those who have seen it vow. They have nymphs, and mermaids, and
-tritons, and I know not what beside; and they ask a pretty price for the
-boxes, I can tell you. But la! one must go and see what all the world
-is talking of. Mind you come to our box if you be there. We shall
-expect you, and shall welcome you and any friend you like to bring."
-
-"Even the new Fidus Achates, of whom you spoke just now?" asked Lord
-Sandford, with a slightly ironical bow.
-
-"Oh gracious, yes!" cried Lady Romaine, excited by the very idea; "bring
-him at once and present him to us. I hope he is a pretty fellow, and
-can turn a merry quip and tell a story. You should have heard Beau
-Sidney last night! Sakes! I thought I should have split my sides!"
-
-At this juncture the horses became so fidgety with standing in the glare
-of the sun that Lord Sandford stepped back, and the coach rolled upon
-its way. Lady Romaine waved her scented kerchief, and then routed her
-scent-bottle out of her reticule, and turning sharply upon her daughter,
-said,--
-
-"Why sit you ever like a stuffed owl, without so much as a word or a
-smile? I die for shame every time I take you out. What have I done to
-be punished with such a daughter? One would think you to be a
-changeling child, if you did not so favour the Adairs. How think you
-you will ever get wed, sitting gaping there like a farm-house wench, who
-is afraid to open her lips lest she should betray herself by her speech.
-You put me to shame, child; I could cry with mortification. What will
-the world say, save that I have an idiot for a daughter?"
-
-Geraldine knew not what to answer. As she listened to the fatuous and
-stilted talk which was fashionable in her mother's world, with its
-senseless mythological allusions and high-flown extravagances, it often
-seemed to her that these gay dandies and dames were all playing at
-madmen together. Her tongue had never learned the trick of such talk.
-It perplexed and disgusted her, seeming trivial and childish when it was
-not improper or profane. She saw other young girls who listened
-eagerly, and as eagerly reproduced the flowery nonsense amongst
-themselves and their admirers; but it seemed impossible to her to do the
-like, and she listened in humble silence to her mother's tirades,
-wondering whether there were something radically wrong about herself, or
-whether the absurdity and folly were in others.
-
-"But, madam," she said gently at the last, "why should I get me a
-husband so soon? My grandmother was against very early marriages, and
-as she lay dying she often warned me to make very careful choice ere I
-gave my hand in troth-plight. She said I must needs be certain of mine
-own heart, for that no more wretched life could exist for woman than
-when she was tied to a man she could not love or respect."
-
-"Tush, child! Your grandmother was a good woman. I speak no hurt of
-her. But she knew less of life than many a girl of eighteen does
-nowadays, and her ideas were all topsy-turvy. A woman wants a fine
-establishment, her powdered footmen, her negro boys, her dresses, her
-jewels, and all the world doing her homage. That is what makes the
-pleasure of life. A good husband who can give you all that is what you
-want; and what can you ask better than the addresses of Lord Sandford?
-I tell you there are half the girls in town would give their ears for
-his smiles. He has been extravagant, 'tis true; but the estate can
-stand a heavy drain, and he is lucky at cards. He soon finds himself on
-his legs again. When he marries he will open his great house in the
-Strand, of which he uses but one wing now. With your fortune and his
-estates and his luck in gaming, you might be the gayest couple in town.
-Look to it, girl, that you show him no airs. I am ashamed to have such
-a mannerless wench for a daughter. If you are not more careful, you
-will drive all the beaux away; and then, when it is too late, you will
-be sorry."
-
-Geraldine had her own ideas on that point. It was her one desire just
-now to keep at arm's length all those gay popinjays that fluttered about
-her mother. Lord Sandford, it is true, was somewhat removed from the
-crowd by a handsomer person, a more distinguished air, and by a greater
-force of character. On more than one occasion, when he had put himself
-about to gain her ear, she had found that he could drop his mask of gay
-affectations, and be both shrewd and entertaining. Some of his
-criticisms had even interested and aroused her; but she was very far
-from being captivated. She did not know whether it would be possible to
-give to such a man either love or reverence, and without either one or
-other Geraldine had resolved not to marry, though she knew that it was a
-hard task for a daughter to set at naught the wishes of her parents in
-these matters. She saw that both father and mother, though for
-different reasons, desired her to make a speedy choice, and take up her
-position in the fashionable world as a lady of title and importance.
-
-However, she was spared further strictures by the arrival of the
-carriage at Lady Saltire's fine house: and shortly she found herself
-standing behind her mother's chair at the hazard table, half stunned by
-the clatter and clamour of voices, watching with grave, pained eyes the
-eager faces of the players, their excited gestures as they reached for
-their winnings, their rage and disappointment when the luck went against
-them, the greed she saw in all faces--that lust after gold which is of
-all vices one of the most hateful and degrading.
-
-Old men and young girls, matrons and aged dames, all crowded round the
-tables, their hoops crushing together, their tall powdered heads
-sometimes meeting in sharp collision. There were scented dandies, who
-regarded this "ladies' play" as the merest bagatelle, and lost or won
-their gold pieces with careless grace, thinking of the more serious play
-which awaited them later at the club, or at the lodgings of some member
-of their own set.
-
-Amongst this motley crowd, gaily apparelled servants moved to and fro,
-handing coffee, chocolate, and delicate confectionery, or offering
-scented waters for the refreshment of the ladies. The gentlemen
-preferred stronger potations, and congregated together, laughing and
-jesting. But not infrequently they would be joined by some giddy young
-matron, who called them all by their Christian names, passed jests with
-them that would not bear repetition in these days, and even toasted some
-"pretty fellow," laughing gaily and giddily the while.
-
-There were a few graver spirits congregated together in one small room,
-and Geraldine could catch fleeting glimpses of them through an open
-door. She knew some of the faces, and that they were politicians and
-men of letters; and she thought they were discussing some literary
-point, for one held a paper in his hand, and he seemed to be reading
-from it to the others.
-
-"I'll warrant they have got a new ode to my Lord of Marlborough yonder,"
-spoke a voice at Geraldine's elbow; and turning she saw an elderly man
-whose face was known to her from his having been a guest at her father's
-house. "They had a great trouble after the victory of Blenheim to find
-a poet able to hymn the triumph in periods sufficiently fine; but I
-think it was Lord Halifax who discovered Mr. Addison, whose noble lines
-set the city wondering. Belike he has broken forth into lyric or epic
-praise over the battle of Ramillies, and the marvellous effects it has
-had abroad. Shall we go and listen to his periods?"
-
-Geraldine was thankful to get away from the heated atmosphere of the
-card-room, and to find herself amongst men and women who had other
-fashions of thought and speech. But she was not allowed much peace in
-these different surroundings; for she was quickly summoned to her
-mother's side, taken from house to house, ever seeing and hearing the
-like vapourings, the like fripperies and follies. It was the same thing
-at the dinner or supper, where her mother had a whole train of young
-bloods in her wake. She gave them the best the house afforded, and
-spent her time quizzing the dresses of the other ladies at the
-surrounding tables, learning all the gossip about any person whose face
-or costume struck her, and drinking in flattery and adulation as a bee
-sips honey from the flowers.
-
-In spite of her efforts to please her mother, Geraldine found it
-impossible to take any share in this strange sort of gaiety. Her
-answers were little more than monosyllables. Often she did not even
-understand the allusions or the far-fetched metaphors of those who
-addressed her. More often she shrank from their glances and their open
-compliments, feeling degraded by both, but powerless to repel them. She
-was thankful when at last she found herself by her mother's side in the
-box at Wynstanly's; for here she hoped she might find some measure of
-peace, since the box would not hold any great number of persons, and her
-mother was never satisfied without the attention of four or five
-gentlemen at once.
-
-If the play in itself were not very entertaining, the effects of fire
-and water were rather magnificent, and something new, so that more
-attention was given to the stage than was usual at such entertainments
-in those days. The fashionable listeners did not turn their backs upon
-the players and talk at the top of their voices all the while the play
-was in progress, as in some houses, and Geraldine was quite wrapped in
-contemplation of the monsters and mermaids and denizens of the deep,
-with Father Neptune and his trident at their head, so that she knew
-nothing of what went on in the box where she sat, till a voice at her
-elbow spoke insistently.
-
-"They lack but one thing more--snow-white Aphrodite rising in peerless
-beauty from the foam of the sea; and yet the audience has but to turn
-its eyes hither, and behold they will see that crowning marvel for
-themselves!"
-
-The girl started, and looked full into the eyes of Lord Sandford, bent
-upon her with a significance there was no misunderstanding. He was
-dressed in a daring costume of scarlet and gold, with quantities of lace
-and sparkling jewels. Even his well-turned legs were encased in scarlet
-stockings, and his shoes were of the same flaming hue. His height and
-breadth of shoulder always made him a notable figure; and the immense
-wig he wore, which to-night was cunningly powdered so as to look almost
-like frosted silver, added to the distinction of his appearance. Gilded
-popinjay Lord Sandford with all his extravagances could never be called.
-There was something too virile and strong about his whole personality
-for that.
-
-"I do not like compliments, my lord," she answered, the words escaping
-her lips almost before she was aware; "I have heard something too much
-of Venus and Cupid, Pallas and Hymen, since I made my appearance in
-London routs. I am but a simple country maid, and desire no high-flown
-compliments. I am foolish enough to regard them rather as honeyed
-insults. I pray you pardon my freedom of speech."
-
-"I pray you pardon mine," spoke Lord Sandford quickly. "You have
-spoken, Lady Geraldine, a deeper truth than perchance you know. I, for
-one, will not offend again. I would that all our sisters, wives, and
-daughters would look as you and speak as you."
-
-The frank sincerity in face and voice pleased her, and a smile dawned in
-her eyes. It was the first he had ever seen bent on him, and he was
-struck afresh with the pure unsullied beauty of this girl's face. Truth
-to tell, his first attraction towards her had been the rumour of her
-fortune, for he was more deeply in debt than he wished the world to
-know; but something in the remoteness and isolation in which she seemed
-to wrap herself piqued and interested him; for his jaded palate required
-fresh food when it was to be had, and the vein of manliness and strength
-which his life had never altogether warped or destroyed responded to the
-sincerity he read in Lady Geraldine's fair face.
-
-The curtain was down now. For a few minutes he spoke of the play and
-the water apparatus, worked by a windmill on the roof, which was
-exciting so much interest in London. Geraldine's eyes meantime
-travelled round the box. She saw her mother engrossed in gay talk with
-a small circle of admirers; but one of these edged himself somewhat away
-from the rest, and finally stood apart, leaning against the wall of the
-box and surveying the house from that vantage point.
-
-Geraldine's eyes were riveted with some interest upon this newcomer,
-whom she was certain she had never seen before. In some indefinable way
-he was different from the men she had been used to meet at such places.
-For one thing, he wore his own hair; and the floating brown curls, like
-Cavalier love-locks, seemed to her infinitely more becoming than the
-mass of false hair which was so much in vogue in all ranks save the
-lowest. His dress, too, though far more simple than that of the beaux
-fluttering round her mother, seemed to her far more graceful and
-distinguished. His stockings, breeches, and vest were all of white,
-with a little silver frosting. His coat was of pale blue, with silver
-buttons; and his lace cravat, though small and unostentatious, was rich
-in quality, and fastened by a beautiful pearl. He carried neither muff
-nor snuff-box, cane nor toothpick. He did not simper nor ogle, nor look
-as though he desired to attract the eyes of the house upon himself. But
-he was, notwithstanding, a rather notable figure as he stood looking
-gravely and thoughtfully downwards; there was something very graceful in
-his attitude, and in the carriage of his head, and his features were so
-remarkably handsome that Lady Romaine turned her eyes upon him many
-times, and exerted all her artifices to draw him back to her immediate
-neighbourhood. But he was perfectly unconscious of this, not hearing
-the chatter which went on about him, lost in some reverie of his own,
-which brought a peculiar dreamy softness into his eyes.
-
-Lord Sandford, following the direction of Geraldine's glance, looked at
-this motionless figure, then back at the girl, and laughed.
-
-"Lady Geraldine, pray permit me to present to you my newly-made friend
-and comrade, Sir Grey Dumaresq, who, I doubt not, is dying to make his
-bow to so fair a lady."
-
-She flashed him a glance half merry, half reproachful, and he suddenly
-laid his hand upon his lips, a laugh rolling from them hearty and full.
-
-"I' faith I had forgot! How shall I teach my rebel tongue a new
-language? But Sir Grey will atone for all my defects.--Here is a lady,
-if you will believe it, O friend, who loves not the sugared and honeyed
-phrase of adulation, but seeks in all things truth, virtue, and I know
-not what else beside. It is whispered to me that she is a mistress of
-all the _belles lettres_, and perchance a poetess herself."
-
-"Nay, my lord," answered Geraldine, with a blush and a smile--"only one
-who loves the poesy of those who have lived before, and left their
-treasures for us who come after, and would fain drink in all the beauty
-of their thoughts and of their lives."
-
-Lord Sandford good-naturedly yielded his seat to Grey, whose sensitive
-face had lighted at the girl's words.
-
-"Methought I had come to a world where naught was dreamed of save
-fashion and frippery, false adulation and falser scorn. I am well-nigh
-stunned by the clamour of tongues, the strife of parties, the bustle of
-this gay life of fashion."
-
-"Oh, and I too--I too!" breathed the girl softly: and he flashed at her
-a quick, keen glance of sympathy and interest.
-
-"I was bred in the country; my grandam brought me up. I lived with my
-books, amid silvan solitudes, the songs of birds, the scent of flowers.
-This great glittering world of folly and fashion is like a fiery wheel
-going round in my head. Ofttimes I could cry aloud for mercy, the pain
-and bewilderment are so great. I know there must be noble men and good
-in this strange Pandemonium; but I know not where to find them, and my
-heart grows sick. Would that I could go back to my books and my dreams!
-But alas! a maiden may not choose for herself."
-
-"Still there is life here," spoke Grey quickly, "and it behoves us to
-know men as well as books. I have studied both. I will study them
-again. I would fain learn all that life has to teach, whether for weal
-or woe. No hermit-monk was ever truly a man. Yet there be times when
-one shrinks in amaze from all one sees and hears."
-
-The chord of sympathy was struck. They passed from one thing to
-another. She found one at last who knew and loved the poets of her
-childhood's dreams--who could talk of Spenser and Sidney, of Watson,
-Greville, and Drayton, quoting their verses, and often lighting upon her
-favourite passages. Here was a man who knew Milton and Clarendon,
-Hobbes, Herbert, Lovelace and Suckling, Lord Herbert of Cherbury and
-Izaak Walton. He had read eagerly, like herself, poetry and prose,
-drama and epic, lyric and sonnet. He could speak of Poetry as one who
-had loved and courted her as a mistress. The girl longed to ask him if
-he had written himself, but maiden shyness withheld her. Yet her eyes
-brightened as she talked, and the peach-like colour rose and deepened in
-her cheeks; and Lord Sandford, turning back once again from the mother
-to look at the daughter, was struck dumb with admiration and delight.
-
-"There is a rose worth winning and wearing, though the stem may not be
-free from a sharp thorn," he said to himself; and Lady Romaine, who
-chanced to catch sight of Geraldine during a shifting of the admirers
-who surrounded her, gave something very like a start, and felt a curious
-thrill run through her in which pride and envy were blended.
-
-"Gracious! I did not know I had so handsome a daughter! I must wed her
-as fast as may be, else shall I find my beaux going from me to her," was
-her unspoken thought; and aloud she said, tapping Lord Sandford with her
-fan, "Pray tell my daughter that I am about to depart. We have had
-enough of the naiads and dryads, and I am tired and hungry. Who will
-come home with me to supper--to take pot-luck with us?"
-
-There was an eager clamour in response; but when the supper-party
-assembled round Lady Romaine's chocolate tables in her favourite private
-parlour, she noted that Geraldine had disappeared to bed, and that Sir
-Grey Dumaresq had not availed himself of her open invitation.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VII.*
-
- *A FAIR FACE.*
-
-
-If Grey Dumaresq was a man who craved a variety of experiences, and
-wished to see life under different aspects, he was getting his wish now;
-for the gay world of fashion, into which he suddenly found himself
-plunged, differed _in toto_ from any of his former experiences; and so
-swift was the pace, and so shifting the throng amid which he moved, that
-he often felt as though his breath were fairly taken away, and as though
-he had suddenly stepped into a new existence.
-
-Lord Sandford had chanced upon the young baronet at a moment when a
-blank had been made in his own life by the sudden and violent death of
-one who had been his boon companion and friend. The gay young man, who
-had fallen in a foolish duel a few weeks before, had been the inmate of
-his house and the companion in all his freaks and follies; so much so,
-that without him the young nobleman felt for the moment bewildered and
-lost, and had absented himself from town with a view to "getting over
-it," as he hoped: for he despised himself for any sign of weakness, and
-would not for worlds have had his comrades and boon companions know how
-the loss had affected him.
-
-Then, as it seemed just by a lucky chance, this young and attractive man
-had fallen as from the very skies at his feet. Grey Dumaresq, new to
-the world of London, curious and speculative, willing to see all, learn
-all, participate in all, seemed exactly the person to fill the gap in
-his life. Grey had no place of abode; why, then, should he not occupy
-the vacant chambers in the wing of the great mansion in the Strand which
-Lord Sandford used as his customary lodging, when he was not spending
-his time with friends, or making one of a gay party elsewhere? Grey had
-no valid reason for declining the invitation pressed upon him. Lord
-Sandford was a masterful man, and his strong personality impressed
-itself upon Grey with something between attraction and repulsion. But,
-on the whole, attraction seemed the stronger power, and curiosity to
-know more of this man and his life held Grey's soul in thrall. He had
-always experienced a vivid curiosity to taste life in its various forms,
-to know and understand the thoughts, the feelings, the aspirations, the
-ambitions of other men. His travels had given him insight into many
-matters; but he felt that these new experiences were likely to be more
-searching, more exciting, more full of keen personal interest. He had
-been, as it were, a spectator heretofore; now he was to be a
-participator.
-
-He had not meant to be any man's guest; he had meant to take a modest
-lodging of his own, and look about him for something in the way of
-employment, but Lord Sandford had roared with laughter over such a
-notion.
-
-"What! Sir Grey Dumaresq going cap in hand to some proud place-giver to
-ask for patronage, or I know not what! Gadzooks, man, with that face,
-that figure, that horse, and a purse full of guineas, you can do better
-than that! Trust yourself to me. I'll show you where fame and fortune
-lie. You shall redeem your rat-infested old house in a very brief
-while, if you will but trust yourself to my guidance. You be Damon to
-my Pythias--or is it t'other way round, eh?--and I'll show you the royal
-road to the goal you want."
-
-For lack of any definite plans, Grey had consented for the nonce to
-accept Lord Sandford's advice, and had quickly found himself installed
-in some gloomy and stately yet luxurious chambers in a vast house, of
-which only a portion was open for use, and the rest given over to a
-neglect and decay that Hartsbourne itself could scarcely rival.
-
-"But we shall change all that some day," spoke Lord Sandford, with a
-careless laugh, as Grey expressed his surprise at the vast rooms and
-long galleries shut up and infested by rats and spiders. "Oh yes, we
-shall change all that some day; but what does a bachelor want with such
-a house as this? What should I be the better for a crowd of liveried
-servants, eating off their heads, idling away their time dicing and
-drinking? What have I to give an army of scullions and cooks to do--I
-who seldom take a meal at home after my morning chocolate? No, no; I
-know a trick worth two of that. I don't ruin myself to keep a crew of
-fat, lazy rogues about me, cheating me at every turn. Half a dozen
-fellows and a few kitchen wenches do well enow for me; but when Lady
-Sandford comes to her husband's home--ah well! then we shall see the
-difference."
-
-But though he talked jestingly from time to time of the Lady Sandford
-that was to be, he gave Grey no hint as to whether his fancy inclined
-more to one or another of the many gay maidens with whom he chatted and
-flirted, danced and romped, in the fashion of the day; and so
-bewildering and dazzling were these young madams and their surroundings
-that the newcomer was lost in a maze of wonder and bewilderment, and
-found it hard to distinguish one face from another, until he met one,
-different from all the rest.
-
-But Grey was not left idle; he had small time for musing. The very
-first day of his sojourn in London he was surrounded by a fluttering
-crowd of tailors, glove-sellers, barbers, fencers, sellers and purveyors
-of every imaginable ware, who all professed their eagerness to serve
-him, and quoted Lord Sandford as a patron who could swear to their
-honesty and the excellence of their goods.
-
-Into the midst of this motley throng Lord Sandford thrust himself,
-laughing his great hearty laugh, and quickly sent to the right-about
-two-thirds of the importunate crowd--a jest here, a keen thrust there, a
-slap on back or shoulder in another quarter, emphasizing his forcible
-hints. And when the room was cleared of all but the lucky few, he flung
-himself into an armchair with another laugh, telling Grey he was sorry
-his knaves of servants, who looked for perquisites everywhere, had let
-in this flood of rogues upon him, but added that he must needs have the
-wherewithal to cut a proper figure in London town, and forthwith set
-about the business of ordering an outfit for the young man which almost
-took his guest's breath away.
-
-"Poof!" he cried, when the latter strove to remonstrate, "you have
-plenty of money; and these rascals can wait if it suits your pleasure.
-Father's memory! Oh, be hanged to all such mawkish sentiment! You need
-not think less of your father because you wear a blue coat in lieu of a
-black! Rabbit me! but you are of a different world from this if you keep
-alive your father's memory for six months after his decease! No, no;
-you must cut a figure. Sir Hugh's name is clean forgot by now. I'll eat
-my boots if 'tis not so. I'll have you as gay as my fancy paints you.
-No black--no sables for the gentleman, I tell you. Let us see those
-other patterns. Ah! here is something more like."
-
-Grey submitted. In sooth, he cared but little for the colour of his
-clothes, or the set of his hat, or the cut of his coat. He let Lord
-Sandford have his way for the most part, only insisting here and there
-upon soft and tender tints, and showing a predilection for white, which
-his friend quite approved.
-
-"You shall be a foil to me, not a rival. I have learned that art from
-the ladies. I like to blaze like old Sol in his strength; you shall
-rather recall gentle Luna amid her galaxy of stars. Faugh! One's tongue
-gets into this silly trick of speech, so that one cannot drop it even
-betwixt man and man! But you are right to think that white becomes you
-well. You will look a pretty fellow, in all conscience, when you have
-added a peruke to your other adornments."
-
-But here Grey stood firm. Nothing would induce him to cumber his head
-with one of those mountains of hair. In vain the perruquiers displayed
-their wares; in vain Lord Sandford bantered and laughed, and made out
-that he would be reckoned as a mad fellow by the young bloods of the
-city. Grey would not yield an inch. He had always found his own hair
-sufficient and comfortable, and he would wear it to the end. And as the
-discomfited perruquier at last departed, Lord Sandford broke into
-another of his great laughs.
-
-"I' faith you are right, man. I like you the better that you have the
-courage of your opinions, and care no whit for fashion. You'll be a
-match for more than the perruquiers yet. There's a fighting strain in
-your blood. I can see it in the glint of your eye. Well, you shall not
-lack opportunity to fight as well as to laugh here in London town; but
-we'll not have cold steel or hot lead again. I've seen enough of that
-cursed duelling to last me for a lifetime."
-
-Grey was quickly to discover the nature of the battles in which he was
-to take a part, and at the first he shrank from them with an instinctive
-aversion he could not well have defined, being no grave moralist or
-philosopher. Contests of skill or of luck at the gaming tables were all
-the rage of the day with the young dandies of the town, and the man who
-could keep a steady head, and in some cases a steady hand, was certain
-in the long run to obtain advantage over his fellows. At one club a
-game something like our modern billiards was all the rage; and, of
-course, a man who was moderate in his cups could score heavily over the
-reckless, dissipated bloods, who were seldom sober after sundown. Dice
-and cards had their vogue at other places; and though some of the games
-played were those purely of chance, others required no small skill and a
-clear head to ensure success, and it was here that Lord Sandford's
-strong head and Grey's cool blood and temperate habits gave them the
-advantage.
-
-The young man had not been a fortnight in town before finding his
-capital doubled, as well as all bills paid to the astonished tradesmen,
-who seldom looked to receive their money within a twelvemonth. He was
-disposed to be troubled at this easy fashion of making money; but Lord
-Sandford laughed him to scorn.
-
-"Zounds, man, what does it matter? Those young popinjays are bound to
-lose their money to some one. Why not then to honest fellows like you
-and me, who pay our bills and do good to the community with the money?
-Scruples! Faugh! you must rid yourself of them! Sir Hugh Dumaresq's
-son need not trouble himself thus. Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow
-we die. Isn't that good Scripture?" But the reckless young lord paled
-a little at the sound of his own words. He had seen sudden death once
-too often for his peace of mind of late.
-
-In sooth, Grey felt but little scruple in taking his winnings. The
-young man was not greatly in advance of his age, although he was indued
-with a nature more finely strung and aspirations more lofty than
-belonged to most. Gambling was so much a matter of course both in this
-and in other lands, and the devotees of the amusement so numerous and so
-bent upon their sport, that it would have needed stronger convictions
-than Grey as yet possessed to make any stand on such a point. He took
-the same risks as the others, and if his coolness of head, steadiness of
-hand, and quick observation and memory served to make for success in his
-case, he rather regarded this as a witness to his superiority, and felt
-only a small sense of reluctance in pocketing his gains; which
-reluctance he could only attribute to a lingering memory of words spoken
-by his mother when he was a growing boy, and news came to them from time
-to time of Sir Hugh's losses over cards, and the necessity for further
-retrenchments upon the already impoverished estate.
-
-But the cases being so dissimilar, Grey did not see that he need debar
-himself from this easy highroad to fortunes, as it then seemed. Nobody
-was dependent upon him. Nobody was there to grieve over his troubles or
-to rejoice over his success. His honest serving-man was in sooth the
-only being in any way deeply attached to him; and Dick was as delighted
-at his master's brave appearance, and at the golden stream running into
-his pocket, as though he had achieved some great success or triumph.
-
-There was one way by which Grey had pocketed considerable sums of money
-that was very congenial to him, and had given him some very happy hours.
-This was the speed and strength of his horse, which Lord Sandford had
-made boast of, vowing in the hearing of some of the smartest dandies of
-the town that Don Carlos would beat any steed against whom he was
-pitted--a challenge eagerly taken up by the young bloods, proud of their
-own horses and horsemanship, to whom trials of skill and strength, and
-contests over which wagers might freely be exchanged, were as the very
-salt of life.
-
-So either out at Hampstead, or at Richmond or Hampton Court, Don Carlos
-had been set to show the metal of which he was made, and had come off
-easy victor in every race and every match, whether flat running, or
-leaping, or a course of the nature of a steeplechase had been elected.
-His strength and speed, sagacity and endurance, had never once failed
-him, and already he was the talk of the town, and Grey could have sold
-him for a great price had he been willing to part with his favourite.
-
-Many bright eyes had smiled upon the young centaur, many languishing
-glances had been cast at him. He had been called up again and again to
-be presented to some high-born dame, or some bevy of laughing maidens,
-and he had bowed with courtly grace, and received their sugared
-compliments with suitable acknowledgments. But no face had attracted
-him as that face he had seen once at the water theatre, almost upon his
-first appearance in the gay world. He knew that it belonged to Lady
-Geraldine Romaine; and often his eyes roved round some gay assemblage,
-searching half unconsciously for a sight of her tall and graceful
-figure, and the sweet, earnest face, so different from the laughing and
-grimacing crowd in which he now moved. Grey had not known much of
-women, so far. His college life first, and then his roving career of
-adventure, had hindered him from making friendships save with those of
-his own sex; and his deep love for his mother had preserved as a living
-power his chivalrous belief in women, and a resolute determination to
-disbelieve the idle, malicious, and vicious tales he heard of them on
-all sides. Womanhood was sacred to him, and should be sacred to the
-world. That was his inalienable conviction; and he had striven to be
-blind and deaf to much of what had often been passing around him, that
-he might not sink to the level of the men he met, who would tear to
-tatters a woman's reputation for an evening's pastime, or revel in every
-ugly bit of scandal or tittle-tattle that the young beaux' valets
-learned from the lackeys of other fine folk, and retailed with additions
-at the door of the theatre, the gates of the Park, or on the staircases
-of the fashionable houses whither their masters and mistresses flocked
-for amusement, unconscious or heedless of the gossip spread abroad about
-them by their servants at the doors.
-
-Grey took no pleasure in the society of these fashionable dames. His
-tongue had not learned the trick of the artificial language then in
-vogue. He was disgusted by the gross flattery every lady looked to
-receive, and the lisping platitudes of the attendant beaux filled him
-with scorn. It was small wonder that he chose rather the society of men
-of more virility and stronger fibre, such as Lord Sandford and his
-chosen friends; for though many of them were wild young rakes, and not a
-few had a very doubtful record, yet Grey knew little enough about that,
-and found them not without attraction, although the higher part of his
-nature revolted from much that he saw and heard. Nevertheless, he
-regarded it all as a part of the experience in life which he craved, and
-he might have become in a short while just such another as these, had it
-not been for an incident which suddenly arrested him in his career of
-dissipation, and turned his thoughts into different channels.
-
-It had been early June when he came to town, and now July had come, with
-its sultry suns and breathless nights, when Grey ofttimes felt after an
-evening over cards that it was mockery to go to bed, and lounged away
-the residue of the night at his open window, enjoying the only coolness
-and freshness that was to be had, as the wind came whispering from the
-river charged with refreshing moisture.
-
-Sometimes the river seemed to call him; and at such times he would lay
-aside his finery, clothe himself in some plainer habit, and betake
-himself through the silent house, where the night watchman was always
-found slumbering at his post, out through the big courts and down to the
-river steps, where a few light wherries were always kept moored, one of
-which he would select, and shoot out upon the glimmering river to meet
-the new day there.
-
-Some of his happiest hours were spent thus; and at such times as these
-he felt rising within him a vague sense of unrest and of disgust. He
-had come to the world of London to conquer fate, to make for himself a
-name and a career; and here he was wasting day after day in
-coffee-houses or clubs, with a crowd of idlers whose thoughts never rose
-above the fancy of the hour, whose only ambition was to kill time as
-easily and pleasantly as possible, and to line their pockets with gold,
-that they might have more to throw away on the morrow.
-
-Was this what he would come to? Was this what he was made for? Would
-he become like unto them, a mere roisterer and boon companion, a man
-without aspirations and without ambition? His cheeks burned at the
-thought; and he sent his light craft spinning rapidly up the stream as
-the questions formed themselves.
-
-It was an exquisite summer morning. The bells in the many towers and
-steeples of the city had chimed the hour of five. The sun had long been
-up, yet the glamour and glory of the new-born day still lay upon the
-sleeping city and the dewy meadows of the opposite shore. Grey rowed on
-rapidly, yet drinking in the beauty of all he saw. He knew not how far
-he had rowed; he had lost count of his surroundings; he was absorbed in
-a deep reverie, when he was suddenly brought up breathless and wondering
-by the sound of a voice singing--a voice so clear and sweet and true
-that he asked himself whether it could be any creature of earth that
-sang, or whether it might be some nymph or mermaid such as sailors spoke
-of in their wondrous tales.
-
-He gazed about him. He saw that he was passing a garden, and that a
-group of weeping willows overhung the water at this spot. The singing
-seemed to come from thence. Burning curiosity possessed him, and he
-very slowly and softly rowed himself onwards, till the prow of his boat
-met the drooping boughs with a soft rustle. The song ceased suddenly.
-Grey turned in his seat, and drew himself within the sheltering shade;
-as he did so, a quick exclamation broke from him. He dropped his oars
-as he exclaimed,--
-
-"The Lady Geraldine!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-How had it come about? Grey never could have said. But now it was all
-told--the story of his chequered life. She had been silent at the
-first--not exactly resentful of his intrusion, not unwilling to let him
-have speech of her again, but quiet, with a maidenly reserve and dignity
-which had acted upon him like a charm. It brought back to him the
-memory of his mother, and her noble dignity. The look in her eyes
-recalled those things that he had learned at her knee, and those
-aspirations after true greatness of life which she had cherished and
-fostered. Suddenly his present life looked to him utterly sordid, mean,
-and unworthy; and in a burst of confidence, for which he could have
-given no reason, he told her all his tale, encouraged by the soft and
-earnest glances of her beautiful eyes, although she scarcely spoke a
-word from beginning to end.
-
-And now she looked at him with a great compassion in her face.
-
-"Oh, it is sad, it is sad!" she said in her earnest musical tones. "I
-know a little how sad it is. I see it too. But you are a man. You are
-strong, you are your own master. Why do you let yourself be made the
-sport and plaything of fate? Oh, do not do it! Rise to your calling as
-a man, as a gentleman, as a Christian! You can--I know you can! I read
-it in your face! What is Lord Sandford to you? The acquaintance of a
-few weeks. What are his comrades to you? You know that in your heart
-you despise them. Then will you make yourself as one of them? Will you
-sink to their level? Oh no, no, no! Break the fetters; they cannot be
-fast riveted yet. Break them, and stand a free man, and then see what
-the world has to offer you."
-
-She was gazing at him now, not shyly, not as a maiden archly coquetting
-with a handsome young swain, but as a woman yearning to reclaim one
-whose footsteps had well-nigh slipped in the mire, and whose whole soul
-was stirred by the effort.
-
-Grey listened like a man who dreams; and yet his eyes were on fire, and
-his heart was kindled to a great flame--shame at his own weakness,
-yearnings after vanished memories and half-forgotten aspirations
-struggling together with some new and utterly unknown emotion which
-seemed to come surging over him like a flood, leaving him speechless,
-motionless.
-
-She had risen, and now held out her hand.
-
-"You will triumph yet. I am assured of it. And I shall pray God to
-give you His strength and grace. Farewell, sir; we may meet again
-sometimes. I shall hear of you. I shall listen to hear naught but
-good. Your mother's voice shall plead through mine. Give up evil
-companions; give up idle dissipation, and all that it brings in its
-train. Lead the higher life of the Courteous Knight, the Spotless
-Knight, the Knight of the Holy Grail. Did we not speak of them all when
-first we met, and methought you looked such a one yourself? Be true to
-that better self; and so I say farewell again. May God be with you!"
-
-She was gone, and Grey stood looking after her as a man who sees a
-vision.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER VIII.*
-
- *A STARTLING DISCOVERY.*
-
-
-As Grey Dumaresq drifted downstream with the tide that sunny July
-morning, he felt as though something new and wonderful had come into his
-life, as though some great and marvellous change had fallen upon him,
-which, for good or ill, must leave its mark upon his life.
-
-He did not try to analyze the strange feelings which possessed him. For
-a time he did not even consciously think. He seemed to be drifting
-along a shining pathway--drifting, he scarce knew whither, and did not
-care to ask. His heart was strangely heavy, and yet strangely light. A
-curious loathing and shame at himself was blended with a sense of
-exultant triumph, which held him in a mood of ecstasy. For a long while
-he drifted onwards, scarce thinking or knowing whither he went, till a
-sudden consciousness that he was passing Lord Sandford's house brought
-him to himself with a sense of shock. He had left that house only two
-hours before; yet it might have been as many years that had rolled over
-his head, so different were his feelings, so changed was his outlook
-upon life.
-
-He moored his boat, and went up to his room. Before long he would be
-expected to drink coffee or chocolate at his friend's levee, meet all
-those of his comrades who had energy to pay their customary _devoirs_ to
-their patron, and discuss the plans for the ensuing day and night. Grey
-dashed some cold water over his hot head, and sat down to think.
-
-What would Lord Sandford say if he suddenly expressed his intention of
-giving up gambling in all its many insidious forms, in order to enter
-upon a life totally different from that of the past weeks? It was not as
-though he had any alternative plan to unfold to him. He was as ignorant
-how his fortune was to be made now, after several weeks in gay London
-town, as he had been on his first approach to that city. He could
-almost hear the great guffaw of laughter with which Lord Sandford would
-greet his confession. He half feared the powerful personality and the
-imperious temper of the man who had been a good friend to him, and who
-had the reputation of being a dangerous enemy when his will was crossed.
-Grey knew that this man liked him--went near to loving him--would not
-easily let him go. He knew that he would appear both ungrateful and
-capricious; and the young man writhed at the thought of seeming either
-the one or the other. But yet he must break away. Pacing up and down
-the room, he seemed to see the soft earnest eyes of the Lady Geraldine
-bent upon him. He had pledged his word to her, and in spirit to his
-dead mother. From that pledge there was no drawing back. Yet how could
-the break best be made?
-
-He thought over the engagements already entered into. Was it needful
-that these should be kept? He thought not--at least not those which were
-but promises to meet at such and such clubs or coffee-houses for the
-purposes of card-playing and similar recreations. But there was one
-engagement that Grey did not see his way honourably to break. He had
-promised to ride Don Carlos the following Saturday in a course against
-three other picked horses, and heavy wagers, he knew, had been laid upon
-or against his steed. This engagement he felt he could not break; but
-the rest he would. He might even make the excuse that Don Carlos wanted
-attention, and that he was going to take him into the country for
-purposes of training; and, once away from Sandford House, he ought to be
-able to pen a letter to the master which might excuse his return, and
-explain the nature of the change which had come over him.
-
-Yes, that would be the way. He would not go open-mouthed to him this
-morning, to be perhaps scoffed or cajoled into some rash compromise.
-Grey knew that his ability to see both sides of a question often led him
-into difficulties and the appearance of vacillation. Surely he could
-keep his pledge if he made the break with a certain diplomatic skill.
-Not only would it be easier to himself, but it might prove the safer
-method also.
-
-When he saw Lord Sandford in the midst of his friends, laughing at the
-last bit of scandal, passing jokes over the latest repartee of the
-redoubtable Duchess of Marlborough to the meek Queen, discussing the
-rivalries of the ministers, and the other rivalries (to them more
-important) of the reigning beauties of the gay world, Grey felt that it
-would indeed be impossible to speak in this company of any of those
-things which were in his mind. He contented himself by standing aloof,
-looking out of the window and sipping his chocolate, whilst the gay
-flood of talk surged around him, and he caught a word here and a phrase
-there, but always heard when Lord Sandford's resonant tones dominated
-those of all others.
-
-"Talk of rival beauties; we shall see sport to-night. Lady Romaine and
-Lady Saltire--dearest friends and dearest foes--are to go to Vauxhall
-Gardens to-night, each in a new toilet specially designed and ordered
-for the occasion. It will be a ladies' battle, in very truth; and
-public opinion must needs decide which of the rival queens is fairest to
-look upon. I have promised both the dear creatures to be there, to give
-my admiration to both alike. Shall I risk the undying enmity of either
-by giving the palm to one? No such fool, gentlemen--no such fool is
-Sandford. I vow I will have ready such a pretty speech or couplet for
-each that she shall go away with a better opinion of me than ever! Ha,
-ha, ha! I love to see the pretty dears, tricked out in their finery,
-and ready to tear each other's eyes out! So, gentlemen, I cancel all
-previous engagements for to-night. I am for Vauxhall, and Heaven only
-knows how late we shall be detained there by the battle of beauty."
-
-"We will all be there!" cried the young bloods, who were at all times
-ready to follow Lord Sandford to whatever place of entertainment he
-elected to go; and one voice followed with a laughing question,--
-
-"Will the snow maiden be there in the train of her mother?"
-
-Grey felt himself start, and was glad his face was turned away. He
-would not for worlds that the sharp mocking eyes of Lord Sandford should
-see him at this moment, albeit he had no notion of any sort that he had
-special interest in his spotless Lady Geraldine.
-
-[Illustration: He stood quite still to watch Lord Sandford lead away the
-fair Geraldine (page 155).]
-
-"I trow so," was the carelessly-spoken reply of Lord Sandford, as he
-adjusted his wig and suffered his valet to spray some delicate perfume
-over his person, as a finishing touch to his toilet. "The Lady
-Geraldine is no longer to lead the life of a nun. It has been decreed
-that she is to show her lovely face abroad, and add thereby a lustre to
-her mother's charms."
-
-"A lustre her ladyship would well dispense with," laughed another. "She
-would sooner pose as the stepmother than the mother of a grown-up
-daughter--ha, ha! How comes it that this young beauty hath never been
-shown before to the world? Other damsels make their _debut_ at sixteen;
-but the Lady Geraldine can scarce be less than twenty, and has the
-dignity of matronhood."
-
-"A vast deal more dignity than the most part of our matrons do show
-forth," spoke Lord Sandford incisively. "Doubtless she learned it from
-her grandam, her mother's mother and her father's aunt; for my Lord and
-my Lady Romaine are cousins, and Mrs. Adair was trusted and revered by
-both. Young children are in the way of such gay ladies of fashion,
-wherefore the babe was sent to its grandam, and remained with her till
-the virtuous and discreet old lady died, having bequeathed her store of
-wisdom and discretion to the beautiful maid she had reared."
-
-"And her fortune too," sniggered one gay dandy. "Do not forget that
-item, my lord. It is whispered that it will make the biggest of her
-charms. What is the figure? Doth anybody know?"
-
-All disclaimed any precise information, and Lord Sandford spoke no word;
-his brow was slightly furrowed, and there was a subdued gleam in his eye
-which warned those who saw it that something in the conversation was not
-to his mind. They therefore hastened to change it, and many of them
-said adieu and sauntered away. Only a small knot remained with their
-patron, discussing the plans for the day; and Grey stood still in the
-embrasure of the window, his heart still beating with curious violence
-and rapidity. When those men were speaking of Geraldine, he had scarce
-been able to keep his fingers from their throats. What business had
-they taking her pure name upon their lips? And why had they spoken of
-her fortune? Could it be true that she was so great an heiress? He
-hated to believe it; yet what was it to him? He was wakened from his
-reverie by a quick question from Lord Sandford, which he heard as
-through the mists of a dream, and answered,--
-
-"'Tis true I am not quite myself. I slept not at all last night, and
-have been on the river well-nigh since sunrise to rid me of the vapours.
-Methinks I will seek some sleep in mine own rooms ere night. Reckon not
-on me for to-day's pastime."
-
-"Ay, you have the air of a man squeamish and in need of rest. Go get
-thee a good sleep, friend Grey, for we must keep you in fettle for the
-match on Saturday. Man and beast must come to the field strong and
-robust, with nerve and wind and muscle true and taut. But you must make
-one of our party to Vauxhall to-night. There will be many bright eyes
-on the lookout for the gay cavalier, as the ladies call you for your
-love-locks. You must not fail us there."
-
-For a moment Grey hesitated, prudence and passion fighting together for
-mastery. But the overwhelming desire to see Geraldine again--perhaps to
-speak a word of farewell--overcame him, and he answered briefly as he
-strolled through the room on his way out,--
-
-"I shall be ready enough for that; you can reckon on me."
-
-How the day passed Grey never knew, and it was still broad daylight when
-he and his comrades started for the gardens of Vauxhall, where it was
-the fashion to spend the evening hours when nothing more attractive
-offered, and where such music and such illuminations as the times had to
-offer were to be enjoyed, and where ladies and their attendant beaux
-fluttered about like so many gay butterflies, and found opportunity as
-the dusk fell for walks and talks of a more private nature in the bosky
-alleys and shady paths than they could hope to gain in crowded routs and
-card-parties. Supper could be obtained too, and pleasant little parties
-made up; and the fashionable world found it agreeable on these hot
-summer nights to take their pleasure out in the open air.
-
-Grey detached himself from his friends upon the first opportunity, and
-wandered alone through the gardens, avoiding encounters with persons he
-knew, though often accosted with laugh and jest and challenge by masked
-ladies, or young bloods eager to make friends with one whose face and
-figure began to be known, owing to his successes in horsemanship with
-Don Carlos, and his friendship with Lord Sandford. But Grey made small
-response to overtures, quickly shook himself free, and pursued his
-solitary ramble, till at length a sound of gay voices, laughter, and
-almost uproarious mirth, in which the tones of Lord Sandford could
-plainly be heard, drew him to a wide open space where an illuminated
-fountain seemed to have drawn a great concourse of people; and there,
-amid a tossing crowd of gaudy gallants, and ladies with towering heads,
-mincing, giggling, uttering little shrieks, little jests, or playing off
-an infinitude of coquetries and artifices to attract admiration, he
-beheld the stately white-robed figure around which his thoughts and
-fancies had been playing all through the long hours of the day.
-
-He saw not the rival queens of beauty in their gorgeous apparel. He saw
-not the surging crowd that eddied around them, appraising, flattering,
-admiring, laughing. He only saw one white figure, standing aloof and
-for the moment alone, the moonbeams glimmering upon the shining
-whiteness of her dress, the fair face bent, as though in some sort of
-sorrow or shame. He saw it, and he was instantly at her side.
-
-Whether or not he spoke, he knew not. He offered his arm, and the next
-moment he was leading her away from that giddy, mocking crowd; and he
-felt the clinging clasp of her fingers thrilling him to his heart's
-core. He heard the breath of relief as the chorus of flippant merriment
-died away in the distance. He paused, and a quick exclamation escaped
-his lips.
-
-"This is no place for you, Lady Geraldine. Why do they bring you
-hither?"
-
-She answered not, but turned her gaze for a moment towards him, and then
-dropped her eyes. With an impulse for which he could not account, he
-covered the fingers which lay upon his arm with his own disengaged hand,
-and passionate words sprang to his lips.
-
-"Give me only the right, fair lady, and I will save you from them all.
-I ask only to live and die as your knight--your champion--without
-wages--without reward!"
-
-Then he was silent. His breath came thick and fast. He felt the quiver
-of the hand he held. He knew not how long the silence lasted, it was so
-strangely sweet, so full of mysterious meaning.
-
-"I thank you, sir. I trow that you speak truth, and that your words are
-not idle froth--gone in a moment--as the words of so many of yonder
-gallants. But it may not be. I may not give you such a right. A maiden
-is not free to choose her friends; and the knights of chivalry are long
-since vanished from the earth. I would that I might call you friend,
-that sometimes we might meet and hold converse together. I trust that I
-may learn a good report of you, that one day I may speak with pride of
-having known you in your youth. But that must suffice us. Let it be
-enough for both. I may not--"
-
-She hesitated, and her voice died into silence. She spoke with a
-repressed emotion which he scarcely understood. The tumult of his own
-heart was such that he could not seek to gauge the depths of her
-feelings.
-
-"If I may not be your knight, let me at least be your friend--your
-servant!" he pleaded. "And if there is anything wherein I can serve
-you--"
-
-She seemed struck by the phrase. She lifted her bent head and gazed
-earnestly at him; but the words she spoke seemed strange.
-
-"You are the friend of Lord Sandford; is it not so?"
-
-"I have been his comrade these many weeks. He has shown me much
-kindness and good-fellowship. I owe him gratitude."
-
-"And you must know him well, I doubt not. Tell me, Sir Grey--and I pray
-you deceive me not--what kind of a man is this same Lord Sandford? Is
-he leal and true, faithful, loving, and loyal? Is he better than the
-crowd who follow at his heels and ape his manners, use his name as a
-watchword, and fawn upon his favour? Tell me, what think you of him? A
-friend must needs speak sooth."
-
-"Lady, you have asked a hard question, inasmuch as I know but little of
-the man, albeit I have lived with him above a month. He attracts me,
-and yet there be moments when he repels me too. He is a good friend--I
-would not speak a word against him; yet it is said that he can be a
-bitter and an unscrupulous enemy; and those who have lost his favour
-withdraw themselves as speedily as possible from his notice, fearful
-lest some evil may befall them."
-
-"Is he then cruel and rancorous?"
-
-"I can believe that he might be, were his passions roused. He has that
-forceful nature which tends to vehement liking and bitter hatred. I
-have experienced the one; I have not tasted of the other. For the rest,
-he is a man of parts, and can do all well to which he puts his hand.
-Methinks he would be strong enough to break off his reckless and vicious
-habits, had he but motive sufficient to make him! desire to do so. But
-for the nonce he floats with the current, and lives as the world lives.
-More I cannot say."
-
-At that moment a swift, firm tread was heard approaching along the dim
-alley; and Geraldine looked hastily round, her hand dropping from Grey's
-arm.
-
-"It is he!" she whispered, and there was a catch in her voice which the
-young man heard without understanding. He faced round, and beheld the
-towering figure of Lord Sandford beside them.
-
-"Well chanced upon!" quoth he in his resonant tones. "I was sent by
-your mother in search of you, Lady Geraldine. The court of beauty has
-sat. To her has been adjudged the prize. She now desires the presence
-of her daughter, to share her triumph. We shall sup anon, and the table
-will not be complete without one gracious and lovely presence. Lady
-Geraldine, honour me by accepting my escort.--Grey, will you join us?"
-
-He spoke the last words over his shoulder, and there was a note in his
-voice which the young man had never heard before, and which he did not
-fully understand. It seemed to sting him, but he knew not why.
-
-"I thank you--no," he answered. "I am going home."
-
-And then he stood quite still to watch Lord Sandford lead away the fair
-Geraldine, who threw him one strange, half-appealing glance over her
-shoulder, but spoke no word of farewell.
-
-Grey had meant to go home, but somehow he could not bring himself to do
-so. His brain seemed on fire, and his heart with it. He knew not what
-ailed him, but a fever was consuming him. He left the gardens, but
-walked on and on, not knowing or caring whither he went. The night was
-far spent, and the dawn was beginning to blush in the eastern sky,
-before he found himself in the region of Sandford House again.
-
-The place was still and deserted. The revellers and roisterers seemed
-all at home. A watchman dozed at his post, thankful for the peace of
-the streets, and Grey met no interruption, till suddenly, round a
-corner, he came face to face with his host, who gave him a look, uttered
-a short laugh, and linked his arm within his.
-
-"Well met, friend Grey! You too have had no desire to woo the somnolent
-god? We find metal more attractive elsewhere. Say now, what think you
-of the future Lady Sandford? Methought you had eyes but for her
-to-night. Will she not queen it right royally here--the beautiful
-stately creature? You have taste, Grey, and I am well pleased that you
-have. Those painted, patched, and powdered Jezebels, smirking and
-ogling and running all over the town for the adulation of the crowd, are
-as little to your mind as to mine. We can flatter and fool and make
-mock with the best; but when it comes to marriage! Faugh! one's soul
-sickens at the thought. What man in his senses would trust his
-happiness or his honour in the hands of that tawdry crew? Gilt and
-tinsel do very well to play with; but when one desires to purchase, one
-asks for gold."
-
-Grey's heart seemed to stand still within him. He felt growing numb and
-cold. As they passed beneath the gateway, and the lamp shone upon his
-face, Lord Sandford saw that it was white as death, and a strange gleam
-came into his own eyes.
-
-"Come, my friend, you do not answer. What think you of the wife that I
-have chosen? What think you of the Lady Geraldine Adair? Is she not a
-matchless creature? Who would have believed such a sport could come
-from such a tree?"
-
-Grey commanded himself by a great effort.
-
-"Is the Lady Geraldine Adair, then, your affianced wife?"
-
-"That, or next door to it. My suit is approved of her parents. We
-shall be betrothed ere long. I thought you might be learning as much
-from her own lips to-night. Did I not hear my name pass between you
-twain?"
-
-"She did ask some question anent you," answered Grey, who had no desire
-to fence or parry--he felt too stunned and bewildered; "but she spoke
-not of any troth-plight. Why should she?"
-
-"True, why should she? She is not one of your empty-headed chatterers.
-She wears not her heart upon her sleeve. And your acquaintance is of
-the slightest; is it not so? Have you met before, since that evening in
-the water theatre when I did first present you to each other?"
-
-"I have seen her but once between," answered Grey, still in the same
-quiet, stunned fashion; and when they had entered the house, he made
-excuse to go at once to his room, declining all proffer of refreshment
-or further converse.
-
-Lord Sandford looked after him with an intent look upon his face, which
-slowly clouded over, till there was something almost malignant and
-ferocious in his aspect.
-
-"So it is as I thought. He has been hit, and hard hit. Where can he
-have seen her in the interim? They would not have been standing thus,
-talking thus, if some bond had not been established between them. Yet I
-thought I had kept an eye upon him. I knew there might be danger. I
-saw it the first moment that they met. There is something akin in their
-natures. They feel it themselves. Hr-r-r-rr! that must be put a stop
-to. I will have no rival in Geraldine's heart. She does not love me
-yet; but she fears me a little, and she thinks of me. That is no bad
-basis to build upon. I shall win her yet, if I have a fair field. But
-a rival--no, that must not be! And yet I read somewhat in her eyes
-to-night which had not been there before. The fiend take all false
-friends! I must rid myself of this one, and that speedily. I have
-liked him; but he shall not stand in my way. Well, 'tis I have made
-him: I can quickly unmake him. Let me but think of the way and the
-means. Grey Dumaresq, you are a pretty fellow and a pleasant comrade;
-but you shall never be suffered to stand in the light of Sandford's
-hopes and plans and desires. Look to yourself, my friend; for evil is
-abroad for you!"
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER IX.*
-
- *"A MAD WORLD, MY MASTERS."*
-
-
-"Master, master, wake up! What ails you? Have you forgot the day, and
-what has to be done?"
-
-Dick, with an expression of uneasiness and determination upon his face,
-was shaking Grey somewhat vehemently by the shoulder. The latter seemed
-to find it hard to wake; and when his eyes opened at last, there was a
-lack-lustre expression in them that was strange and unnatural. Dick's
-honest face clouded over yet more.
-
-"I was certain there was some devilry afoot when they all came here last
-night. I have never seen my master in such a mad mood of merriment," he
-muttered half aloud, as he turned away to get a brimming glass of pure
-cold water from the table. "What has come over them, I don't know. But
-I like not the change. I liked not the look in Lord Sandford's eyes. He
-is a great man, I doubt it not; but I wish my master had chanced upon
-another as a friend and comrade in this great Babylon of a city. There
-is more going on here than I well understand."
-
-"What are you grumbling over there to yourself, Dicon?" asked Grey from
-his bed, and his voice sounded more natural and quiet than his servant
-had heard it yet; "and where am I? For sure this room is strange to
-mine eyes, nor have I any recollection of it overnight; and how come you
-to be here, for that matter, honest Dicon? Methought you were at
-Hampstead, watching over Don Carlos, that he might be ready for
-Saturday's race."
-
-"Yes, master, and so I am; and this is the hostelry at Hampstead where I
-have taken up my quarters with the horse; and hither it was that you
-came yestere'en, with Lord Sandford and his friends, to be ready for the
-match to-day. But beshrew me if I did think yesterday you would be fit
-for the saddle to-day! Is it strange I should mutter and grumble to
-myself when such things happen?"
-
-"Nay now, what things, good Dicon? I pray you tell me," spoke Grey, as
-he drained at one draught the ice-cold water, and drew a long breath of
-relief. "I feel like a man waking from a strange and fevered dream; for,
-in sooth, I know but little of what has been passing these last days.
-Some strange madness seems to have possessed me. I had meant to say
-farewell to Lord Sandford and his world, and seek mine own fortunes in
-some other field. Yet methinks I have not made the break. I have
-visions of wild orgies and furious gaming--such as I held aloof from
-before. Dicon, I fear me I have made a desperate fool of myself, and of
-my fortunes too. Tell me, what money have I with me now?"
-
-"Not much, master. I took what you had--a matter of some twenty guineas
-perhaps. I have it safe in a bag. But surely that is not all. You had
-won a fortune, you did tell me--"
-
-"Ay, and now I have lost it. I can recollect how the guineas flew, and
-how the stakes were doubled, and how I lost again and yet again. I take
-it I am a ruined man, good Dicon. These twenty guineas saved from the
-wreck are all the fortune I possess, and belike it is better so--better
-so."
-
-"Better!" echoed the dismayed Dick; "nay, my master. But you will win
-it back again. The luck cannot always be against you. Think how it was
-at the first!"
-
-"Yes, Dicon, and perchance it had been better had the luck been worse.
-I love not such gains as these. Besides, there is somewhat in this
-beyond my ken. Lord Sandford desired my friendship and company then, and
-luck was with me. Now that he desires it no more, the luck has changed,
-and that so strangely and desperately that one might almost say there
-was magic in it."
-
-Dick's jaw dropped; he longed to know more, but feared to intrude too
-much upon his master's secrets. Grey, however, knew how faithful and
-attached was his stanch henchman, and as he went through his morning
-toilet he told him a little of the events of the past three days, in as
-far as he himself could remember them.
-
-"I have offended Lord Sandford doubly," he said, "though he will not
-openly admit it. But I know--I feel the change. I trow that he is my
-enemy. Nay, Dicon, look not so aghast; it will matter little in the
-future, since to-day I take my leave of him, and most like in this great
-whirling world our paths will not again cross, either for weal or woe."
-
-"But how?--what? He did seem to love you well."
-
-"I think he did; but a mischance befell. He did not tell me of his
-troth-plight to a fair lady--a lady of surpassing beauty, and of a
-virtue and purity which make her like a bright particular star amid the
-painted dames and mincing damsels of this giddy London town. Twice or
-thrice did I meet her and pay homage to her wondrous beauty and
-goodness. It was words she spoke to me that decided me, ere ever any
-ill-blood had been aroused, to leave off from this life of
-pleasure-seeking and distraction, and seek a nobler career than that of
-the butterfly dandy fluttering round the town. But Lord Sandford
-thought that there was somewhat more than this betwixt us. Of that I am
-assured. A flame of jealousy swept over him; and when I told him of my
-resolution, I trow that his suspicions received confirmation. I did not
-see it then, but I see it now. He thought I left him to pursue my ends
-alone, and, perchance, to seek to win the lady of his choice. But he
-spoke nothing of this--only insisted that for this week my engagements
-should be kept, and that after to-day's race I might go my own way, an I
-was so resolved. He was not unkindly; yet there was something strange
-and stern in his bearing and language, and you have seen how his
-imperious temper and will sweep all before them. I myself was strangely
-dazed and something sorrowful. I scarce do know why my heart was so
-heavy within me. I let him have his way; and you behold what that way
-has been. I am a ruined man, beggared of all my winnings; and methinks
-my Lord Sandford has plotted for this very thing."
-
-"It is a shame! Would I could take my horsewhip to him--"
-
-"Nay, nay, good Dicon; be not so wroth," spoke Grey calmly and quietly.
-"In sooth, I know not that I owe him aught but thanks. When all is said
-and done, it was but ill-gotten gain. I would sooner face life with
-none of it upon me. I had a few guineas to start with--well, it was
-more than a few; yet had I spent my time in London, I should have had
-but little left by now. I have learned many lessons, and I shall start
-clear of debt, and without my pockets filled with other men's gold."
-
-Dick was scarce moralist enough to understand or appreciate his master's
-scruples--scruples new, indeed, to Grey himself--but the faithful fellow
-was ready to accept any verdict and any decision made by the man he
-loved and served; and as he put the finishing touches to the workmanlike
-riding toilet which he had in readiness, he remarked with a short
-laugh,--
-
-"Faith, master, you and I betwixt us, with Don Carlos and my good nag
-for company, and a few guineas in our pockets, need not fear the future;
-and I trow it will be well for you to be quit for ever of my Lord
-Sandford's company. I liked him not greatly for your friend; I hate him
-with a goodly hatred since he shows himself your foe. Shall we turn our
-backs upon him and upon London town, and seek our fortunes with the army
-over the water, where his Grace of Marlborough will give you welcome?"
-
-"I scarce know what the future will bring for me, Dicon," was the reply,
-spoken gravely, yet with a certain listless indifference not lost upon
-the servant; "I have made no plans as yet. Let us see what this day
-brings forth first."
-
-"I wager it will fill our pockets anew with gold!"
-
-"I will not touch their gold!" spoke Grey with eyes that suddenly
-flashed fire. "I have cancelled all my wagers. I will take nothing at
-their hands. I will ride Don Carlos and ride my best for mine own honour
-and that of the good steed I shall bestride; but their money will I not
-touch. I have done with all that. Nay, stare not in such amaze, good
-Dicon. I have not taken leave of my senses; rather, I trow, I have come
-to my better mind. Now get me somewhat to eat here, and then we will to
-the stables to see my beauty. This match once over, we turn a new page
-in our life's story. Who knows what the next will be?"
-
-It was not much that Grey could eat. The three days which had passed
-since he and Lord Sandford had come to an understanding, which was
-well-nigh a rupture, had left a mark upon him. Moreover there was a
-weary ache at his heart which he did not fully understand, and which was
-harder to bear than aught beside. Dimly he knew that it had some
-connection with the Lady Geraldine Adair; but he feared to search too
-deeply into that matter. She was as far removed from him as the moon in
-the heavens, and he believed her plighted to another, and that one a man
-who had stood his friend, even though suspicion, jealousy, and an
-imperious temper had changed friendship into something very like enmity.
-Grey never for a moment dreamed of regarding himself as an aspirant for
-that fair hand; but he knew that the motive which was urging him to
-change the manner of his life and become a worthier and a better man was
-the hope that she might watch his career, and hear a whisper of his fame
-or his success; or that he might win some laurels in the fields of
-literature, art, or politics, which he might perchance in some sort lay
-at her feet.
-
-This, however, lurked in the background of his thoughts. He scarcely
-owned to himself that he expected ever to look upon that fair face
-again; hence the sensation of heart sickness which had rendered him
-well-nigh desperate for a few days, and had helped him to squander
-without a qualm the hoard which his previous successes had accumulated.
-And now the end of this mad life of gay folly had come. He had drained
-the cup to the dregs, and found it bitter to the taste. He had neither
-liking nor respect for the companions with whom he had associated.
-Towards Lord Sandford his feelings were very mixed. The power of the man
-was too great to be shaken off entirely, nor could he despise or dislike
-him. But the tie of friendship had snapped asunder. A chasm had opened
-between them, and he felt that he was regarded, if not as a foe, yet as
-something akin, and it needed not Dick's words of warning to tell him
-that the less he saw of this man in the future the better it would be
-for himself.
-
-Sounds of laughter and revelry greeted his ears as he slipped quietly
-out towards the paddock and shed where his horse had been stabled these
-past weeks, tended and exercised by Dick, and ready for whatever demand
-might be made upon him. He greeted his master with a neigh of
-recognition, dropped his nose in the extended hand, and stood tranquil
-and content under Grey's quiet caresses. The glossy coat was satin
-smooth, the delicate tracery of veins could be distinctly seen, and each
-muscle stood out hard and taut; there was no superfluous flesh, but a
-firmness and excellence of condition that brought a smile of
-satisfaction to Grey's face. He turned with a smile to Dick, who stood
-by beaming.
-
-"Not much fear of him to-day, eh, Dicon?"
-
-"He would jump the moon, master, if you asked it of him," was the proud
-and confident answer.
-
-"How do the others look? Have you seen them?"
-
-"Pretty bits of horseflesh every one; and there is a black stallion of
-Mr. Artheret's that will take some beating. But he's too heavy for some
-of the jumps. He don't take off fast enough. And he's a nasty temper
-too. There's a gray Arab with pace; but he falls away behind, as they
-all do. I don't think Don Carlos will be troubled long by him. None of
-the others will take much beating. Pretty to look at, but not trained
-for what they've got to do. Lord Sandford was here yesterday early,
-looking at the jumps, and he had several of them made stiffer; but
-there's nothing Don Carlos cannot sail over like a bird!"
-
-"Let us go and see," said Grey. "I will take a canter on the turf to
-warm myself to the saddle. Soh, boy, soh!" as he lightly vaulted to his
-seat, and the horse curveted beneath him. "We will take a look at these
-obstructions. The stiffer they are, the better you and I will be
-pleased--eh, my beauty?"
-
-Dick mounted his nag, and rode beside his master to the course, where
-the horses were to be matched against each other when Lord Sandford and
-his friends should have finished their merry meal, and be ready to
-witness the exhibition. It was a fine stretch of ground which had been
-chosen--nearly a mile in length, and with several natural obstacles,
-which had been increased in some cases artificially, to test better the
-strength and skill of horse and rider. A stream of water with rather
-awkward banks ran across the course in one place, and in another was a
-dip in the ground filled with gorse bushes--a nasty place to get
-entangled in, if the horse could not be persuaded to clear the whole
-thing with a flying leap. A broken stone wall with a ditch in front was
-another obstacle; and the last was a barrier entirely artificial, made
-of hurdles and bushes high enough to tax the mettle of any horse, though
-not absolutely insurmountable. Still it was a formidable object enough,
-and Grey looked at it critically, walking Don Carlos up and down, to let
-the creature take his own observations with regard to the leap he was to
-make.
-
-"It was here they were busy yesterday, but I could not see all they did.
-I was afraid to leave Don Carlos with so many strangers about. Some of
-the grooms with the other horses looked up to mischief. But I heard them
-say afterwards that Lord Sandford had not been satisfied with the field
-as it was. He said they must have something that really would be a
-test, or the black stallion and Don Carlos were like to come in
-together."
-
-But now a horn blew gaily, and horsemen were seen approaching from many
-quarters. In the neighbourhood of the inn all was bustle and
-excitement, whilst from all sides there appeared streams of people
-converging to this spot. Some fine carriages had been driven out from
-London, with bedecked ladies eager to witness the contest. Others had
-stayed the night in the neighbourhood to be ready; and all the natives
-of the place who could get a holiday had come to gape at the fine folks,
-and see the grand gentlemen racing their own horses.
-
-Indeed the hour for the contest had well-nigh come. Grey could see that
-the other horses were assembling, their riders decked in every colour of
-the rainbow, quite eclipsing the quiet and workmanlike suit of buff
-which he wore. But Grey's taste had always disinclined him to gaudy
-colours. The soft leather, finely chased and stamped in gold, pleased
-his eye more than rich-hued cloths or velvets. His breeches were of
-white buckskin cut by Lord Sandford's own tailor, and he wore long boots
-fitted with silver spurs, albeit he scarcely ever had need of the latter
-when he bestrode Don Carlos. His scarf was of white silk fringed with
-gold, and his only adornment was a cravat of fine lace, fastened with a
-diamond clasp. His cocked hat matched his buff coat, and was adorned
-with a white plume. Altogether, as he rode forward to his place, it
-would have been hard to find a fault with his dress or person; and the
-ladies behind their fans audibly praised his elegant figure, graceful
-seat, and distinguished and handsome face.
-
-Grey, all unconscious of the favour bestowed upon him, rode up and
-saluted courteously the gentlemen who were to meet him and each other in
-rivalry. Lord Sandford, splendidly mounted, was to act as judge at the
-winning post. Another of his friends was to be starter; and gentlemen
-were posted at various points along the course to see that all the rules
-laid down were observed, and that no rider deviated from the
-well-pegged-out route prescribed for all. The spectators scattered
-hither and thither, taking up stations wherever their fancy prompted.
-The course seemed marked out by a glittering border extending down both
-sides. The sun shone brilliantly in the sky, and all nature seemed in
-gladsome mood.
-
-Grey cast a keen look at the seven rival steeds as they were brought
-into line for the start. He picked out in a moment the two of whom
-Dicon had spoken, and saw that he had judged well. Then he gave his
-whole mind to the task in hand, checked with hand and voice the prancing
-of the excited Don Carlos, and brought him up to his appointed place
-docile and motionless.
-
-The word was given, but the black stallion had bounded off a few seconds
-too soon, and had to be recalled. A second start was spoiled by two
-other competitors, who suddenly reared at each other, and strove to
-fight. One iron hoof, indeed, inflicted such a wound upon the shoulder
-of his neighbour that that horse had to be taken away limping and
-bleeding.
-
-It was trying to all, horses and riders alike; but at the third start
-all got off, though Grey saw that again the black stallion had made his
-bound a second too soon. This gave him a few yards the advantage,
-which, as his rider pressed him hard from the first, and his temper was
-evidently up, he increased in the next minute to more than a length.
-The Arab and Don Carlos were neck and neck, and sailed over the first
-easy jump side by side, the stallion having cleared it with a tremendous
-bound a couple of seconds earlier.
-
-The water jump was next, and it was obvious that one spot offered
-greater advantages to the horse than any other. The stallion made for
-this spot with a rush, took off and bounded clear over, just as Don
-Carlos and the Arab came rushing up neck and neck, each rider desirous
-of the advantage of the sound bank. Grey set his teeth and glanced at
-his adversary. A collision at the leap might be fatal to one or both,
-so far as the race went. His rival would not budge an inch--that he
-saw. With a muttered oath between his teeth, he pulled his left rein,
-and used his knees. Don Carlos felt, and instantly understood: swerving
-slightly, he gathered himself together, and rose magnificently where the
-water was wider and the bank less safe; but he landed safely, and with a
-hardly perceptible scramble found his feet again, and amid the plaudits
-of the people raced on after the Arab, who, having got a momentary
-advantage, was now slightly in advance.
-
-The black stallion had just reached the downward dip leading to the deep
-ditch filled with gorse bushes. His rider had had perforce to pull him
-up somewhat, lest he should slip and fall, for the ground was sandy and
-treacherous. But Don Carlos had been born and bred to this sort of wild
-work, and dashing onwards and downwards with the agility of a deer, came
-neck and neck with his rival, and having passed the Arab, cleared with a
-bound the treacherous gully, landing true and safe upon the opposite
-side. The Arab followed in his tracks, his rider taking advantage of
-the lead given; but the black stallion slipped and snorted, could not be
-made to try the leap till another of the horses came up and took it,
-after which he sprang across with a vicious energy which tried the
-horsemanship of his rider, and tore like a wild thing after the leading
-pair.
-
-These had cleared one after the other the wall and ditch; but the Arab
-was showing signs of distress, whilst Don Carlos looked fresh and eager
-as at the start. There now remained only a quarter of a mile of smooth
-sward, and then the last critical jump; and Grey, knowing himself first,
-and not knowing what had betided his rivals, sailed happily onward,
-secure of victory, though he heard behind him the thud of flying horse
-hoofs, and knew that the black stallion was not beaten yet. It was he
-who snorted with such excitement and fury, and seemed to awaken thunders
-with his iron-shod hoofs.
-
-One glance over his shoulder, and Grey passed his whip very lightly
-across the neck of Don Carlos. The gallant animal sprang forward like an
-arrow from a bow, showing how well within himself he had been travelling
-so far. The sound of other beating hoofs was fainter now. Grey looked
-keenly at the great obstacle looming up in his path, and measured the
-height at various places, deciding where the leap could best be taken.
-
-He felt the tension of the muscles beneath him. Don Carlos was gathering
-himself together for the leap. He would not fail, falter, or refuse.
-The great mass seemed rushing up against him. He felt the slackening
-with which Don Carlos faced his task, the motion of his flanks as he
-took off and rose. Then what was it happened? The sound of a click,
-sharp and clear--a sickening sensation of falling, sinking, struggling,
-plunging. Grey felt for a moment as though the end had come. He and
-his horse seemed falling into the very bowels of the earth. A black
-shadow almost overhead showed him that the stallion had cleared the
-barrier, and the air was full of shouts, screams, cheers, and cries.
-
-Next moment he felt strong hands lifting and dragging him upwards.
-Dick's white face looked into his own, and the first words he heard were
-hissed in his ear by his faithful henchman.
-
-"Foul play, foul play, my master. That ditch was dug and concealed--ay,
-and more than concealed; it has been an old well at some time, and it
-will open with a spring. You have been grossly tricked and cozened. It
-has been a trap cleverly laid and baited. But let me only get at
-them--my Lord Sandford--"
-
-Dick almost choked in his fury; but Grey was now on his feet, and his
-one thought was for the good horse, who had dropped downwards into this
-unseen, unsuspected pit, and was gasping in affright, but might possibly
-have escaped serious injury. He himself felt little ill effects, having
-had a marvellous escape. But his soul was stirred within him, and in
-getting out the horse he saw plainly that Dick had been right, and that
-some sort of old trap-door concealed an opening into the ground which
-might have been at one time a well, but was now silted up with sand. By
-luring the foremost rider to this particular spot to take the leap, any
-astute enemy aware of the nature of the ground could almost certainly
-ensure his overthrow and defeat; and Grey had his suspicions that Lord
-Sandford had hoped that he might then and there break his neck--a thing
-which might very well have happened.
-
-There was a crowd round the spot now, and great horror was expressed by
-many at sight of the unsuspected well, no voice being louder than Lord
-Sandford's in proclaiming astonishment and indignation. But Grey took no
-notice of the clamour, only busying himself about his horse; and
-presently, with some difficulty, the sagacious and docile creature was
-got out, and it appeared that no limb was broken, though one hock was
-deeply cut, and one shoulder badly strained.
-
-Grey stood in silent thought awhile, his hand upon the neck of his
-favourite, who stood with drooping head and dejected mien, as though
-wondering whether he would ever be whole and sound again. Dick was
-binding up the wound, his face like a thunder-cloud. A knot of persons
-of all ranks stood watching at a little distance; but Grey had
-courteously waved away all proffers of help, and indicated that he
-desired no attentions.
-
-"Dicon," he said in a low tone, "we must now part for a while. Don
-Carlos will need you more than I. He is now my sole fortune, and must
-be respected as such. Take him and your own nag, and walk them both by
-easy stages to Hartsbourne. There are paddocks enough and to spare, and
-I surely have the right to pasture my horse in one; but if the thing
-should come to my kinsman's ears, give him what is due in money, and I
-will repay you. Old Jock Jarvis will be your friend. He will rejoice
-in your company and give you house-room with him, and it is not so far
-but that I can get news of you from time to time. Your good horse will
-bring you to London in three hours or less any day you have a mind to
-come; and you can watch for me what goes on yonder, and bring me word
-again."
-
-It was a grief to Dick to part from his master; but he saw the need, and
-he loved the horse only second to Grey himself.
-
-"I will do your behest, master. Nay, I want no money; I have plenty for
-all my needs. I too have made some modest wealth here in this great
-city. Only tell me where I may find you, and I will be gone, and do what
-can be done for the poor beast."
-
-"You shall always get news of me at Wills' Coffee House, good Dicon,"
-was the answer. "Where I go and how I live, I know not yet; but I will
-leave word there for you. So now, farewell. I turn a new page in my
-life from this day forth."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER X.*
-
- *"THE OLD LION."*
-
-
-Grey Dumaresq, having settled matters with his servant, and adjusted the
-disarray of his own dress and person, turned towards a group of men who
-were standing round Lord Sandford, making believe to laugh and jest, but
-showing some vague symptoms of uneasiness as they cast sidelong glances
-in the direction of their erstwhile comrade.
-
-Grey walked straight up to Lord Sandford, and looked him full in the
-eyes. Did the glance of the other quail ever so little before his? He
-thought so, but could scarce be certain.
-
-"My lord," he said, "I have to thank you for many acts of kindness and
-courtesy, and a certain liberality of treatment which I have received at
-your hands and within your doors. In taking my farewell, I wish freely
-to acknowledge all this debt. But other matters which I need not
-specify, yet which are well understood by your lordship, have transpired
-to change the relations betwixt us; and I wish to add that I desire to
-be beholden to no man. In the rooms allotted to me in your lordship's
-house there is a quantity of wearing apparel, jewels, trinkets, for
-which I have no more use. I pray you have them sold, and the amount
-thus realized will reimburse you for all charges you have been at in my
-maintenance during the time I have dwelt beneath your roof. That is all
-I have to say.--Gentlemen, I wish you a very good day."
-
-And lifting his hat with quiet dignity and grace, Grey made them a
-general salute and turned upon his heel.
-
-But Lord Sandford's voice came thundering after him. "Do you desire to
-insult me, sir? Am I a beggarly inn-keeper, that I should sell a
-guest's belongings to pay my bill? What do you mean by such words? Do
-you desire that I should demand satisfaction for them at your hands?"
-
-Grey did not know whether this man desired to fasten a quarrel upon him
-or not, and, truth to tell, he did not care. He just turned his head
-over his shoulder, and threw back an answer in tones of scarcely veiled
-contempt.
-
-"That is for your lordship to decide. I shall have pleasure in giving
-any satisfaction demanded at any time, and in any place appointed. For
-the rest, a man who has sought to compass the death of a comrade by a
-foul trick need scarcely fear to soil his hands by the touch of his
-gold. Again I wish you good-day, my lord."
-
-And without so much as turning his head again, Grey Dumaresq walked off,
-his head held high, neither observing nor returning the many salutes and
-bright arch glances shot at him from the lane of bystanders through
-which he needs must pass, but walking like a man in a dream, and so
-disappearing from view along the white road which led Londonwards.
-
-Round Lord Sandford men were buzzing like bees disturbed.
-
-"Insolent young jackanapes!" "What did he mean?" "What was his motive
-in such an insult?" "What will you do, my lord?" "Whither has he gone?
-Whither will he go?" "Is it true that he is ruined?" "He has lost his
-horse, at least. None will give him a score of guineas for the beast
-now." "How did it chance?" "Was it an accident?" "What meant he by
-his words?" All were pouring out these and like questions; but there
-was none to answer them, till Lord Sandford himself spoke.
-
-"The fellow's wits are gone astray," he cried in his loud, dominating
-tones. "It is the Dumaresq blood. Sir Hugh was just such another--mad
-as a March hare half his time, flinging his gold to the winds, and
-quarrelling with every man he met. Like father, like son. It has been
-coming on for days. I misdoubted me if ever he would ride this race. He
-came and told me he must reform. That was ever his father's cry, and he
-would disappear into the country for a while, and reappear again as gay
-as ever. 'Tis the same with the son. I saw it then, and I strove to
-combat the madness; but 'tis ill dealing with the lunatic. You see what
-we get for our pains! Tush! let the fellow alone. I did wrong to
-answer him. Let him go his own way, and we will think of him no more."
-
-And Lord Sandford, with a heavy cloud upon his brow, and a look about
-the corners of his mouth which warned those about him to say no more,
-but leave matters as they were, flung away from them, and made his way
-back alone to the inn, from which he was presently seen to issue forth
-in his gorgeous chariot, driving furiously along the road which led to
-St. Albans.
-
-His boon companions, thus left to their own devices, went over to the
-spot where the strange thing had befallen at the race, and where the
-country folk had gathered with shakings of the head and questionings
-beneath their breath; and there, plain for all men to see, was the
-yawning hole with the open trap hanging down, and the marks of the heavy
-fall of the good horse, whose escape with whole bones was little short
-of a miracle.
-
-An old countryman was holding forth to a knot of eager questioners, now
-swelled by Lord Sandford's friends.
-
-"I mind well when there was a house here; 'twas pulled down when I were
-a young chap. And the well must ha' bin hereabouts. That old trap has
-been in the ground ever since I can mind; but there be no water now, and
-the sand has pretty nigh silted it up. I've a-looked in many a time,
-and the hole gets less and less deep. When I saw them setting up the
-brushwood and things here, I made sure they had covered the trap well.
-I walked about it, but never saw sign of it. If I'd a thought of
-danger, I'd ha' told one of the fine folks. I suppose they never seed
-it. The grass and stuff do grow long and rank this time o' year. And
-so the gentleman's horse trod on it, and it gave way with him. Mercy
-me, but 'tis a wonder he didn't break his neck then and there!"
-
-Lord Sandford's comrades looked each other in the eyes, and drew a
-little away. All knew that something strange had passed upon him of
-late, and that there was some rupture betwixt him and the man who had
-but lately accused him of seeking to compass his death.
-
-"Did he know?" "Was it plot or plan of his?" whispered one and another;
-but none could give the answer.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A wild, wet September day was drawing to its close, amid pelting squalls
-of cold rain, when a tall young man, gaunt and hollow-eyed, pushed his
-way into a small coffee-house in an obscure thoroughfare somewhere in
-the region of Drury Lane, and took a seat in a dark corner as near to
-the stove as he could get, for he looked pinched with cold, and his
-plain and rather threadbare black suit was pretty well wet through. As
-soon as he was seated, he drew from his breast a roll of paper, which he
-regarded with solicitude. That at least was dry, and he heaved a sigh
-that sounded like one of satisfaction.
-
-In this narrow street the daylight had completely faded, though it was
-not yet six o'clock. The room was furthermore darkened by clouds of
-tobacco smoke which the guests were puffing forth. The smell of coffee
-mingled with the ranker fumes of the tobacco, and the clink of cup and
-spoon made ceaseless accompaniment to the talk, which went on in a
-continuous stream.
-
-Grey (for it was he) leaned his head on his hand wearily, and fell into
-something like a doze as he sat in his shadowy corner. He was exhausted
-in mind and in body. He was faint with hunger, and yet half afraid to
-order food; for his funds were dwindling almost to the vanishing point,
-and as yet he had found no means of replenishing his exchequer. But he
-had not been able to resist the temptation to escape from the buffetings
-of the tempest, and when the boy in attendance upon the guests came to
-ask his pleasure, he ordered some coffee and bread, and devoured it with
-a ravenous appetite when it was set before him.
-
-The pangs of hunger stayed, if not appeased, he began to look about him,
-and to wonder into what manner of company he had thrust himself. He had
-never before been inside this house, though he had, in the first days of
-his new career, taken his meals in some of the numerous coffee or
-chocolate houses, or the taverns which abounded throughout the town.
-Latterly he had generally bought his food at the cheapest market, and
-had eaten it in the attic to which he had removed himself and his few
-belongings. He was beginning to wonder how long he should be able even
-to retain that humble abode as his own. Dame Fortune's smiles seemed
-quite to have deserted him, and abject poverty stared him grimly in the
-face.
-
-A smoking lamp had been brought in, and hung overhead, lighting up the
-faces of the company with its yellow glare. There was something strange
-and Rembrandt-like in the effect of the picture upon which Grey's eyes
-rested. Leaning back dreamily with his head against the wall, he could
-almost fancy himself back in one of those foreign picture galleries, in
-which heretofore he had delighted, and where so many hours of his time
-had been spent.
-
-But this was a living picture, shifting, changing, breaking up into
-groups and re-forming again; and the hum of talk went on unceasingly, as
-one after another took up the word and launched forth his opinions,
-generally in florid and flowery language, and with much gesticulation
-and indignation.
-
-What first struck Grey as strange was the anger which seemed to possess
-all these men. That they were in no good case was well-nigh proved by
-the shabbiness of their dress, and by the fact of their being gathered
-in this very humble and cheap place of resort, which would not tempt any
-but those in adverse circumstances. But over and above their poverty,
-they seemed to be railing at neglect or injustice of some sort, and ever
-and anon would break out into virulent abuse of some person or persons,
-whose names were unknown to Grey, but who evidently were characters well
-known to the others of the company.
-
-"There is no such thing as justice left, or purity of taste, or any such
-thing!" shouted a handsome, well-proportioned fellow, whose face had
-attracted Grey's notice several times, and seemed dimly familiar to him.
-"Look at the mouthing mountebanks that walk the boards now! They strut
-like peacocks, they gibber like apes. They have neither voice, nor
-figure, nor talent, nor grace. But, forsooth, because some fine dame
-has smiled upon them, or they are backed by a nobleman's patronage, they
-can crow it over the rest of us like a cock upon his dunghill, and we,
-who have the talent and the gifts, may rot like rats in our holes!"
-
-"Shame! shame! shame!" cried an admiring chorus.
-
-"Look at me!" thundered the young man, his eyes flashing. "Who dares
-say I cannot act? Have I not held spellbound, hanging on my lips, whole
-houses of beauty and fashion? Have I lost my skill or cunning? Has my
-voice or has my grace departed from me? Wherefore, then, do I sit here
-idle and hungry, whilst men not fit to black my boots hold the boards
-and fill their pouches with gold? Why such injustice, I say?"
-
-A chorus of indignation again arose; but out of the shadows came a deep
-voice.
-
-"The answer is easy, friend Lionel; arrogance and drink have been the
-cause of your downfall. How could any manager continue to engage you?
-How many times has it happened that you have come to the theatre sodden
-with drink? How many representations have you spoiled by your bestial
-folly? They were patient with you. Oh yes, they were very patient; for
-they knew your gifts and recognized them. But you met friendly rebuke
-or warning with haughtiness and scorn. You would listen to no counsel;
-you would heed no warnings. The end should have been plain to you from
-the beginning, an you would not mend your ways. I told you how it needs
-must be; and now the time has come when you see it for yourself. Worse
-men are put in the parts that you excelled in, because they can be
-depended upon. No drunkard can ever become great. Put that in your
-pipe and smoke it, Lionel Field."
-
-At the sound of this new voice, speaking out of the shadows of the
-ingle-nook, a great hush had fallen upon the room. Grey leaned forward
-to obtain a view of the speaker, and the firelight played upon the
-striking features and iron-gray hair of a very remarkable-looking old
-man of leonine aspect, whose voice was of that penetrating quality which
-makes itself heard without being raised; and it was plain that something
-in the personality of the man lifted him above his fellows, for all
-listened in silence whilst he spoke, and even the arrogant young actor
-looked for the moment abashed.
-
-"Who is it?" whispered Grey to the man next him; and the answer came
-readily, though spoken in a cautious whisper.
-
-"His name is Jonathan Wylde. Once he, too, was a famous actor; but long
-illness crippled his limbs, and he has fallen into poverty. He is
-always called the Old Lion, and methinks the name suits him well. He is
-a very lion for courage, else would he not dare to rebuke Master Lionel
-Field. For he is one who is ready with his fist, or with knife or
-bludgeon, and it is ill work meeting him when he is in his cups."
-
-Grey looked with interest and attention at the old man in the shadows;
-but he was leaning back again, and spoke no more. The talk surged round
-him again from the rest; they spoke of the plays that were being enacted
-at the various theatres, and of those who were playing the various
-_roles_. Some of them stood up and rolled forth bits of Congreve's
-witty and sparkling dramas, and disputed as to whether the "Old
-Bachelor" or the "Way of the World" were his happiest effort; whilst
-some declared that the "Double Dealer" was the best of all. They talked
-excitedly of the revival at Drury Lane of Farquhar's "Love and a
-Bottle," which had scored such a success some fourteen or fifteen years
-previously. And there were some who lauded and some who depreciated
-Colley Cibber and his "Careless Husband" and "Love's Last Shift," which
-were favourites throughout the town.
-
-It was a new world to Grey; but he listened with a certain fascination,
-for the drama had always attracted him, and he watched the gestures of
-the actors and listened to their mouthing periods with something between
-wonder and amusement. He could understand that these men had been
-failures. Only Lionel Field appeared to have any true histrionic gift,
-and the cause of his downfall was plain to be read after the speech of
-the "Old Lion." From time to time, as the light flickered upon the
-striking face in the ingle, Grey caught a fine-lipped smile upon it, and
-once or twice he thought the old actor's eyes met his in a gleam of
-humour. But of that he could not be sure--it might be but the trick of
-the firelight; and presently wearied nature asserted itself, and the
-young man passed from drowsiness to actual sleep, and knew nothing more
-till a sharp grip upon his arm roused him to a sense of his
-surroundings.
-
-It was the tapster who thus shook him; and when he opened his eyes, Grey
-saw--or thought, at least--that the room was empty. What the time was
-he had no idea; but it must be late, and he rose hastily to his feet
-with a muttered apology at having overstayed the closing time.
-
-At that moment there emerged out of the shadows of the ingle-nook a bent
-figure, dignified even in its infirmity, and the voice which Grey had
-heard before spoke in quietly authoritative accents.
-
-"Bring hither coffee and a dish of eggs for two. The wind and rain yet
-howl around the house. This gentleman will sup with me ere we go home.
-Go and serve us quickly, for we have both a good stomach, and would eat
-ere we depart hence."
-
-The tapster vanished quickly to do the bidding of the guests, and Grey
-turned a wondering glance upon the Old Lion, whose face, framed in its
-shaggy gray hair, looked more leonine than ever, the bright eyes shining
-out of deep caverns from under bushy brows, the rugged features full of
-power, not unmixed with a curious underlying ferocity. But the glance
-bent upon Grey was kindly enough.
-
-"Sit down, young man; I would know more of you. I have a gift for
-reading faces. I have marked yours ever since you entered this room.
-Tell me your name. Tell me of yourself, for you were not born to the
-state to which you have now fallen."
-
-"My name is Grey," was the ready answer. Grey had dropped his title and
-patronymic with his fallen fortunes, and used his mother's name alone.
-"My father was a country gentleman. I was gently reared, and was at one
-time a scholar at Oxford, where I dreamed many dreams. Afterwards I
-travelled abroad, returning to find my father dead and my home in the
-hands of a kinsman to whom it was mortgaged by my father. The small
-fortune I received I squandered foolishly in a few weeks of gay living
-with young bloods of the town. I wakened from my dream to find myself
-well-nigh penniless, disgusted alike with myself and those I had called
-my friends. I have ever been something ambitious. I misdoubt me I am a
-fool; but I did think that I might win laurels upon the field of
-literature. I have never lost the trick of rhyming, and jotting down
-such things as pleased my fancy, whether in prose or in verse. Do I
-weary you with my tale?"
-
-"No, sir--far from it. Let me hear you to the end. I did see you take
-forth a roll of paper from your breast as you came in. That action,
-together with your face, told me much. You have the gift of a creative
-fancy. You have written a poem or a play."
-
-"Neither the one nor the other, but a romance," answered Grey, the
-colour flushing his face as it flushes that of a maiden when the love of
-her heart is named by her. "I scarce know how to call it, but methinks
-it savours more of a romance than of aught besides. When I was rudely
-awakened from my pleasure-loving life, saw the folly and futility
-thereof, and desired to amend, I did take a quiet lodging high up in a
-building off Holborn, and there I did set myself to the task, and right
-happy was I in it. I had a score of gold pieces still left me, and my
-needs I did think modest; though, looking back, they seem many to me
-now. The weeks fled by, and my work reached its close. When my romance
-was finished, my money was all but spent. For the past week or more I
-have been seeking a publisher for it. In my folly I did think that it
-would bring me gold as fast as I wanted. My eyes have been rudely
-opened these last days."
-
-The Old Lion nodded his head many times.
-
-"You made a mistake in seeking a publisher, young sir. You should first
-have sought a patron."
-
-Grey's face flushed slightly, and he hesitated before he spoke.
-
-"Others have said the same to me; but there are difficulties. I have
-not learned to go cap in hand to cringe for patronage to the great ones
-of the earth." But, as Grey saw a slight smile flicker in the old man's
-eyes, he added rather hastily, "And then I desire not to be known and
-recognized by those whom I did know ha my former life. There is scarce
-an antechamber in those fine houses where patrons dwell where I might
-not meet the curious and impertinent regard of those who would know me
-again. That I will not brook." And now Grey's eyes flashed, thinking of
-Lord Sandford, and how he would chuckle to hear how low his rival had
-fallen. "No; if I am to succeed at all, I must needs do so without a
-patron. If I fail, there is one resource left. Able-bodied paupers are
-sent to the wars. I can go thither and fight."
-
-Again a smile flickered over the Old Lion's face; but the tapster was
-entering with the smoking viands, and the gleam in Grey's eyes bespoke
-the wolf within him.
-
-"Set to, my friend, and make a good meal. When we have cleared the
-trenchers, you shall come with me to my lodging. I would hear the end
-of your tale; but that can wait till after supper."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XI.*
-
- *THE LION'S DEN.*
-
-
-"Welcome to the Lion's Den!" spoke the man Wylde, as he threw open the
-door of a room which he had unlocked, and kicking a smouldering log upon
-the hearth, evoked a cheery blaze, by the aid of which he lighted a lamp
-that swung over a table littered with books, papers, and quills.
-
-Grey stepped within the threshold, and looked about him with curious
-eyes. The house they had entered a few minutes before was a tall and
-narrow one in Harpe Alley, leading from Shoe Lane. It was not an old
-house, for it came within the area of the great fire of fifty years
-back, and had been rebuilt, like the whole of the surrounding buildings,
-with greater speed than discretion. Grey had once come across Sir
-Christopher Wren in his other life, and had talked with him of the
-short-sighted policy observed in the rebuilding of the city. The great
-architect declared that had his plans been carried out, London would
-have been the finest city in the world: but the haste and false economy
-of the citizens and city companies had thwarted his plans, and the old
-lines of narrow and crooked streets were kept as before, to the cost of
-succeeding generations.
-
-This house had been hastily run up, like those surrounding it, and the
-tempest from without rattled and shook the walls and windows as though
-to drive them in. But the room itself, though no more than an attic,
-bore an air of comfort very pleasant to the eyes of the homeless Grey,
-whose own quarters only contained the barest necessities of life; for
-there were some rough shelves full of books in one corner, and a rug
-before the fire gave a look of comfort to the place. Two armchairs of
-rude pattern, but furnished with down cushions, seemed to invite repose;
-and everything was scrupulously clean, even to the boards of the floor.
-
-"'A poor thing, but mine own,'" spoke the Old Lion, with his grim smile,
-as he motioned to Grey to take one chair, and he himself pulled up the
-other. "I have dwelt here two years and more now, and I have not been
-unhappy; albeit I never thought to end my days in a garret, as belike I
-shall do now."
-
-"Fortune has been hard upon you," spoke Grey earnestly. "You have the
-gifts and the powers; it is cruel that your limbs should have become
-crippled."
-
-"We must take the rough and the smooth of life as we find it," answered
-the other. "I have had my moments of rebellion--I have them still; but
-I seek the consolations of philosophy; and I have never yet wanted for
-bread or shelter. But there be times when the future looks dark before
-me. Those who remember me, and pity my misfortunes, drop away one by
-one. I lacked not for patrons at the first. When I could not longer
-tread the boards, I was ofttimes engaged to make men laugh or weep at
-some gay rout at a nobleman's house. Then, too, my jests and quips were
-in request at gay supper-parties, and I was paid to set the table in a
-roar, which in all sooth was not difficult when the wine-bottle was
-going round and round. Oh, I knew gay times for many a year after my
-stage career closed. But patrons have died off one by one. I am more
-crippled than I was, and the young wits are pushing to the front, whilst
-the Old Lion has been crowded out. My pen still serves me in a measure.
-I can turn an epigram, or write a couplet, or even make shift to pen a
-sonnet that lacks not the true ring. Grist yet comes to the mill, but
-more and more slowly. There come moments when I wonder what will be the
-end of the Old Lion's career--the poorhouse, or a death by slow
-starvation in some garret!"
-
-"No, no," cried Grey almost fiercely; "that would be shame indeed.
-Surely, if nothing better turn up, there must be places of refuge for
-fallen genius. Have not almshouses been built, again and again, by the
-well-disposed for such men as sickness has laid aside? You smile, but
-in sooth it is so."
-
-"Ay, and how many are there to claim the benefits of pious founders?
-Yet no matter. I brought you not here to talk of my troubles, but of
-yours. That romance of which you speak--"
-
-"It would seem the world cares little for such things. I did hear the
-same tale everywhere. Was it a pamphlet I had to give them, a lampoon
-upon some great man, an attack against the Tories, the Whigs, the
-Dissenters? If so, they would read it; for there was great eagerness
-amongst the people to read such things, and no matter what side was
-attacked, there were hundreds eager to buy and to read. But a
-romance--no; that was a mistake altogether. A writer of successful
-pamphlets might perhaps find readers for a merry tale, or even a
-romance; but for an unknown aspirant to fame--no, that was another
-matter. No one would buy it; no one would even read it; though there
-were one or two who took it and glanced through some pages, praised the
-style and the easy flow of words, and advised me to take to
-pamphleteering, promising that they would read anything like that."
-
-"That is it, that is it!" cried the Old Lion, rising and pacing up and
-down the room with his halting stride. "Write a filthy lampoon, a
-scurrilous libel, a fiery diatribe against any great or notable man, and
-all the world will read and set themselves agog to know the writer.
-Look at Swift, with his 'Tale of a Tub;' look at De Foe, with his crowd
-of pamphlets--men of talent, I do not doubt or deny, but full of gall
-and bitterness. Yet they are read by all the world. Fame, if not
-fortune, has come to them, and fortune will doubtless follow. The late
-King, they say, would have made Swift a bishop. The Queen will not: his
-ribald wit disgusts her; but he has admirers and patrons everywhere. It
-is the bold and unscrupulous who flourish like the grass of the field.
-True poetry and literary beauty are not asked, or even desired. A pen
-dipped in gall is a pen dipped in gold in these days of party strife.
-And the genius that wields not this bitter pen sits in dust and ashes,
-asking bread, and that well-nigh in vain."
-
-"How should I write these party diatribes--I who know little of their
-cries? Whig or Tory, Tory or Whig--what care I? The Tory of one
-Parliament is the Whig of the next. Have not Lords Marlborough and
-Godolphin gone over to the Whigs? The Queen herself, they say, is
-changing slowly."
-
-"Nay, the Queen herself will never change!" cried Wylde, with an
-emphatic gesture. "The Duchess has changed, and she seeks to use her
-influence with the Queen to make her change also, and give up her Tory
-advisers altogether. But she will not succeed. The Queen may be timid
-and gentle, but she has all her father's tenacity and obstinacy. Let my
-Lady of Marlborough look to it! She may strain the cord to breaking
-point. Already they say that the new favourite, Mrs. Masham, is ousting
-her kinswoman, the Duchess, from the foremost place in the Queen's
-affections. Favourites have fallen ere this through too great
-arrogance. The victories of Ramillies and Oudenarde, and the successes
-that have followed, make the Duke the idol of the nation and the
-favourite of the Queen yet; but the day may come when this may change,
-and then the high Tories may come in once more with a rush."
-
-"I should be sorry for the Duke to lose favour," spoke Grey
-thoughtfully. "I did see him once, and had speech with him after the
-battle of Ramillies, and a more gracious and courtly gentleman it has
-never been my lot to meet."
-
-Suddenly the Old Lion's eyes flashed fire.
-
-"You have seen and had speech with the Duke on the field of Ramillies?
-You saw the battle, or something of it? Speak! Tell me all! I must
-hear this tale. It may mean much to us both."
-
-"In sooth it is little I can tell you of the battle, for I was in the
-thick of it myself. It was by accident that my servant and I came upon
-the rival armies; and another happy accident gave me the chance of doing
-a small service for the Duke. After the battle, when we were hard by
-Louvain, he called me to him, and spoke many gracious words. I would
-fain hope that some day I may see him again."
-
-"You had speech with him? You saw his manner and his port? Tell
-me--show me--how did he carry himself?"
-
-Grey rose to his feet, laughing. He humoured the whim of the old actor.
-He was not lacking in the histrionic gift, and threw himself into his
-part with good will. He uttered quick commands, as though to his
-officers; he threw out his arms, as though directing one man here,
-another there. He recalled numbers of words spoken by the General, and
-these he reproduced faithfully and with an excellent imitation of
-Marlborough's polished, courteous, yet commanding air. Then he let his
-face soften, and addressed the old man as he himself had been addressed,
-with words of thanks and with promises of friendship. Finally, throwing
-off the mask, he broke into a laugh, and was astonished at the eager
-change which had come upon the Old Lion.
-
-"Boy!" he cried, with a new access of energy, "I trow I see for both of
-us a way to fame and fortune."
-
-Grey's eyes lighted as he eagerly asked his meaning.
-
-"That is soon told. Have you heard how, after the victory of Blenheim,
-none could be found to hymn the praises of the great General till the
-poet Addison was introduced to notice, and penned his immortal lines?
-Now, since the victory of Ramillies, I have burned with desire to show
-the world by somewhat more than verse alone the power and genius of
-England's mighty soldier. See here!"
-
-The old man rose and crossed to his table, where he fetched from a
-drawer a scroll covered with writing, which he put in the hands of his
-companion. Grey saw that it was a dialogue cast in dramatic form, and
-though he could not read it then and there, he could see, by casting his
-eyes over it, that there were many very fine periods in it, and that it
-was filled with descriptive passages of some great battle, and the
-energy and glory of the General in command. He raised his eyes
-inquiringly to the impassioned face of the author, which was working
-with excitement.
-
-"See you not something of the form? It is a dramatic interlude. It
-should be played upon the stage during the intervals of the play. Time
-sits aloft, aged and grim, his scythe in his hand, his hour-glass beside
-him, and he speaks of the decay of mankind--that the world's greatness
-is vanishing, its men of genius growing ever fewer and fewer. That is
-my part. I take the _role_ of Time. To him then enters one in the
-guise of youth--one in the flush of manhood's prime--one who has seen
-great and doughty deeds, and comes to rehearse the same in the ears of
-old Time, to bid him change his tune, to tell him that giants yet live
-upon the earth. This youth comes with songs of victory; he speaks of
-what he has seen; he describes in burning words and glowing colours that
-last great fight wherein England's General put to flight the hosts of
-the haughty monarch of France. For months has this been written; for
-months have I gone about seeking the man to take the part of youth and
-manhood. But I have sought in vain. All those whom I would have chosen
-have other work to do, and did but laugh at me. Those who would gladly
-do my bidding, I will none of. You saw how they did mouth and rant
-to-night, thinking to show their talent, when they only displayed their
-imbecile folly. But here have I found the very man for whom I have long
-waited. You have youth, beauty--that manly beauty which transcends, to
-my thinking, the ephemeral loveliness of woman; you have the gift; you
-have seen the great hero: you have caught the very trick of his words
-and speech. Oh, I know it! Once did I hear him address the House of
-Lords, and when you spoke I seemed to see and hear him again. The great
-world of fashion will go mad over you. We shall draw full houses; we
-shall succeed. I know it! I feel it! The Old Lion is not dead yet!
-He shall roar again in his native forest. Say, boy, will you be my
-helper in this thing? And in the gains which we shall make we will
-share and share alike."
-
-It was a very different sort of fame from anything Grey had pictured for
-himself, and for a moment he hesitated; for he realized that were this
-dramatic sketch to take hold of the imagination of the town, and draw
-fashionable audiences, he could scarcely avoid recognition, disguise
-himself as he might. But as against this there was the pressing need of
-the moment. He was well-nigh penniless; his romance seemed likely to be
-but so much waste paper. He was hiding now even from Dick, who
-periodically visited London to see him, lest the honest fellow should
-insist upon maintaining him from his own small hoard. Here was an
-opening, as it seemed, to something like prosperity; and the alternative
-of being drafted into the army as a pauper recruit was scarcely
-sufficiently attractive to weigh in the balance. Moreover, there was
-something so earnest and pathetic in the glance bent upon him by the Old
-Lion that he had not the heart to say him nay, and he held out his hand
-with a smile.
-
-"I will be your helper; and as for the gains, let them be yours, and you
-shall give me what wage I merit. The play is yours, the thought is
-yours: it is for you to reap the harvest. I am but the labourer--worthy
-of his hire, and no more."
-
-The compact was sealed, and the old man then insisted that Grey should
-take his bed for the night, as he must sit up and remodel his play upon
-lines indicated by the young man, who had seen the field of Ramillies
-and the disposition of troops. Grey furnished him with sundry diagrams
-and notes, and left him perfectly happy at his task, which would
-doubtless occupy him during the night, whilst the weary guest slumbered
-peacefully upon the humble bed in the little alcove beyond the larger
-room.
-
-When Grey awoke next morning, the sun was shining; a frugal but
-sufficient meal was spread upon the table; a fire was blazing cheerily
-upon the hearth; and there was the Old Lion, with his manuscript before
-him, muttering beneath his breath, and throwing out his hand in telling
-gesture, making so fine a picture with his leonine face and shaggy mane
-of hair that Grey watched him awhile in silence before advancing.
-
-"Good-morrow, and welcome to you, my son," was the greeting be received.
-"I have had a beautiful night. The muse was hot upon me. The rounded
-periods seemed to flow from my pen without effort. Let us to breakfast
-first; then shall you read what I have written, and together we will
-amend it, if need be. But first shall you remove hither from that
-unsavoury lodging of which you did speak. Here is money: pay your
-reckoning, and bring hither any goods and chattels you may value. We
-must dwell together these next weeks. We will work hard, and before the
-week closes I will have some manager here to listen to our rendering of
-this scene. We will have the world crowding to see and hear us
-yet!--King Fortune, I salute thee, and I thank thee from my heart that
-thou didst send this goodly youth to me, and didst prompt my heart from
-the first to take note of him and seek his friendship."
-
-The removal of Grey's simple belongings took but little time, and lucky
-did he feel himself to be able to call this comfortable abode his home.
-A small attic upon the same floor of the house made him a sleeping
-chamber at very small cost, and his days were spent in the sunny south
-garret, which was called the Lion's Den; and there they studied, and
-wrote, and rehearsed this eulogy upon the Duke, and the prowess of the
-English arms, the old man introducing here and there allusions and
-innuendoes which Grey scarcely understood, but which Wylde declared
-would bring down thunders of applause from the house--as, indeed, proved
-to be the case.
-
-Grey had a faint misgiving at the first that no manager might be
-forthcoming to admit the dialogue to his boards; but there the old actor
-knew his ground. He succeeded in inviting two of the most successful
-managers to listen to a performance in the attic, without the
-accessories which would add much to the effect upon the stage; and even
-so the scene proved so telling, the acting of the Old Lion was so superb
-in its quiet dignity, and Grey (who had learned and studied patiently
-and diligently) went through his part with such spirit, such power, such
-dramatic energy, that even his instructor was surprised at his success,
-and the managers exchanged glances of astonishment and pleasure.
-
-It was just the sort of piece to catch the public favour at this
-juncture. Marlborough was still the idol of the nation, and might be
-expected home some time before the winter closed--perhaps before
-Christmas itself. The nation was discussing how to do him honour, and
-would flock to see a piece wherein his praises were so ably sung.
-
-"With a wig such as the Duke wears, and with military dress, Mr. Grey
-could be made to look the very image of the great General," cried one.
-
-"He has something the same class of face--handsome, regular features,
-grace of action and bearing. He does but want to be transformed from
-fair to dark, and his acting of the Duke will bring down veritable
-thunders of applause from all."
-
-And then began a gratifying rivalry as to terms, in which the Old Lion
-sustained his part with dignity and firmness. Both managers desired to
-secure this interlude for their respective theatres, and at the last it
-was settled that the performance was to be given two nights a week at
-Drury Lane, and two at Sadler's Wells, the astute old actor retaining
-the right to make his own terms at private houses upon the two remaining
-nights of the working week. The costumes were to be provided by the
-managers, but were to be the property of the actors, who would undertake
-to replace them should any harm befall them at private representations.
-
-When these matters had been satisfactorily settled, and certain other
-details arranged, the great men took their leave in high good humour;
-and the Old Lion, shaking back his mane of shaggy hair, grasped Grey by
-the hands, his eyes sparkling in his head.
-
-"Your fortune is made, young man! your fortune is made! You will never
-need to fear poverty again. What life so grand as that of the man who
-can sway the multitude, make men laugh or weep at his bidding, hold them
-suspended breathless upon his lips, move them to mirth, or rouse them to
-the highest realm of passion? Ah, that is life! that is life! Have I
-not tasted it? Do I not know? And that life lies before you, my son.
-I will be your guide and mentor; you have but to use patience and
-discretion, and with your gifts and with your person you shall hold all
-men in thrall. Ay, and you shall write, too--Cibber shall find a rival.
-Men shall sing your praise. The world shall lie at your feet. And I
-shall see it--I, who have found and taught you, who have discerned your
-powers with pen and tongue. I shall be content. I ask nothing better
-of fortune. Ah, my son, it was indeed a providence which made our paths
-to cross!"
-
-Grey smiled, and was silent. The life of an actor was not the life of
-his ambition, and he doubted if it would enthrall him as it had
-enthralled the Old Lion. But it would be at least a new experience. He
-was ready and willing to make trial of it. As matters now stood with
-him, he had scarce a choice. He would go through with this thing that
-was planned, and with the future he would not immediately concern
-himself.
-
-So he smiled back at the old man, and took his hand, saying simply,--
-
-"I am well pleased that I have acquitted myself to your liking. I will
-seek to do you credit in the eyes of the world."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XII.*
-
- *TRIUMPH.*
-
-
-Grey gazed at himself in astonishment. His fear of the eyes of quondam
-friends vanished into thin air. Scarce would he have known himself.
-That others would know him, he could not believe. He had had no idea of
-the transforming properties of one of the great flowing wigs of the
-period; but when his own brown curls were covered and hidden beneath
-this mass of perfumed hair, his brows darkened and the skin of his face
-olive-tinted, his figure padded and arrayed in full military finery such
-as the Duke of Marlborough was wont to wear, he could almost believe
-that he saw that great warrior before his eyes, so cunningly had the
-artificers wrought. He looked younger than the General, but that was
-intended--an impersonation of youth and manly beauty and war-like
-prowess. This was what the author of the interlude aimed at, and this
-Grey looked to perfection, as he stood habited in the garments in which
-he was to appear before the public.
-
-The Old Lion, himself transformed into an excellent presentment of
-Father Time, stood gazing at the young man with glowing eyes, directing
-the attendants to give a touch here or there to accentuate any point he
-wished brought out. Satisfaction beamed from every feature of his face.
-He seemed to see the town at his feet. In a week's time all London
-would be ringing with the fame of Jonathan Wylde.
-
-It was just the sort of artificial scene likely to catch the popular
-taste. There was a rage for semi-mythological representations--dryads
-and nymphs and mermaids at the water theatre, Cupids and Psyches and
-heathen or classical deities at other places, whilst stilted and absurd
-allusions to Arcadian joys, nectar and ambrosia, spicy breezes of
-Paphos, or Hymen's seductive temples, fell trippingly from the tongues
-of every dandy with any claim to be a man of fashion, and were echoed in
-simpering accents by the ladies to whom this flowery nonsense was
-addressed.
-
-The setting of the dramatic interlude had been carefully arranged.
-Father Time, with his flowing white beard, his scythe leaning against
-him, and his hour-glass at his feet, was seated aloft at one side of the
-stage overlooking a dim and vague expanse, which was supposed to
-represent the earth. There was something very majestic in the aspect of
-the old actor, whose name many still remembered, and a burst of applause
-followed the rise of the curtain. Curiosity was raised to a high pitch
-by the gossip already excited in dramatic circles, and the house was
-crowded to the ceiling with breathless and eager spectators.
-
-The Old Lion delivered his harangue with all the fire and dignity for
-which his acting had been celebrated in past years. Seated upon his
-throne, surveying, as it were, the world, the crippled limbs no longer
-hampered him. A few telling gestures of the brown and skinny hand, the
-play of facial expression, the thunder or the melting pathos of his rich
-voice--these were all the aids he needed, and he used them with
-excellent effect. The audience sat spellbound. The young bloods even
-shrank and quailed and exchanged shamefaced glances as Father Time
-launched his thunders of scorn at the decadence of manhood, the decay of
-all true chivalry, the gilded luxury, the senseless folly, the gross
-extravagance he beheld on all hands. Where were the men? he asked,
-pointing a long and skinny finger straight at the house filled to
-overflowing with the fashion and wealth of the town. How did the youth
-of the great cities show their valour now? Why, by scouring the streets
-at night, setting upon helpless citizens, using them shamefully, even to
-leaving them half dead, with eyes gouged out, in emulation of the
-barbarous fashion of the Indian tribes, after which these gallants were
-not ashamed to call themselves. In the past men had laid down their
-lives to defend their country and the liberties of the subject; now they
-banded together to maltreat the very men who were set to maintain law
-and order. Of old, womanhood was sacred, and knights went forth to do
-doughty deeds for the honour of their ladies, and for the upholding of
-all the laws of chivalry, which they held dearer than life itself. Now
-young gallants delighted to show their reverence for womanhood by
-rolling some hapless citizen's wife or daughter down a sloping street in
-a barrel, laughing the louder if she screamed piteously, or even swooned
-with fright.
-
-Was there a man yet left in the land? Where was such to be found? And
-tears streamed down the face of Father Time, as he made his moan,
-lamenting the days which had gone by, and fearing he would never see the
-like again.
-
-Then came a telling pause of deep silence. The applause, which had
-broken out once and again during the monologue, had been hushed into
-shamed stillness at the last. Murmurs of sympathy and approval rose
-from the many present who hated and lamented the folly and extravagances
-of the day, and delighted to hear them so tellingly and scathingly
-reproved. Even the young bloods themselves could not but admire the
-skill and power of the speaker. They recognized the truth of the
-indictment, and felt a sense of shame and uneasiness which no preacher
-in the pulpit had ever aroused--perhaps because they so seldom went to
-listen, and only stayed to mock.
-
-And then the silence was as suddenly broken by a tumultuous burst of
-amazed applause. A second figure had stepped upon the stage--tall,
-graceful, alert, instinct with strength and manly beauty; and a
-thundering shout went up from all the house,--
-
-"The Duke! The Duke!"
-
-Paying no heed to the tumult of applause, the Youth went slowly forward
-towards the throne upon which sat Father Time, and to him he made a deep
-obeisance. Then amid the breathless hush of the house began the
-animated dialogue betwixt the twain, wherein the Youth did strive to
-show that manhood was not yet dead, and to call to the notice of Father
-Time the things which he had seen, and which were yet taking place upon
-the face of the globe.
-
-Then after a good deal of discussion, in which telling phrases were
-dropped on both sides, which evoked roars of applause and approval, the
-young man was called upon to tell of those great acts of which he spoke.
-Whereupon came Grey's great speech, descriptive of the battle of
-Ramillies, and the superb generalship and dauntless personal courage of
-England's great General.
-
-The audience hung spellbound upon the words and gestures of the speaker.
-A breathless hush told of the effect produced. To those who had known
-the Duke, it seemed as though he himself were recounting the story of
-his victory. To those who had not, it was still a marvellous and
-soul-stirring oration, as though the strictures lately passed upon
-manhood by Father Time were in some sort swept away, and England's
-honour vindicated by this young champion, who represented the nation's
-idol.
-
-The thing was an unqualified success. Behind the scenes the two actors
-were received with warm congratulation scarcely tinged by jealousy. Old
-Wylde was greeted by many a friend who had not troubled to recognize him
-during his days of eclipse; and in addition to the ovations from
-managers and actors, scores of men, and even of fine ladies, crowded
-round behind the scenes to shake hands with the heroes of the night, and
-satisfy their curiosity by gazing at them at close quarters.
-
-This part of the business was little to the taste of Grey, who desired
-nothing so little as any recognition by former acquaintances. He saw
-one or two faces that he knew, but no one came near him to whom he
-remembered having spoken in his past life. He retained his heavy wig
-and military dress as he talked with those pressing round him. But as
-soon as he was able he disengaged himself from the crowd, and ordering a
-coach to be called, he and his comrade drove home together, weary but
-exultant.
-
-"I told you how it would be!" spoke the Old Lion, as they stood together
-in their upper chamber, smiling at the remembrance of the scene just
-passed through. "I knew I had but to find the right man, and our fortune
-would be made! You were fine, boy; you were fine! I had reckoned upon
-you; yet one never knows how it will be till the moment comes. Some are
-struck with stage-fright, and blunder and trip, till all illusion
-vanishes. Others mouth and strut through pure terror of the myriad eyes
-bent upon them, and bring down ridicule and contempt upon their heads.
-But I had confidence in you, and my confidence was not misplaced. We
-have taken the town by storm this night; and as we have begun, so shall
-it be to the end."
-
-Certainly it seemed as though this prediction were to be fulfilled, for
-every performance was crowded to the utmost limit of the two theatres;
-and the extraordinary resemblance of the young actor--whose name was
-quite unknown to the world--to the great Duke of Marlborough was the
-talk of the whole town, and raised an immense curiosity, which spread
-through all classes.
-
-Grey called himself Edward White upon the playbills, and was thus known
-to the theatre managers, who could give no information about the young
-man save that he was a pupil of the old actor Wylde, who had written the
-piece, and cast it especially for himself and his _protege_. When it
-was urged that the young man must have known the Duke, else how could he
-so accurately reproduce his tricks of voice and speech and manner, they
-drily shook their heads, saying that of his past history they were
-ignorant, but that as an actor they were satisfied with his capacity,
-and were struck by his similarity in figure and bearing to the great
-General.
-
-The talk spread through the town, the theatres filled to overflowing,
-and crowds flocked behind the scenes nightly to get speech with the
-successful actors.
-
-It was perhaps a week after the first performance, and Grey was just
-meditating the possibility of escape from the attentions of the
-fashionable mob, when a loud and resonant laugh broke upon his ear, and
-his face flushed deeply beneath its olive tinting.
-
-Lord Sandford made his way through the crowd about him, and in a moment
-the two were face to face.
-
-Grey had of set purpose taken up a station, according to his custom, in
-a place where the light was sufficiently bad. The passages and rooms
-behind the scenes were never brilliantly illuminated, and the shadows
-fell somewhat deeply upon his face; yet it seemed to him well-nigh
-impossible, as he looked full into the eyes of the man he had trusted,
-and who had failed him, that he should not at once be discovered.
-
-But there was no trace of recognition in Lord Sandford's bold glance,
-though it rested upon his face with a shrewd curiosity.
-
-"Good-even, sir. I have desired to see your performance ere this, but
-have always been hindered. A fine piece of acting as ever I saw. And
-yet your name is unknown to me, and I thought I knew every actor in the
-town and in the country."
-
-"It is my first appearance, your lordship," answered Grey in his stage
-voice. "I owe my success to the kindliness of Mr. Wylde. I have had no
-previous training. I have to thank the public for a very kind
-reception."
-
-"No previous training for the boards? I can believe that, my friend.
-But I warrant me you have had previous acquaintance with the great
-world. You are no stranger to my lord of Marlborough--that I will
-warrant."
-
-"I did see him once, my lord; and there are some persons whom once to
-see and hear is always to remember. The impression of a great
-personality is not easily effaced."
-
-Lord Sandford's bold eyes were roving over Grey's face and figure in a
-way that was disconcerting, but he would not flinch or abase his gaze.
-He, at least had nothing of which to be ashamed.
-
-"I have seen you before, Mr. White," he remarked suddenly; "I cannot yet
-say where or when. But you have been in my company ere this. Say, is
-not that true?"
-
-"To have been in your lordship's company is surely no great
-distinction," answered Grey, with slightly veiled irony. "Is it not
-well known that Lord Sandford goes everywhere, is seen everywhere, and
-keeps company with all sorts and conditions of men?"
-
-The young peer threw back his head and broke into a great laugh.
-
-"Gadzooks, you have a ready tongue, my friend, and are not afraid to use
-it. Well, well, if you desire to tell me nothing, I will ask no more.
-Every man has a right to his own secret, though I make no pledge that I
-will not discover yours ere long. I have a mighty curiosity about some
-men's affairs, which I will gratify at my pleasure."
-
-"Was it a threat?" asked Grey of himself, "and had he any suspicion?"
-He scarce thought so. He would have seen a glint of recognition in his
-eyes had he been known beneath his disguise. But he was glad when Lord
-Sandford turned away with another loud laugh, though his heart seemed to
-throb with a painful intensity as he heard his loud voice speaking to
-his companions,--
-
-"Well, I must away to my Lord Romaine's house. My lady holds a rout
-to-night, and will be ill pleased if I present not myself. The Lady
-Geraldine will expect to see me. We must not disappoint the pretty
-birds. Who is for the rout, and who to stay for what fare they give us
-here?"
-
-Grey turned away with his heart on fire. What meant that jesting
-allusion to the Lady Geraldine? Could it be that she had plighted her
-troth to him? What else could he expect to hear than that she would obey
-the wishes of her parents? If Lord Sandford were the husband chosen for
-her, how could she escape the fate of becoming his wife? Would she even
-desire to escape it? How could a pure and innocent maiden know the sort
-of life which he had hitherto led?
-
-
-Lady Romaine's rooms were full of gay company, and a clamour of laughter
-and chatter rose up in a never-ceasing hum. The card-tables were
-crowded, and little piles of gold coins were constantly changing hands.
-Gay gallants fluttered hither and thither like great painted
-butterflies, first stopping before one fair lady and then hovering round
-another; taking snuff with one another; bandying jest or anecdote, quip
-or crank; putting their heads eagerly together over some bit of new
-scandal, and then going off in high glee to tell the news elsewhere.
-
-There were a few grave politicians gathered together in one corner
-discussing the affairs of the day--the successful campaign on the
-Continent, and the possibilities of an honourable peace. There were
-none of the high Tories to be seen at Lord Romaine's house. He belonged
-to the Whig faction, and pinned his faith to Godolphin, whom he thought
-the finest statesman of the day. He was on friendly terms with all the
-men of the so-called Whig junto, and Lord Halifax and Lord Sunderland
-were to be seen at his house to-night, foremost amongst those who
-preferred quiet converse on weighty matters to the laughter and giddy
-talk in the larger rooms.
-
-The Lady Geraldine had betaken herself to the inner apartment, where her
-father was to be found in converse with his friends. It interested her
-far more to listen to the topics of the day discussed by them than to
-receive the vapourings of the gilded dandies, or to hear the chatter of
-painted dames. To her great relief Lord Sandford had not appeared at
-the rout, and sincerely did she hope he would continue to absent
-himself. Of late his attentions had become more pressing, and every day
-she feared to hear from her father that he had made formal application
-for her hand, and had been accepted.
-
-Geraldine did not want to marry him. From the first she had shrunk from
-his admiration, but had not been able to satisfy herself as to whether
-such shrinking were just or right. She knew her mother favoured him,
-and that her father thought he would rise to eminence if once he could
-shake off the follies and extravagances of youth, and settle down to
-wedded life with the woman of his choice. There was something
-attractive in his great strength, and in the manhood which was never
-eclipsed even when he followed the fashion of the day in dress and talk.
-But whilst she was hesitating, something had come into her life which
-seemed quite to have changed its current; and from that time forward she
-had resolutely set herself against Lord Sandford's suit, and received
-his attentions with a coldness and aloofness which whetted his desire
-and piqued his vanity as nothing else could have done.
-
-There was one face for which Geraldine looked in vain, and had looked
-for many long weary weeks. Why she so desired to see that face, she
-could scarce have told; yet thus it was. But it never came. She asked
-questions now and again of some young beau who had lived in Lord
-Sandford's world; but it was little she could learn of what she so much
-wished.
-
-"Oh, Sir Grey and my Lord Sandford had a quarrel. None know the cause,
-but they say 'twas about a woman. I know naught of it. But they parted
-company; and belike he has gone off to the wars, for none of us have set
-eyes upon him since the day when he lost the race, and went near to lose
-his life."
-
-"How was that?" Geraldine had asked with whitening lips.
-
-Then she had heard, with sundry embellishments, the story of the race,
-and the suspicions which had been aroused as to whether or not a trap
-had been laid for the young baronet, into which he had fallen, and had
-only escaped severe injury by a happy chance.
-
-Geraldine's heart had been filled with horror.
-
-"Think you that Lord Sandford had a hand in it?" had been her whispered
-question, to which a careless laugh was the answer. She gathered from
-more than one source that his companions believed Lord Sandford quite
-capable of such a deed; for he had the reputation of being a man good as
-a friend, but bad to quarrel with, and absolutely unscrupulous when his
-passions were roused. None would ever answer for what he might do.
-
-A great horror had fallen upon Geraldine at hearing this tale--a horror
-which haunted her still after all these weeks. She could not forget how
-Lord Sandford had come upon her and Grey in the gardens of Vauxhall, and
-how he had spoken in a stern voice, and had carried her off with an air
-of mastery that she had been unable to resist. And almost immediately
-after this had come the quarrel--which men said was about a woman--and
-the disappearance of Sir Grey Dumaresq from the world which had known
-him. Her heart often beat fast and painfully as she mused on these
-things. Had he not promised her to give up that idle life, that gaming
-and dissipation which in their hearts they both despised? And he had
-kept his promise. He had broken loose from his fetters. He might now
-be living a life of honourable purpose elsewhere. But she had hoped to
-see and know more of him. She had not thought of his exiling himself
-altogether. True, if Lord Sandford were his foe, and such a dangerous
-one to boot, it were better he should be far away. And yet she longed
-to see him again, to hear his voice, to know how it went with him.
-Oft-times in the midst of such gay scenes as the one before her eyes her
-thoughts would go roving back to that golden summer morning when he had
-come to her upon the shining river; and she would rehearse in her memory
-every word that had passed, whilst her eyes would grow dreamy, and her
-lips curve softly, and her whole face take an expression which was
-exquisite in its tenderness and purity.
-
-"Good-even, Lady Geraldine! I trust that your thoughts are with your
-poor servant now before you, who has been chafing in sore impatience at
-the delay in presenting himself here."
-
-She raised her eyes, and there was Lord Sandford standing before her;
-and they seemed almost alone, for no one was near, the group of
-politicians having moved farther away towards the doorway commanding the
-larger suite.
-
-She rose and made him the sweeping curtsy of the day; but he possessed
-himself of her hand, and carried it to his lips.
-
-"I pray you treat me with none such ceremony, sweet lady. We may surely
-call ourselves something more than acquaintances, after all that has
-passed betwixt us. I may safely style myself your friend, I trow. Is
-it not so, Lady Geraldine?"
-
-There was something almost compelling in the glance he bent upon her.
-There was a ring of mastery in his words, despite the gentleness he
-strove to assume. She felt it, and she inwardly rebelled, although she
-gave no sign.
-
-"Friendship, I trow, my lord, doth mean something very near and intimate
-and sacred. I scarce know myself at what point an acquaintance doth
-become a friend. I would that all true and noble-hearted men and women
-would honour me by their friendship, for I prize not any other."
-
-He looked at her searchingly, wondering what she meant, and if she were
-levelling any taunt at himself. The thought was like the sting of a
-lash upon his skin, and a flush rose slowly to his brow, out his voice
-was steady as he answered,--
-
-"I care not how intimate and near and sacred such friendship be,
-provided it be vouchsafed to me, madam. I have not been thought by
-those who know me to be a bad friend; but it would ill become me to sing
-mine own praises to win the regard of the woman who is queen of my
-heart."
-
-It was the first time he had spoken quite so openly, and Geraldine's
-fair, pale face flushed beneath his ardent gaze. What she would have
-answered she never knew; he held her gaze almost as the snake holds that
-of the bird it has in thrall. Yet, all the while, her heart was
-rebelling fiercely, and her vague doubts and misgivings were changing
-rapidly into a very pronounced fear and distrust and loathing.
-
-But ere she had time to think what she should say, or he to make further
-protestations, a great rustling of silken skirts was heard, and in
-rushed Lady Romaine in a state of her usual artificial excitement and
-animation.
-
-"Ah, my lord, there you are! They did tell me you had come. And it is
-said that you have been to see the representation of which all men are
-talking--the dreadful old Father Time, who says such horrid things, but
-is put to shame by a wonderful youth who is as like the Duke of
-Marlborough as though they were cast in the same mould. Tell me, is
-this so? What is it like, this performance? I have been dying to see
-it, yet never have done so. Tickets are scarce to be had--and such a
-price! All the town is flocking. Tell us truly, is it such a wonderful
-thing, or is it just something for empty heads to cackle over?"
-
-"It is well enough," answered Lord Sandford carelessly, wishing the
-ogling lady farther at this moment. "The acting is good, and the piece
-not bad; there is power and wit in it, as all may hear, and it lacks not
-for boldness neither. But 'tis the resemblance of the young actor to
-the great Duke which is the attraction to the populace. I went to speak
-with him after all was over, to see if the likeness was as great close
-at hand as it seems on the stage."
-
-"And is it so?" asked the lady breathlessly.
-
-"No; the features in no way favour the Duke's, save that both are
-handsome and regular. But the carriage, the action, the voice--these
-are excellent. The fellow must have known his Grace in days gone by.
-But no man knows who he is nor whence he comes. He calls himself Edward
-White; but none know if that be his name or not."
-
-A sudden flush mounted to Geraldine's face, and faded, leaving her
-snow-white. A thought had flashed into her mind; it set her heart
-beating violently. White! How often had he said to her, "Would I were
-white as thou!" He had gifts; she had told him of them. He had seen
-and known the Duke, and was tall and comely to look upon; and she had
-heard him speak with his voice and manner as he told her of their
-meeting. Everything seemed whirling in a mist about her. She was
-recalled to herself by hearing her mother exclaim, in her shrill, eager
-tones,--
-
-"Then, by my troth, we will have them here, and see for ourselves what
-they can do, without the crowding we should suffer at the theatre. We
-will engage them for the first night they can come."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIII.*
-
- *THE HERO OF THE HOUR.*
-
-
-Grey's heart was beating to suffocation as he put the finishing touches
-to his toilet. The Old Lion sat beside the fire in his costume of
-Father Time, bending forward to the blaze, but giving vent from time to
-time to a hollow cough, which at a less all-engrossing moment might have
-caused Grey some uneasiness. But to-night his head was filled with
-other thoughts. He was about to start for Lord Romaine's house. The
-representation of "Time and the Youth" was to be given there before a
-large and fashionable assembly. _She_ would be there! That was his
-first thought. She would watch the performance. He might even be able
-to pick her out from crowded audience, and feast his eyes upon her pure,
-pale beauty. At least for an hour he would be near her. That alone was
-enough to set his heart beating in tumultuous fashion. She would be
-there. At Lord Romaine's own house it was impossible it should be
-otherwise. Their eyes might meet; and though she would know him
-not--better that she should not, indeed--he would gaze upon those
-features which were dearest to him out of all the world. And whether
-for weal or woe, Grey knew by this time that the love of his whole being
-was centred in Lady Geraldine Adair, though he was schooling himself to
-the thought of seeing her and knowing her to be another man's wife. To
-him she could only be as a star in the firmament of heaven--as a
-benignant influence guiding him to higher and nobler paths. That was
-how he must ever learn to regard her, for her world and his were poles
-asunder. And what had he to offer to any woman--he whose future lay all
-uncertain before him, and whose fortunes were yet in the clouds?
-
-A message from below warned them that the coach which was to convey them
-to Lord Romaine's house was now at the door.
-
-"You are tired, sir," spoke Grey, suddenly waking from his reverie and
-turning to the old man, who rose with an air of lassitude which his
-strong will could not entirely conceal; "I fear me you are not quite
-yourself to-night. This constant acting is something too great a strain
-upon you."
-
-"Ay, my boy, I am growing old," answered the other, with a note of pain
-in his voice; "I feel it as I never felt it before. My triumph has come
-just a little too late. I am too old to take up the threads of the past
-again. The Old Lion has risen once again to roar in the forest, but he
-must needs lay him down soon in his den--to die."
-
-Over Grey's face there passed a quick spasm of anxiety and pain.
-
-"Nay, nay; say not so. I have never heard you speak in such vein
-before. What ails you to-night, dear master?"
-
-"No matter, boy, no matter; heed not my groanings," answered Wylde,
-assuming more of his usual manner, though he held tightly to Grey's arm
-as they descended the stairs. "I have been somewhat out of sorts these
-last few days, and you know how they did tell me at the theatre that my
-voice was not well heard the other night--"
-
-"Ah, but you had that rheum upon you. It is better now. Yesterday your
-notes rang forth like those of a clarion."
-
-"Ah yes, that may be; but what has happened once may chance again. Boy,
-did you observe a gray-headed man standing in the slips and watching my
-every action, his lips following mine as I spoke my part?"
-
-"I did. I thought he seemed to know every word by heart himself. He
-had the face of an actor, methought."
-
-"He is one, and a favourite with the people--Anthony Frewen is his name.
-He and I have held many an audience spellbound ere now. What think you
-he was there for?"
-
-"Nay, I know not, save to watch and learn and admire."
-
-"Ay, truly, to watch and learn, that he may step into Father Time's
-part, should the day come when I can hold my throne no longer."
-
-A violent fit of coughing here interrupted the old man's words, seeming
-to give a point to his speech that otherwise it might have lacked.
-
-Grey supported him tenderly whilst the paroxysm lasted; but he sat
-aghast, thinking what might be coming upon his master and friend. If,
-indeed, he were to be laid aside by illness, how could the successful
-dramatic interlude be carried on, save by another actor? And did it not
-look as though theatre managers were foreseeing this contingency, and
-preparing for it?
-
-"Could they, indeed, supersede you, sir?" he asked at length. "Have
-they the right to do so, since the thing was written by you? Must they
-not rather wait for you to take up your part again, should the cold
-seize upon you, and for a time render you unfit for your part?"
-
-"Nay, nay, they will not do that; and they have purchased the rights to
-produce the piece as long as they will. I could not complain. I could
-only submit." He stopped and drew his breath rather hard, and then
-broke out with something of his old fire: "But what matter? what matter?
-It is nature's law! The old must give way to the young. I have lived my
-life. I have shown men what I can do. I have aroused me from sleep,
-and shone like a meteor in the sky ere my long eclipse shall come. I am
-content. I ask no more. Let Elisha take up the mantle which falls from
-Elijah. My work will be remembered when the hand that penned it is
-dust."
-
-Grey was almost horrified by these words. It seemed to him as though
-the Old Lion were almost making up his mind to some approaching
-calamity; and at the thought of losing his one friend, the young man's
-heart stood still. He had become greatly attached to Wylde; but he knew
-that amid those of his own profession he had many enemies. Nor had he
-been many weeks amongst actors before he had learned the jealousies and
-emulations that burned so fiercely amongst them, and how eagerly every
-vacant place was snapped up by one of a crowd of eager aspirants. Who
-knew but that somebody might even now be studying his part of the Youth,
-ready to step into his shoes should any untoward event occur to
-incapacitate him? He had constantly seen the handsome but unsteady
-Lionel Field hanging about the theatre, and once or twice he had come to
-see them in their lodgings, and had asked the Old Lion to speak a good
-word for him, declaring that he had resolved upon turning over a new
-leaf, and becoming steady and sober again. Grey remembered now how many
-questions he had put about the Duke of Marlborough, asking how Grey had
-become so well acquainted with his person and voice and gestures. These
-he himself had imitated, not without success, for the young man had
-considerable natural gifts, and far more training than Grey could boast,
-although he had won so great success through the close instructions of
-an able master.
-
-The young man knew perfectly by this time that Wylde was somewhat feared
-in dramatic circles for his keen criticisms, his autocratic temper, and
-his scathing powers of retort. He knew, likewise, that he was regarded
-as something of an interloper--a man who had risen suddenly into notice
-by what might be called "back-stair" influence. Grey was fully aware
-himself that he had served no apprenticeship to his present calling,
-that he had stepped into success simply and solely through a series of
-happy accidents. He could not wonder that to others he should seem to be
-something of an impostor and a fraud. Whilst under the Old Lion's
-immediate patronage, nobody dared to flout or insult him; but he was
-sometimes conscious of an undercurrent of hostile jealousy directed
-against him, which increased with his increasing popularity with the
-public. He could not doubt that if some mischance were to befall him or
-his patron, his fall would be acclaimed in many circles with delight, as
-making room for another to fill his vacant place. And Grey, looking at
-the hollow cheeks and the gaunt frame of the Old Lion, hearing from time
-to time his painful coughing, began to fear that he, indeed, would not
-long be able to face the world or fight his own battle; and doubtful,
-indeed, did he feel of his own power and ability to fight that battle
-for himself single-handed.
-
-[Illustration: The hero of the hour (page 251).]
-
-These fears and misgivings, however, though somewhat dismal at the
-moment, were all driven away as the carriage rolled under the archway of
-Lord Romaine's house, and he found himself at his journey's end, and so
-close to the object of his heart's desire.
-
-The actors were not, of course, taken into any of the thronged
-drawing-rooms; the day for the reception of dramatists as honoured
-guests at the houses of the nobility was not yet. They were, however,
-respectfully conducted to a small apartment and offered refreshments,
-which they partook of sparingly, and then conducted through the garden
-to a large temporary structure, which Lady Romaine had insisted on
-having run up, so that she might invite a very large audience to her
-house for the occasion.
-
-There was a well-arranged stage for the actors, and the scenery, such as
-it was, had been well painted, in imitation of that at the theatres;
-Father Time's throne was a very fine erection, and all the arrangements
-were excellent. The old man seemed to throw off his lassitude as he
-made his observations, and the fire came back to his eyes and the power
-to his voice. Grey forgot his uneasiness in the excitement of the
-moment, and in the realization of where he was and who might at any
-moment appear before his eyes, and he was resolved that this
-representation should be the finest which had ever been seen heretofore.
-
-In the grand reception-rooms of the Countess, Geraldine stood apart as
-one who dreams. She saw the throng of fashionable persons assembling;
-she heard delighted exclamations about the wonders of the little theatre
-which all had heard of. It had been brought from Spring Gardens, and
-the moving of it had been quite a small excitement for the fashionable
-world, who declared that Lady Romaine was the cleverest and most
-delightful of women, and that it was quite too charming to be able to
-witness this representation, of which all the town was talking, without
-the crush and fatigue of attending the theatres.
-
-Geraldine heard as in a dream all this hubbub and clatter. She herself
-was as eager as any to witness the dramatic interlude, but from a motive
-different from that of the rest of the world. There was an unwonted
-flush upon her cheeks, a brilliance in her dreamy eyes. Many persons,
-who had scarcely noticed her before, or had passed her by with the
-epithet, "a maid of ice," "a snow-queen," now regarded her with greater
-attention, and said one to another that the Lady Geraldine was a more
-beautiful creature than they had fancied before.
-
-Lord Sandford, pushing his way through the throng towards her, felt a
-peculiar thrill of triumph run through him as his eyes dwelt upon her
-face.
-
-"She is a splendid woman--just fit to be the future Lady Sandford, the
-mother of those who shall come after me! My wooing shall not last much
-longer. I know the mind of her mother, and though her father promises
-nothing, he wishes me well. He will not have her coerced, nor would I.
-She must come to me willingly; but come she shall. She has no mind
-towards marriage, as other maids and damsels. Better so, better so. I
-would not have my mistress one of those whose ears are greedy for the
-flattery of all the world--one who looks upon each man as he appears in
-the light of a possible suitor. No, I would have my white lily just as
-she is--pure, spotless, calm, cold. It is for me to kindle the fire,
-for me to unlock the heart; and I will not grumble if the task be
-something hard, for better is the prize for which we have toiled and
-sweated, than the one which drops into our hands at the first touch."
-
-So thinking, he pushed his way till he stood by Geraldine's side, and
-met the clear, steady glance of her eyes.
-
-"Fair lady, I give you greeting. You are not going to absent yourself
-from the representation this night? We never know in our garish world
-where the Lady Geraldine will appear, or what places she will illumine
-with the light of her countenance. I rejoice to see you here to-night."
-
-"I have a great desire to see this spectacle of which I have heard so
-much," answered Geraldine quietly; "I would fain have gone to the
-theatre, if so be that my mother had not arranged this representation
-here. I have heard of the Old Lion of the stage, though never have I
-seen him. There is something grand in the story I have heard of his
-talent, his early successes, and his bravely endured eclipse and
-poverty. I am right glad he has lived again to taste success and the
-plaudits of the people."
-
-Lord Sandford laughed at her earnestness.
-
-"You are a philanthropist in sooth, Lady Geraldine, to interest yourself
-in the affairs of such persons as these."
-
-"Are they not of our own flesh and blood, my lord?" she asked.
-
-"Faith, I know not, and I care not! At least, they are not of our
-world, which is more to the point in these days."
-
-Geraldine turned away with a look upon her face which roused the hot
-blood of Lord Sandford; he was not used to scorn.
-
-"Lady Geraldine," he began; but a sudden stir and as sudden a hush in
-the great rooms brought his words to an abrupt stop. The Duchess of
-Marlborough herself was making her formal entry, and there was almost
-the same respect paid to her as though royalty itself were appearing.
-They were only waiting for her to troop through the covered way into the
-theatre; and Geraldine, taking advantage of the movement and the
-confusion incident to this, escaped from Lord Sandford, who would have
-given her his arm, made her way rapidly downstairs by a private way, and
-took up a position in the theatre where he was quite unable to get near
-her.
-
-She had decided beforehand where she would sit--near to a side-door into
-the garden, which, standing half-open, let in a current of cool air into
-the heated place. It had been warmed beforehand, and was dimly lighted
-by a number of small lanterns overhead, such as were used in the gardens
-of Vauxhall and Ranelagh.
-
-Her heart was beating almost to suffocation as the curtain went up, and
-she saw the often-described figure of Time upon his throne. But it was
-not of his rounded periods nor his telling gestures that she had been
-dreaming; and though she listened and watched with a sense of
-fascination, she knew that she was waiting--waiting--waiting for the
-next actor, with a sense almost of suffocation in her throat.
-
-Why had she thought this thing? Why had it seemed to her no
-impossibility that Sir Grey Dumaresq, vanished utterly from his old
-world, should be masquerading now in this part of the Youth? She could
-not have answered even to herself these questions, yet her heart was all
-in a tumult. Had he not once said to her, as he plucked a white rosebud
-and gave it her, "Why was my name not White instead of Grey? Then it
-would be like unto you"? Was that enough to build upon? Hardly, but
-yet she could not help it. Did not men speak of his grace, dignity,
-manly beauty? and did not many say of him that his face seemed familiar
-in some sort, yet none could say who he was? And now a thunder of new
-applause rent the air. For a moment her vision grew dim and she could
-not see. Then it cleared, and her heart gave a great bound. Clear
-silver tones fell upon her ear, and the ring of a voice that she knew.
-His face for the moment was turned away. He was addressing himself to
-Father Time; but as he turned towards the house and gazed full upon the
-audience sitting in spellbound silence, the foot-lights fell full upon
-his face, and she knew him!
-
-She knew him--that was enough! What he said or did, she knew not--cared
-not. She sat with her gaze fastened full upon him. She recked not why
-that alone seemed enough. A strange trance that was half dream fell
-upon her. She gazed, and gazed, and gazed.
-
-"Good lack, but the fellow is the very mirror of my husband! I had not
-believed it, had I not seen it with mine own eyes." The voice of the
-Duchess was clearly heard above the clarion notes of the actor. She was
-not one to hush her tones, and she was not a little astonished by the
-performance. Pleasure, gratification, and surprise were all written
-upon the hard but handsome features of the Queen's favourite; and every
-now and again she would tap her long ivory fan with some vehemence upon
-the back of the seat in front, and would exclaim aloud,--
-
-"Vastly good! Vastly well done! Faith, but he is a pretty fellow, and
-knows what he is about. I must have speech with him. I would learn
-more of this. Beshrew me, but the Duke must see this when he returns!"
-
-This loud-voiced praise could not but reach the ears of the actors, and
-they could not fail to know who it was that spoke. All knew that the
-Duchess was to be present, as a special mark of good will and
-condescension, and that she should speak such open praise seemed to set
-a seal upon the success of the entertainment. Lady Romaine could scarce
-contain herself for delight.
-
-Geraldine still sat as in a maze of bewildered happiness. It was not
-till just as the performance was closing that she was awakened from her
-trance, and that somewhat rudely. The last words of the interlude were
-being spoken. Father Time and the Youth were standing together making
-their last speeches to the audience, and she was gazing with all her
-eyes into the face of one whom she alone out of all the company had
-recognized, when one of the lanterns overhead, insecurely fastened,
-burnt its way loose, and fell flaring and blazing upon the light train
-of her dress. Instantly she was in a blaze. The flames shooting up made
-a glare all over the house, and a hundred piercing shrieks attested the
-terror of the ladies at the sight.
-
-But one had seen even before the flames shot up. Already the young actor
-had leaped like a deer to the floor of the house; in a moment he had
-reached the side of the lady. He had caught up in his hands a great rug
-which was picturesquely flung over the throne of Father Time, and before
-any other person in the room had recovered presence of mind sufficient
-to stir, he had the flaming figure wrapped round in this rug, and had
-borne it out through the half-open door into the safety of the grassy
-garden without, where, laying his burden down upon the ground tenderly,
-despite his haste, he was quickly able to stifle the flames and
-extinguish the last spark.
-
-He bent over her, his face white and ghastly in the moonlight.
-
-"You are not hurt--say you are not hurt!"
-
-"I think not; you were so quick--so quick. How can I thank you?"
-
-Her eyes looked into his; it was just one moment before the people came
-rushing out upon them in a frantic crowd. But that moment was their
-own. They looked into each other's eyes, and a thrill passed from heart
-to heart that never could be forgotten. Out rushed Lord Romaine, frantic
-with anxiety; out followed a motley crowd--some weeping, some gasping,
-some exclaiming, some even laughing in hysterical excitement. Grey
-stood up suddenly, and slipped away like a wraith in the moonlight.
-
-Lord Romaine bent tenderly over his daughter, who was struggling to her
-feet, still encumbered by the folds of the great rug. She was
-dishevelled, her dress was torn and burnt, she held the folds of the
-covering wrap about her still; but her voice was only a little tremulous
-as she clung to her father's arm.
-
-"I am not hurt; no, I am sure I am not. The hot breath of the fire just
-scorched for a moment; but then it was crushed out.. Please send the
-people away. I do not want to be stared at. I am not hurt. Please
-take me in, and let me go to my own room."
-
-"Bless me, but what a pretty kettle of fish!" cried a loud and imperious
-voice. "Let me see the child and be sure she is all safe. Ha, there
-you are, my pretty white bird! A nice scare you gave us all wrapped
-about in a ring of fire like--who was the woman?--Brynhild, or some such
-outlandish name. But it was a fine ending to the drama. We have not
-quite lost our heroes yet. My faith, how he leaped down! He must have
-seen it before any of the rest of us. Well, well, well; it is a good
-thing that his fine show of bravery was not all in words. He is a
-mettlesome youth, and deserves the praise of the town. He will be more
-the hero of the hour than ever. Where is the boy? I would have speech
-of him myself."
-
-The Duchess looked about her; but no one like the Youth was to be seen.
-He had vanished altogether; but, doubtless, he would be somewhere on the
-place, and could be fetched to receive the thanks of the parents and the
-compliments of the Duchess.
-
-It was too cold to stand out in the moonlight, and there was a general
-move towards the house, Geraldine still clinging to her father's arm,
-avoiding the shrill questions, comments, and congratulations of the
-company, and shrinking back especially when Lord Sandford would have
-approached.
-
-"The luck was not for me to-night," he said; "nevertheless, give me the
-chance, Lady Geraldine, and you shall see what I will do. But that
-actor chap shall not lose his reward for his promptitude. I will see to
-that."
-
-She started as though she had been stung.
-
-"My lord, do not insult him!"
-
-He stared at her in amaze; but she slipped away and vanished like a
-wraith. He strode moodily about the rooms, joining in the general
-inquiry after the young actor whom the Duchess had sent for; but the
-servants came back after some time to say that the young man could not
-be found. He seemed to have disappeared into thin air.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIV.*
-
- *FICKLE FORTUNE.*
-
-
-Grey had a double reason for his rapid disappearance from the scene of
-his recent exploit. For one thing, he had recognized amid the audience
-assembled by Lady Romaine to witness the performance quite a number of
-men whom he had known with more or less intimacy in the former days, and
-whom he now desired to avoid. He knew that both his flowing wig and his
-fine clothes had received some injury from the fire, and moreover he
-quickly felt that his hands and one of his arms had suffered from the
-flames. If he were to be taken possession of by friendly or
-compassionate persons, to have these matters looked to, there was no end
-to the possible complications which might arise. The sensitive pride of
-the young man of gentle birth rose in arms against being unmasked in the
-midst of old associates. He pictured the laugh with which Lord Sandford
-would make the discovery that the youthful baronet, his whilom friend,
-was playing upon the boards of the theatre for a livelihood. That was a
-thing he could not and would not endure. And he had fled hastily from
-the coming crowd, so soon as he had been assured that Lord Romaine was
-on the spot to take care of his daughter.
-
-Again, he was frightened by the intensity of his own feelings. When he
-held Geraldine in his arms, and when their eyes met, and he knew himself
-recognized, the flood of emotion which surged over him had well-nigh
-mastered him and led him into some wild act of folly. He had had much
-ado to stay the burning words which rushed like a torrent to his lips.
-He dared not trust himself to look again upon Geraldine's fair face. He
-was frightened at the immensity of the temptation which had assailed him
-to break into some wild declaration of love.
-
-But when he had reached the waiting coach which was to convey him and
-his companion back to town, his thoughts were directed into quite
-another channel by the frightened faces of the servants who stood by.
-
-"You had better get Master Wylde home without delay," spoke one, "and
-have a leech for him. He was taken with bleeding at the mouth almost as
-soon as he left the stage. He has only spoken once, and that was to ask
-for you. He should be got to bed as quick as may be, and kept there
-till he is better."
-
-With a pale and anxious face Grey threw himself into the coach where the
-Old Lion was sitting, leaning back feebly against the cushions, his face
-ghastly, his hand holding to his mouth a kerchief stained and spotted
-with blood. In a great fright the young actor bade the man drive fast,
-and stop on his way at the residence of one of the many physicians, or
-quacks, who drove so brisk a trade in these times, each having some
-wonderful nostrum of his own for the cure of all ills under the sun, and
-some of them thriving so mightily that they drove four or six horses in
-their coaches, and had lackeys in scarlet and silver lace running beside
-them and distributing small leaflets, in which the wonders their master
-had performed were set forth.
-
-Grey had heard of some of these men, and that they performed wonderful
-cures; and he cared not what he paid, at that moment, so that his master
-and friend might be relieved and healed.
-
-With no small trouble he got him up the stairs to their attic, and put
-him to bed. But more than once the hacking cough brought back the
-dreaded bleeding; and by the time that the leech arrived, pompous and
-haughty, and none too well pleased at being summoned from the convivial
-gathering of friends whither he had betaken himself, he looked more like
-a corpse than a living man.
-
-Grey was in a fever of anxiety, and listened with earnest heed to the
-words of the leech, and his instructions for the relief of the patient.
-He bought every suggested medicament, regardless of the cost, and made
-no hesitation in handing the exorbitant fee demanded by the great man
-for his valuable services. He cared for nothing, so that his master
-should recover; and the leech, finding that gold was plentiful in this
-humble abode, and rather interested in the discovery that he was
-attending the actor whose Father Time had made such talk in the town,
-really began to take some interest in the case, and to put forth his
-best skill; so that before very long the death-like hue of the patient's
-face changed to something more natural, and the hemorrhage was for the
-time being checked.
-
-"He must be kept perfectly quiet. On no account must he exert his
-voice, or leave his bed, or take any liberties. Nature must be
-humoured, my dear sir; nature must be helped and aided. She is a kind
-mother to her obedient and reasonable children, but she has many a rod
-for the backs of those who despise her warnings. Our worthy friend has
-been tendering a deaf ear to her counsels; therefore has she chastened
-him somewhat severely. But let him show himself mild and docile under
-her rod, and it may be that she will restore him to favour again, and
-that the world will once more pay to him its tribute of admiration and
-praise."
-
-So saying the leech took his departure, promising to come at any hour of
-the day or night that he might be sent for; and Grey was left alone with
-his patient, who had been soothed off to a quiet sleep by a draught
-administered. And it must be said in justice to these men--half
-physician, half quack--who flourished at this time, that some of their
-remedies were of no small value when properly applied. They used herbs
-and concoctions brewed from the leaves and roots of plants far more
-freely than has since become fashionable. Many purchased their nostrums
-from old women, who went forth into the fields and lanes, and distilled
-from their spoil mixtures which they regarded as remedies of infallible
-potency. Much ignorance prevailed as to the action of these simples
-upon the human body; but many of them were of no small value in
-sickness, and when used in cases where it chanced to be the thing
-required, worked wonders in rapid healing, and became at once the
-favourite elixir of the moment amongst those who had known of the cure.
-
-So the Old Lion was at least soothed to quiet sleep, and in the warm
-atmosphere of the attic his breathing was sensibly relieved. Grey was
-able now to strip off his own finery, rather aghast at the sorry state
-of his coat, the total destruction of his costly ruffles, and the singed
-condition of his wig.
-
-"These must be made good quickly, or I shall not be fit to appear on the
-boards on Monday night," he mused, as he looked at them. Luckily as
-this was Saturday night, he felt as though there were breathing time
-before him. "I must send word to Mr. Butler of what has befallen.
-Anthony Frewen, or some other, must needs play Father Time for a score
-of performances at least, I fear me. It will be a loss: I shall earn
-but the half of what was given us before. Still it will suffice to keep
-us, and I trust and hope that it will not be long ere he recover, to
-take his place once more."
-
-A troubled look came over Grey's face as he looked towards the bed, and
-noted the patient's sunken cheek and cavernous eyes. He wondered that
-he had not before seen how thin and shrunken the old man was getting;
-but there was always so much fire about him that it deceived even those
-who saw him oftenest and loved him best.
-
-"It has been too much for him," mused Grey, as he sat beside the fire,
-pain of body and anxiety of mind precluding all thought of sleep. His
-hands were becoming increasingly painful, and he had forgotten to ask
-the leech for any medicament for them. However, he applied linen rag
-steeped in oil; and the burning smart lessened somewhat, though he had
-no disposition to seek sleep.
-
-"It hath been too much for him--the triumph, the adulation, the
-excitement of taking again his old place before the world. It meant so
-much to him, this play. It was like the child of his old age. It
-brought him his final triumph; but it took much out of him also. The
-fires of life blazed up too fiercely. Now they seem sinking down to
-ashes. Heaven grant that we may feed them yet, that he may recover him
-of this sickness. Yet will he ever be able to face the world again as
-heretofore? It is hard that his trumpet voice should be taken--the last
-of those attributes which made him the idol of the stage. Oh, it has
-been hard how one thing has followed another with him! Some men seem
-born to success and triumph, whilst others with equal gifts and powers
-are doomed to misfortune and sorrow."
-
-Grey fell into a reverie of a sombre nature. "Was he fated to be one of
-those luckless mortals, ever falling lower and lower in fortune's
-favour, till perhaps a pauper's grave should at last close over him?
-
-"What has life given me heretofore? A good old name, which I may not
-use for very pride; an estate so burdened and crippled that it is none
-of mine, save in name. I have had my days of glory and happiness; but
-what lies before me now? If my master dies, or lies sick and helpless,
-what will become of us in the future? I may play the part of the Youth
-with Anthony Frewen or some other till the world tires of it; but what
-then? Shall I join the crowd of cringing, hollow-eyed men, crowding the
-taverns and the stage doors of the theatres, and begging for some
-inferior part upon the boards? Shall I go vaunting my powers, or
-chaffering my wares in a market already overstocked, that wants none of
-me? No. Whatever happens, I will have none of that. I have tasted of
-the life, but it hath no charms for me. Rather would I gird my sword
-upon my thigh, and go forth as a soldier in foreign lands; and, indeed,
-were I alone in the world, methinks I would hesitate no longer, but
-offer myself for this."
-
-As he spoke, his eyes turned to the bed where the old man lay, and a
-softer look came over his face.
-
-"I cannot leave him. With him I must stay till he recover, or till he
-die. He took me in in my hour of need. To desert him in his would be
-base beyond all words. I will play the part of son to him so long as he
-needs me; and for his sake will I go through my part as before, though
-without him the joy will be gone. But it will bring us the needful
-gold; and we are not without our hoard, as it is. Truly my master was
-wise when he decided not to leave these rooms--not to live like rich men
-on the strength of our earnings. We have sufficient gold laid by
-against a rainy day. Ere that is spent, doubtless there will come some
-change to our fortunes."
-
-But with the dawn of another day Grey found himself in very sorry
-plight. Great blisters had risen over his hand and arm, and the fingers
-were so swollen and painful that he could scarcely move them. He was
-forced to contrive a sling in which to carry his left hand and arm, and
-he could only just use his right sufficiently for the needful attendance
-upon the sick man, and that not without considerable pain. He began to
-feel feverish and weak himself from the effects of pain and shock.
-
-It began to come over him with more and more conviction that he himself
-would be unfit to appear upon the stage on the morrow. And as soon as
-the morning light had fully come, he sent the servant of the house
-wherein they lodged to the rooms occupied by Mr. Butler of the Drury
-Lane theatre management, asking him to come at once to see him upon a
-matter of importance.
-
-Mr. Butler was part proprietor of the theatre, and the practical stage
-manager, and he listened with great interest and concern to Grey's tale,
-looking earnestly at the sick man muttering to himself upon the bed, but
-taking no notice of what went on about him, and bending over him not
-untenderly, to see if could elicit some response. But the Old Lion
-unclosed his dim eyes for a few moments, looked into his face, and then
-turned restlessly and began the mutterings as before, interrupted
-sometimes by fits of coughing, which left him visibly exhausted,
-although there was no return of the hemorrhage.
-
-"I have had my fears of this," spoke Mr. Butler, turning back to Grey.
-"He is scarce fit for the strain of the past weeks. He uses himself up
-too fast. The fires burn within too fiercely; and his long illness,
-though seeming only to cripple his limbs, has told upon him. I have
-feared it might be so, therefore we are not altogether unprovided."
-
-"I know," answered Grey quietly. "I was going to say as much. Anthony
-Frewen has the part of Father Time at his fingers' ends. He can play it
-for Mr. Wylde till this illness be overpassed."
-
-"That is true. I am glad you should know. He is ready at any time to
-take the part. It will be for him a great opportunity. But it would be
-well for you to rehearse with him ere appearing before the public.
-Shall we arrange for this to-morrow forenoon? As for this dress, it
-must be given at once into the hands of tailor and perruquier. But
-there should be no difficulty in having it repaired in time. A few
-guineas will set that matter to rights."
-
-"At my cost," answered Grey promptly. "Let that be understood. It is
-in the bond; though I shall be grateful if you will see to the matter
-for me. As for the rehearsal, and even the performance to-morrow and
-the next few nights, I am not certain if I myself shall be able to go
-through my part. See here!" and Grey drew from the sling his maimed and
-stiffened hand, showing even a greater extent of injury in the daylight
-than he had observed before. His white face and drawn brows showed that
-he was suffering considerable pain; and Mr. Butler whistled in dismay.
-
-"This is serious," he said, with a look of perplexity on his face.
-
-"Yet methinks there is a way out of the difficulty," spoke Grey, with
-some eagerness. "Could you find and send to me the young actor Lionel
-Field, who has lodgings somewhere in these regions, for he comes and
-goes at the theatre, and has visited us often, albeit he has never told
-me where he dwells?"
-
-"I could find the fellow, doubtless," was the answer; "but do you know
-your man? A fellow sober one day, drunk the next, upon whom no reliance
-can be placed, though his talent is considerable, and he has caught the
-public taste before now."
-
-"Ay, and adversity has something sobered and tamed him," answered Grey
-eagerly. "I have a sort of liking for the fellow, though he has a
-jealous feeling towards me, in that I have stepped into a place without
-serving apprenticeship thereto. But believe me, he could act this part
-of mine. I am sure of it. He has studied it, I know. He has sat many a
-time in that chair whilst I have been going through my paces before my
-master. I have seen him watching and following all. Send him hither to
-me. I will undertake that he shall be ready to act for me till I am my
-own man again. Let him have the chance. I am sure he will remain sober.
-He has been steadier for long; and this, he knows, may give him just
-that lift for which he has been waiting and longing. It may be the
-beginning for him of better things; and since we are much of the same
-height, and he is only something broader and more stoutly built, there
-will be little trouble with the dress. Let him play the Youth for one
-week at least in my place, and I will give my time to my sick friend
-yonder, and let my injured hands recover their strength and suppleness."
-
-The manager had been studying Grey's face with some attention. He saw
-that it would be impossible for the young man to act for some days to
-come. There was a look of fever about him, and the state of his hands
-was quite prohibitive. He spoke with a note as of warning in his voice.
-
-"Do you know what it is that you would do?" he asked. "Have you heard
-the tale of the countryman who warmed a viper at his hearth, which
-afterwards did him to death?"
-
-"The fable I know," answered Grey with a smile, "but I do not see the
-application in the present."
-
-"Perchance you may have reason to understand it, if you do as you
-purpose towards Lionel Field. A man consumed by vanity and envy is not
-the safest wearer of one's discarded shoes."
-
-"But is there any other?" asked Grey. "I know of none."
-
-"No, nor I, i' faith. We have feared that the old man might break
-down--he has been growing so gaunt and hollow-eyed of late; but we had
-never thought of such a thing as the Youth failing us. We have no
-substitute for you, Mr. White. If you fall ill, the interlude must
-cease; and it were pity too, for it still draws us crowded houses."
-
-"No, it need not cease," spoke Grey with energy. "Send me only Lionel
-Field this day, and I will undertake that by to-morrow forenoon he shall
-be fit for the rehearsal with Anthony Frewen in the theatre. Let him
-take my place till I am ready to fill it again. He will do it better
-than I, with these maimed hands, and with my heart so full of anxious
-fears for Mr. Wylde."
-
-"Then so be it," answered the manager, with audible relief in his tones.
-He had no wish to withdraw the piece whilst it was still so high in
-favour. No one knew how soon the capricious public might tire of it; but
-for the moment, with the Duke of Marlborough the popular idol, and
-expected home week by week, nothing that gave him praise and honour
-could fail to catch the popular taste. The house filled double as full
-on those nights on which Time and the Youth were to appear as it did on
-the others. Grey knew this, and would not for the world have had the
-performances to cease on his account. He had no petty jealousy of an
-understudy. He simply desired that a man he had come to pity sincerely
-should have the chance he so coveted; and when Lionel Field stood before
-him, flushed, excited, filled with strenuous desire to succeed--to fill
-the part as ably as it had been filled before--Grey's only desire was to
-help him to this end.
-
-It was a strange day that was passed in that upper chamber. On the bed
-lay the sick man, for the most part lying in the lethargy of weakness,
-but from time to time rousing up, watching with sudden feverish
-eagerness the actions of the young men, and occasionally in whispering
-tones giving some fragment of keen criticism or dramatic suggestion. At
-the other end of the room stood Lionel, going through his part again and
-yet again, with an unwearied energy and with increasing grip and power;
-whilst Grey, white-faced and exhausted, but still bent on the task
-before him, sat beside the fire watching, listening, instructing, rising
-every now and again to show how a certain trick of manner or of voice
-must be managed, to recall the great Duke to those who knew him. The
-master was in earnest; the pupil was eager and resolved to excel.
-Lionel had never lacked talent. What he had lacked was the power of
-self-restraint, whilst vanity had led him into the snare of thinking
-himself invaluable. A bitter lesson had followed, and he had learned
-wisdom by experience. His chance had now come to him most unexpectedly.
-He meant to use it well. He was grateful to Grey for selecting him at
-this juncture. He did not consciously meditate doing him an ill turn,
-but he resolved in his heart that this opportunity should be used to the
-uttermost. It would bring him once more before the public which once
-had favoured him. He would take care he did not sink into obscurity
-again.
-
-It was dusk before he left with his part perfect, and everything learned
-that Grey could teach him. As his footsteps clattered down the wooden
-stairs, Grey sank back exhausted into his chair, closing his eyes in
-utter lassitude. It was more than an hour before he moved, and then
-nothing but the necessity for giving food to Wylde would have roused
-him.
-
-The Old Lion was awake now, and his breathing, though very rapid, was
-somewhat easier. He was excessively weak; but the quiet day spent in
-the warm attic and without any exertion on his part had not been without
-effect, and there was more comprehension in the gaze now bent upon
-Grey's face than he had seen there since the previous night, when the
-old man had been taken suddenly ill.
-
-"What is the matter, boy, and what have you been doing all day? Who was
-that went out at dusk? Methought it looked like young Lionel Field."
-
-"It was he, sir. He came to learn--or rather to perfect--the part of
-the Youth. You and I are to take a week's holiday, and enjoy a rest
-together. Your cough is too bad for you to go abroad, and I have burnt
-my hands and must needs get them healed ere I step the boards again.
-Anthony Frewen and Lionel Field will take our places for the nonce; and
-after we are restored to our former health, and strength, the public
-will welcome us back the more gladly for our absence."
-
-The Old Lion's eyes flashed suddenly from beneath their heavy lids. He
-half raised himself in his bed.
-
-"I shall never tread the boards again. My acting days are done. I
-murmur not. I have had my heart's desire. I can now depart in peace.
-But you, boy--you! Why have you given up the place that was yours? I
-hear the knell tolling for you too. Not for your life--nay, you will
-live after these limbs are laid in the grave; but for your triumph--for
-your fame. You have given up your birthright to the supplanter. You
-will never take your rightful place again--never--never!"
-
-Grey smiled at the sorrowful intensity with which these words were
-spoken. He laid the old man down, and spoke to him soothingly.
-
-"Nay, do not fear; do not let such thoughts trouble you. I have seen
-Mr. Butler. All will be well. My place will be kept for me till my
-return. When I am able for it, I shall play the 'Youth' again; and we
-will live upon the proceeds till you are hale and strong; and then you
-shall write a great play which shall hold the whole world captive and
-enthralled. But now trouble not yourself of these matters. Only rest,
-and all will be well."
-
-"Well, well; yes, for me all will soon be well," was the old man's
-dreamy answer. "But for you, my son--for you, what will befall? Fickle
-Fortune did smile at you; but her smile has changed to a frown. The open
-door is closing in your face, and where will you find another?"
-
-Grey smiled and answered not. At the present moment he was too worn out
-in mind and body even to care what the future might hold.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XV.*
-
- *DARK DAYS.*
-
-
-For above a fortnight things went very strangely for Grey in that upper
-room which had been for so long his home. The Old Lion was very
-ill--dangerously ill for many days; and though the leech was called in
-several times, and sometimes gave a medicine which brought relief, it
-was little his skill availed, and the tender nursing of the young man
-was undoubtedly the means under Providence whereby the sick man's life
-was saved.
-
-But Grey himself was suffering from severe prostration, from an
-intermittent fever, and from much pain from his burns, which were slow
-to heal and made his task of nursing very difficult.
-
-Nevertheless he would let no one else rob him of this labour of love;
-for none could soothe the sick man as he could, and if left to other
-care, he always became restless and feverish.
-
-As for the world without, that was altogether blotted out from Grey's
-thoughts. He never even heard of the return of the Duke of Marlborough
-from his glorious campaign of victory; he never knew of the grand
-procession through the streets from Whitehall to Guildhall, and thence
-to the Vintners' Hall, where the victor of Ramillies was feasted by the
-civic authorities, after the standards taken at the great battle had
-been flaunted through the streets and acclaimed by a huge and
-enthusiastic crowd.
-
-All this, if he heard rumour of it, passed through his brain unheeded.
-He did not even know that the Duke attended a performance at Drury Lane
-of "Time and the Youth," and laughed and applauded the representation,
-in which so much subtle flattery had been introduced. Always eager for
-popular applause, the Duke was not a little delighted by the ovation he
-received in his own person, and in the words of the interlude itself,
-which were cheered to the echo by a house crowded to suffocation.
-Afterwards the actors were summoned before him, and each received a
-purse of gold from the hands of the Duchess. And she told the Duke how
-that the young actor had been so brave and prompt in the saving of the
-life of her favourite, Lady Geraldine, at the private performance of the
-piece a short while back. So great a lady as the Duchess could not be
-expected to note any difference in the actors of the interlude, and none
-explained her error, for what did it matter? Anthony Frewen and Lionel
-Field were drawing just as well as the original pair had done, since the
-enthusiasm for the Duke was increasing with his presence in England.
-They asked lower terms for their services, and they gave none of the
-trouble that the Old Lion had done by his autocratic demands and his
-hasty temper. The managers of both theatres were well content with
-matters as they were, and congratulated themselves that nothing more had
-been heard of their former employes. Wylde's uncertain health would
-render his re-engagement a matter of some difficulty, if not of
-impossibility; and Anthony Frewen had openly declared that he would act
-only with Field. They had studied together. They understood each
-other, and they wanted no "interloper" coming between them.
-
-This was in substance what Grey heard when, after three weeks of anxiety
-and watching, he found that their exchequer was almost empty, and
-realized that he must bestir himself again to earn the needful weekly
-sum to enable them to live comfortably, and provide the wherewithal for
-the sick man's needs. His hands were now almost well. He had discarded
-his sling and could use his arm freely. The fever had left him somewhat
-weak, but he believed he had power to take his part without any fear of
-failure, and he sought out the friendly stage-manager, Mr. Butler, to
-tell him as much. Little did he anticipate the answer he received.
-
-The matter was fully and kindly explained; but there seemed no
-hesitation about the decision.
-
-"I am sorry--very sorry--Mr. White. But what are we to do? Frewen and
-Field are both old stage favourites. Their return has been hailed with
-approval in many quarters. They have acted all this time together, and
-Frewen declines to act with any other. It is possible that he fears in
-you a rival; for there is a dash and a divine afflatus (if I may use the
-phrase) in your acting which is lacking in that of Field. Talent is
-always ready to be jealous of genius. It may be that the matter lies in
-that nutshell. However this may be, these are the facts. These two mean
-to do well; they refuse to be separated, and therefore--"
-
-"I understand," answered Grey quietly. "It is quite right, I suppose.
-For myself I care little, but for Mr. Wylde I have my regrets. After
-all, it is his piece that is filling your pockets. Has he no claim upon
-you for that? I know not what the law may be; but can you suffer him to
-be in want whilst his genius is bringing you such success?"
-
-"Well, well, well, we will see what we can do. I am sorry, very sorry,
-that you ever gave up your part. Oh, I know it was inevitable. You
-were not able for it; and you showed magnanimity in your instruction of
-another. But it was a mistake on your own part--the countryman and the
-viper--did I not warn you? A man of more worldly wisdom would have done
-differently."
-
-"If you will only see that Mr. Wylde lacks not for the necessaries of
-life, I care nothing for my own loss," answered Grey with perfect
-truthfulness. "I am young and strong; I have the world before me. But
-whilst he is ill I cannot leave him; and if I lose my post here, how can
-I hope to support him through the bitter winter now upon us? I can face
-destitution for myself, but it were shame to let him suffer."
-
-"Well, well, he shall not starve; we will do something for him. I
-promise you that. But it was a thousand pities that you did not receive
-the purse of gold from the hands of the Duchess last week. That would
-have set you on your feet for some time to come; and, after all, it was
-for you it was really meant. Field should be made to divide it."
-
-"No, no," answered Grey, with sudden haste and imperiousness; "I touch
-no gold that I do not earn." And when he heard the story of the
-performance at which the Duke had been present, he rejoiced greatly that
-he had not played the "Youth" that night. He felt as though the eagle
-eyes of the Duke would have penetrated his disguise; and how could he
-have met the victor of Ramillies again in the garb of an actor, winning
-his bread on the London boards?
-
-There was a curious strain of pride in the young man's nature. Although
-his short dramatic career had been so successful, he shrank with the
-deepest distaste from recognition by any of his former friends. He hated
-the very thought that the name of Grey Dumaresq should be linked with
-that of the actor of the "Youth."
-
-In the same way he had always abstained from making any use of the token
-of favour bestowed upon him by the Duke of Marlborough as a pledge of
-friendship. He always carried the ring about his person, hung round his
-neck by a silken cord. But although he knew it would win for him the
-patronage of the great Duchess, whose influence with the Queen, if not
-the paramount power it once was, was still very great, he had never been
-able to make up his mind to use it. He had not learned how to present
-himself as a suppliant for favour. He felt that he had talent. He
-desired to see that talent recognized and rewarded. But to go about
-seeking for a patron to push him into notice was a thing he had never
-brought himself to do. Whilst living with the Old Lion he had rewritten
-his romance, and had made of it a very delicate piece of workmanship,
-which might well win him fame if he could but get it taken up. But
-hitherto he had been too busy to think much about the matter. The
-romance must wait his greater leisure. Now, however, turning away from
-the theatre feeling very certain that his dramatic career had closed as
-suddenly as it had opened, he began to realize that something must be
-done to keep the wolf from the door; and his thoughts instinctively
-turned to his pen with a certain joy and pride. For therein lay more
-real delight to him than in the plaudits of assembled crowds. If he
-could win fame in the realms of literature, he would with joy say
-farewell to his brief career as actor.
-
-Walking thoughtfully along, he almost ran into two men who were
-strolling arm in arm along the pavement. Stopping short from the recoil,
-he looked at them, and saw that they were Anthony Frewen and Lionel
-Field--the very two whose amicable partnership had ousted him from his
-hoped-for employment. But there was no rancour in Grey's heart. Already
-his facile and eager mind had turned to other themes. He would have held
-out his hand in fellowship to his quondam pupil; but the young actor's
-face had suddenly flushed a deep crimson, and he pulled his companion
-down a side alley, laughing loudly, and affecting not to have seen the
-other. Plainly, he feared reproaches and recriminations, and was stung
-by the goad of an uneasy conscience.
-
-Grey smiled a little as he pursued his way.
-
-"It is something strange," he mused, "how that a man can never forgive
-one whom he has injured! Had I supplanted him, he might have swaggered
-up to demand explanation or redress, and we might even have made it up
-again; but since he has injured me, he will have none of it. I am
-henceforth to him an outcast."
-
-Grey was not disposed at once to return home, to encounter the keen eyes
-and perhaps the burst of righteous indignation which no doubt his news
-would awaken within the breast of the Old Lion. That Wylde had had some
-fears of what the event had justified, Grey was aware. He knew the
-emulations, jealousies, and small cabals of the theatre, and how a young
-actor, raised by lucky chance to a post of eminence, is suspected and
-plotted against by others as an interloper. His own reputation and
-Grey's brilliant success had served them in good stead so long as he was
-able to retain his own place; but now that his influence was withdrawn,
-and Grey had shown himself not indispensable, the thing which he foresaw
-had come to pass; and the young man regretted it more for his master's
-sake than for his own, save for the immediate difficulty of seeing where
-the daily necessities of life were to come from.
-
-But at least he had obtained a promise that something should be done for
-the old man, and he could surely fend for himself.
-
-He was walking northward along the frost-bound road. A spell of bitter
-weather had succeeded the torrents of rain which had characterized the
-earlier part of the winter. Icicles hung from the eaves, and the water
-was frozen in the gutters and puddles. The sun hung like a red ball in
-the clear frosty sky, and there was a biting keenness in the air which
-made rapid motion a necessity.
-
-Grey was not depressed, though he was grave and thoughtful. He walked
-on rapidly, one thought chasing another through his brain. Had it not
-been for the necessity of taking care of his old friend, he would have
-liked well enough to walk all the way to Hartsbourne, to see old Jock
-and faithful Dick, from whom the recent almost impassable state of the
-roads had sundered him. During the days of his extreme poverty Grey had
-hidden himself even from Dick. But with brighter times he had written to
-his faithful henchman; and once the latter had visited him at his new
-abode, and had accompanied him to the theatre to watch the performance
-there, which had filled him with pride and joy at his master's triumph,
-albeit he felt a pang of pain to see him reduced to such a method of
-earning his bread.
-
-That was the last time they had met, for the constant rains had made the
-roads well-nigh impassable. But the frost had come as a friend to
-travellers, and Grey felt sure that Dick would not be long in availing
-himself of the changed conditions for a visit to town. It might be
-indeed that they would meet one another, if only he persevered in his
-walk. He wanted news of Don Carlos--now his one valuable asset. Much
-as it went against him to sell his beautiful horse, he brought himself
-to contemplate it as a possibility. As a poor man in London, the
-creature was of little use to him, and there were a score of wealthy
-young bloods who had offered again and again to purchase the horse at
-his own price. The strained shoulder had entirely recovered. The
-creature was as sound as ever. Perhaps--perhaps--Grey had got as far as
-that, when he suddenly heard himself hailed in rapturous tones as
-"Master! master!" and there was Dick racing to meet him at the top of
-his speed.
-
-But the honest fellow's face was troubled; and scarce had Grey time to
-greet him ere the evil news was out.
-
-"He is stolen, master--he is stolen! Don Carlos is gone! Oh, it has
-been foul play from first to last! We had kept him so safely, Jock and
-I. The old skinflint had no notion of his being there. He grazed out
-of sight of the house, and at night was never brought in till after
-dark. But that one-eyed Judas must have discovered the secret at last,
-and told his master. We never suspected it; but I will wager it was so.
-Then they played this scurvy trick on me. They said the old man was
-dying. The doctor must be fetched at all cost. I and my nag, who paid
-our board, were known to be living with old Jock. I galloped off to
-Edgeware for the leech, and Jock was kept within doors, making hot large
-quantities of water, never allowed for a moment outside the brew-house,
-where stood the great copper filled with water. I rode away gleefully
-enough, for I had no fears for the old man's life, though of course I
-would not have him die for lack of succour. I found the leech, and bade
-him ride back with me full speed; but we had both been long making the
-journey, for the roads were like troughs of mire, and the beasts flagged
-sorely when urged. We were forced to let them pick their way as they
-could, and so it was well-nigh dusk ere we arrived. He went up to the
-sick-room, and I to groom down my jaded horse and fetch in Don Carlos.
-When I went for him to the far paddock, he was gone! The rails were
-down. There was abundant trace of trampling hoofs and footprints of
-men. He had given them trouble; but they had him at last. The horse
-was stolen!"
-
-Grey listened in silence. He felt somewhat as did the patriarch Job
-when one after another the messengers of evil tidings came with their
-words of woe. He scarce heard all that Dick was saying now--whom he
-suspected of being in complicity with his unscrupulous kinsman in this
-matter. But one name arrested his attention, and he stopped to ask a
-quick question.
-
-"Lord Sandford! What said you of him?"
-
-"Why, master, as I was telling you, when I began to make inquiry here,
-there, and everywhere, I heard that my Lord Sandford had been seen as
-near as Edgeware, and that he had been asking something about a horse.
-More I cannot find out; but it is enough for me. There is devilry in
-the matter, and Barty Dumaresq and Lord Sandford are both mixed up in
-it. I have come to town to see you first, and then to get some
-knowledge of his lordship's stables, and I'll wager I'll find out before
-very long where the Don is hidden away."
-
-Grey's eyes flashed with anger. Was it possible that this man should
-sink to plotting a common theft? Or was it his kinsman who had stolen
-the horse, and sold him for a great sum to the young nobleman, who had
-always coveted the creature? This was most probably the truth, for the
-recluse of Hartsbourne had plainly feigned illness to get Dick and Jock
-out of the way. The whole thing was a dishonourable conspiracy, and he
-could only hope that Lord Sandford's part in it had been merely that of
-purchaser. If he had stooped to plot a theft with the old miser, he
-would be a worse and a meaner villain than Grey would willingly believe,
-since it was already the talk of the town that he would wed with the
-Lady Geraldine Adair so soon as the spring-tide should come.
-
-Master and man discussed the matter for some time, and Grey agreed that
-Dick should carry out his plans, and report to him of the result at
-intervals. It was above a week since the horse had vanished; but the
-state of the roads had prevented the man from attempting the walk to
-London before, and he did not desire to be burdened with his own horse,
-as he knew not where he might have to lodge, or what was likely to turn
-up.
-
-"Our fortunes are at a low ebb just now, good Dicon," said Grey as they
-parted. "You have but a few gold pieces left, and our exchequer is
-almost bare. But we must hope that Dame Fortune, who has shown a
-frowning face of late, will treat us to some of her smiles again. For
-the world is a harder place than once I thought it, and life a sorer
-struggle."
-
-"But you have the Duke's token still, sir?" spoke Dick eagerly. "You
-need not despair whilst that remains. They say he is in London now.
-Why not take it boldly to him, and remind him of yourself and his
-promise? They say he has a kindly heart, as well as a gracious manner."
-
-"I believe that is true," answered Grey with a smile. "Yes, why not go
-to him? Why not? Ah, Dicon, I would that life looked as simple to me
-as it does to you. But perhaps--perhaps-- Who knows what may next
-betide? At least, so long as the token remains, I have still a card to
-play; and who can tell but that the last card shall take the trick and
-win the game?"
-
-The sunlight had faded by the time Grey reached the attic, and the fire
-had burnt itself out to a handful of ashes. Wylde was turning
-restlessly upon his bed, coughing more than he had done of late; and
-Grey reproached himself with his long absence, though he quickly had
-things comfortable and bright again. But the old man must needs hear of
-his journey to the theatre; and though he professed himself in no wise
-astonished, it was plain that the blow struck home.
-
-His _protege_ had been set aside for another. They ceased to regard him
-as a power. He was laid upon the shelf, and another had stepped into
-his place. His word carried no weight. No one cared whether he lived or
-died. He had brought success and prosperity by his talents to others,
-but he was to be left to die in obscurity and want. Ah well, better men
-than he had been treated just so. He desired of Grey to leave him to
-die alone, and to go forth and make his own way in the world that had no
-room for a feeble and broken man whose work was done.
-
-Grey soothed him as well as he was able, but he could not find much to
-say that was hopeful or encouraging. He dared not speak of any promise
-of help from the theatres, lest the old man should wrathfully refuse to
-receive alms, where justice was denied. So he represented that there was
-still money left in their purse, which was in a measure true; but the
-funds were so excessively scanty that in a few days they would be quite
-exhausted. And when the old man at last passed into slumber, Grey went
-carefully over all his possessions, which had increased somewhat of
-late, and carefully detached from his clothing any ornaments which might
-be sold for small sums to eke out their subsistence till something
-should turn up. For it was evident that Wylde must not be left long by
-himself, as this day's experiment had proved. And how was Grey to obtain
-any sort of paid work, were he to be tied to this attic and to almost
-constant attendance upon his old friend and master?
-
-How the next days passed by Grey scarcely knew, for the Old Lion had a
-relapse, medicines had to be obtained, together with food such as his
-condition required; and although a small sum of money had been sent by
-Mr. Butler, with an intimation that the same amount should be paid
-weekly for the present, it had soon melted away, and there came a night
-when Grey had not so much as a penny left in the purse, and he himself
-was almost faint for want of food.
-
-But the old man lay sleeping peacefully; the fire burned clear and
-bright. The night was fine and cold, and Grey slipped forth into the
-streets, wrapping himself well up in a voluminous cloak belonging to his
-friend, which completely disguised him.
-
-A strange desperation seized him, and he cared not what he did. He
-entered tavern after tavern, singing a roundelay in one, telling a story
-in another, reciting a speech or a part of a dramatic scene in another,
-and once going through the whole dialogue of "Time and the Youth,"
-taking both parts himself, but so changing his aspect from moment to
-moment that his audience was electrified, and silver coins as well as
-coppers were his portion on this occasion.
-
-He had now enough for two days' needs. He had supped well, and now must
-return home. He felt as though he had passed through a strange black
-dream; but he had learned how at a pinch the next day's wants might be
-supplied--at least until he had been the round of all the taverns and
-coffee-houses, and men were tired of him. But he would not think of
-that yet.
-
-He, Sir Grey Dumaresq, had sunk to playing the buffoon in pot-houses, to
-earn coppers from the idle sots who frequented such places. He laughed
-aloud as the thought presented itself to him thus. Dame Fortune had
-proved a sorry shrew so far as he was concerned. Was there any lower
-turn in her wheel that he must presently experience?
-
-He had wandered some distance from home, since after having supped he
-had been fired to try his luck at some of the more fashionable resorts
-of the day; and his last performance had been given at a coffee-house in
-one of the better localities, though for the life of him he could not
-exactly tell where he was.
-
-It was long since he had walked in these wider streets, and the night,
-though starlight, was very dark. Suddenly a sound as of blows and cries
-wakened him from his reverie. Instinctively he started to run in the
-direction whence they came, and almost directly he met some fellows
-wearing livery fleeing helter-skelter, as for dear life, from a band of
-young Mohawks or Scourers, as they termed themselves, who made the
-terror of the town at night. In the distance there was still some
-tumult going on, and Grey, half guessing the cause, rushed onward, not
-heeding the pursuit he passed. A lamp dimly burning over a house showed
-him the outline of one of those chairs in which ladies of fashion were
-carried to and fro from house to house. Plainly the liveried servants
-in charge of the chair had been chased away, and its occupant was now at
-the mercy of the half-drunken young bloods against whom Father Time had
-inveighed so eloquently.
-
-Grey understood in a moment, and with a cry of rage and scorn he flung
-himself into the heart of the fray, intent upon the rescue of the lady
-in the chair, whoever she might be.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVI.*
-
- *A NIGHT ADVENTURE.*
-
-
-The all-important Duchess of Marlborough had taken one of her sudden and
-somewhat vehement and exacting likings for the Lady Geraldine. This was
-a matter of no small gratification to Lord and Lady Romaine,
-notwithstanding the fact that the mother felt some jealousy and vexation
-that her daughter should have been singled out for this distinguished
-lady's favour, whilst she herself was entirely passed over. Still she
-was woman of the world enough to accept the situation with philosophy.
-She always declared freely that the Duchess bored her to death, and that
-she would never be able to put up with her temper and her autocratic
-ways. But she was glad enough to let Geraldine visit at Marlborough
-House whenever an invitation (or rather summons) came for her; and
-Geraldine herself was glad and thankful to go, for here at least she was
-safe from the unwelcome and ever more pressing attentions of Lord
-Sandford. And above and beyond this, her parents were disposed to treat
-her with more respect since she had been "taken up" by the Queen's
-favourite. When she begged of her father not to make any promise to
-Lord Sandford regarding the disposition of her hand, he laughingly
-consented to wait awhile; for in his heart he began to wonder whether
-his beautiful daughter might not do better for herself. Lord Sandford's
-reckless expenditure was becoming the talk of the town, and unless he
-had larger reserve funds to draw upon than were known, he might possibly
-find himself in awkward straits. In the house of the Duchess, Geraldine
-might possibly meet admirers with more to recommend them or at least
-with prospects more sound and secure. It is true that Lady Romaine
-still upheld her favourite Sandford's suit as warmly as ever; but Lord
-Romaine was quite willing to accede to his daughter's request, and to
-let things take their own course without bringing matters at once to a
-climax. Lord Sandford was not to be dismissed; but Geraldine was not to
-be coerced.
-
-It was natural that the girl should welcome with pleasure and gratitude
-a friendship which brought her immunity from what promised to become
-something very like persecution. Her occasional visits to Marlborough
-House formed the brightest spots in her present life.
-
-If the Duchess were proud, capricious, autocratic, and uncertain in
-temper, as her detractors declared, at least she possessed warm and deep
-feelings, and could be infinitely agreeable and kindly when she chose.
-To Geraldine she was uniformly gentle and sympathetic. Perhaps she
-already felt that she had passed the meridian of her days of power. The
-kinswoman, Abigail Hill (now Mrs. Masham), whom she had first introduced
-to the Queen, was rapidly rising in royal favour, and seemed likely to
-prove not only a rival, but a supplanter. It had not come to that yet;
-and the return of the Duke, covered with glory and honour, averted for a
-while the calamity already overshadowing her. But so clever and astute
-a woman could not be altogether blind to the Queen's waning affection;
-and perhaps the consciousness of her own faults and shortcomings, and
-her unguarded temper, helped at this juncture to soften the asperities
-of this rough but sterling nature, and disposed her to take pleasure in
-the sincere and undisguised affection and admiration of this beautiful
-girl.
-
-Geraldine on her part took great pleasure in the society of one who held
-in a semi-masculine contempt the follies, frivolities, and buffooneries
-of the present day code of manners. Of men and women alike, the Duchess
-spoke with hearty scorn, her eyes flashing and her lips curling in a
-fine contempt. Her influence at Court had always been on the side of
-gravity, decorum, and what the fashionable dames and gallants called
-"dullness." She and the Queen were at one in all these matters, as they
-were at one in their ideas of conjugal fidelity and the sacredness of
-the marriage bond. The Queen was as devoted to her weak-minded husband
-as the Duchess to her victorious lord. Both held in detestation the
-laxity which prevailed in the world of fashion, and neither cared for
-the criticisms passed upon the dullness of the Court, so long as its
-virtue was preserved untainted.
-
-Geraldine, sickened by what she saw and heard at the gay routs to which
-she had been taken in her mother's train, felt the solemn stately
-gravity of the Duchess's house as a haven of rest. She spent her time
-during her visits in the private apartment of the great lady, where the
-latter came and sat whenever she had leisure to do so, writing short
-notes to her husband, to be dispatched by special couriers, or talking
-of him and his triumphs, or the prospects of the war or of parties at
-home, to one who was eager to learn and ready to take a keen and
-intelligent interest in all, and whose sincere admiration and affection,
-expressed rather in looks and little unconscious actions than in words,
-seemed to soothe and refresh her not a little, accustomed as she was to
-full-mouthed flatteries to her face, and the scheming of jealousy behind
-her back.
-
-With the return of the Duke came a break in these pleasant visits. But
-the break was not final in any sense of the word, and Geraldine received
-many little affectionate notes, expressing a hope of seeing more of her
-when they could escape from attendance at Court, and enjoy a season of
-privacy in their own house. At first it was necessary for the Duke to
-be constant in his attendance at Whitehall or Kensington Palace, and the
-Duchess went with him. But a day came at last when Geraldine was
-summoned to Marlborough House, to spend the afternoon with the Duke and
-Duchess, and to remain through the evening with the latter, as the Duke
-had to attend a meeting of friends at Lord Halifax's house, and the
-Duchess desired to keep the girl, asking that her chair might not be
-sent for her until eleven o'clock.
-
-Geraldine was pleased and excited by this prospect; for as yet she had
-never seen the Duke at close quarters, though from all she had heard of
-him from his wife and others she felt as though he were familiar to her,
-and her admiration for him was very great. She had heard of his weakness
-where money was concerned, and she knew that he had more than once
-changed sides in his politics, and even in his loyalty. But those were
-days of change and confusion, when it was often difficult to see the way
-clear before one, and when the outlook varied so continually with
-changes of dynasty and of foreign and domestic policy that a perfectly
-consistent and straightforward walk in life was a thing almost
-impossible of achievement. The girl was not disposed to criticise him or
-suspect him of overmuch self-seeking. Still less so when the charm of
-his personality was brought to bear upon her. She well understood all
-she had heard respecting his powers of fascination, and felt that she
-could have listened for ever to the music of his voice, watching the
-changing expressions of his handsome, mobile features, and the graceful
-telling gestures of his beautiful white hands.
-
-They enjoyed a little quiet dinner in their private apartments, almost
-unattended by servants. And it was as they sat with wine and dried
-fruits before them, awaiting the moment when the Duke must take his
-leave, that he suddenly addressed his wife,--
-
-"Ha, Sarah! There is a question I have wanted to put a hundred times,
-but ever when it sprang to my lips the moment was not favourable. Tell
-me, has a young gentleman of prepossessing appearance ever presented
-himself to you with my amethyst ring as token of his good faith? I did
-surely tell you of the narrow escape I had at the battle of Ramillies,
-and how that I was saved and helped by the timely assistance of a
-gallant young English traveller."
-
-"You did, my good lord; and I have greatly desired myself to see and to
-thank this young gentleman for the service rendered. You did warn me
-that you had bidden him come to me, if in need of any favour or
-influence. A warm welcome should have been his at any time, but he has
-never presented himself."
-
-"Let us hope, then, that he has prospered without our aid," spoke the
-Duke. "He did tell me somewhat of himself, and I do remember how that I
-thought his future something uncertain. But the details of his story
-have escaped my memory, and I fear even his name is not clearly
-remembered. It was Grey--the Christian name--that do I recollect; for
-he said it was that of a kinsman of his whom I had overthrown at
-Sedgemoor in the days of the rebellion in the west. Grey, Grey--yes,
-that is clear; but for the rest--"
-
-"Could it have been Sir Grey Dumaresq?"
-
-Geraldine's was the voice which broke in here. They turned and looked at
-her. Her face was flushed: her eyes were bright. The Duke smiled as he
-made instant reply.
-
-"Grey Dumaresq--that was the name. Say, fair lady, is this man known to
-you? I would fain renew my acquaintance with him, and show him some
-token of gratitude."
-
-"I know not where he is now," answered Geraldine. "For a while he was
-dwelling with Lord Sandford, as his friend and comrade. But they say
-that they had some quarrel. Strange stories were told of them. And Sir
-Grey disappeared--no man knows whither. Many whispers and rumours have
-gone forth concerning him, even to the one which said that he had taken
-the part of the Youth in the representation you did witness, your Grace,
-at the theatre."
-
-"It was not Grey Dumaresq whom I did see afterwards," spoke Marlborough
-quickly. "I do not forget faces. I should have known him instantly.
-That report could not be true."
-
-Geraldine's face was changing colour every moment; her breath came thick
-and fast. Heretofore she had spoken no word of this matter, which had
-been on her mind night and day for long. Now an impulse of speech came
-over her.
-
-"Ah, but the actors have changed," she said. "I did hear from our
-servants that the old man who played Father Time was taken ill the very
-night that they played at our house; and your Grace doth know," turning
-to the Duchess, "how that my dress caught fire, and how that the young
-actor did spring down and extinguish the flames, escaping away ere we
-could call him back to thank him. It was then that I made sure. I had
-suspected it before; but when I saw his face so near, I could not doubt.
-It was he."
-
-"Extraordinary!" exclaimed the Duke. "How could things have come to
-such a pass with him? Why had he not sought you out, and told of his
-adversity? To be sure, many a gentleman born to fortune falls upon evil
-days, sometimes through no fault of his own. But with my token--well,
-there was no need for this. I must consider what should be done. Have
-you seen him since, Lady Geraldine?"
-
-"Nay; and he has not been acting of late. Two strangers, or rather two
-other actors, have been playing the parts since that night. I did ask
-of my mother leave to send and seek him out, that we might at least give
-him thanks for the service rendered me; but she would not believe I had
-recognized him aright--she said it was but my fantasy; and for the rest,
-if the man wanted a guerdon, he had but to come and ask for it. Hence,
-nothing has been done."
-
-"Well, 'tis a strange story; and yet, as I saw that representation at
-the theatre, I did say within myself that some eye-witness of the battle
-of Ramillies must have planned and written it. We will think and speak
-more of it anon. Stranger things have befallen ere this. It would
-please me well to befriend a gallant and chivalrous youth, too proud or
-too noble to ask favours for himself. I told him he had something of
-the poet in him. He may have a career before him yet. Well,
-sweetheart, I must needs be going now; but I will return ere midnight,
-and Lady Geraldine will beguile the hours of my absence."
-
-He rose, and kissed his wife with a lover-like devotion which sat
-gracefully upon him, and which to Geraldine seemed in no wise
-ridiculous, notwithstanding the fact that this couple had grown-up
-children, married themselves. It was a beautiful thing, she thought, to
-see how their love survived, and grew in depth and intensity. She was
-able to speak of the Duke, when he had gone, in terms which brought
-smiles of pleasure to the wife's face.
-
-It was a happy evening for Geraldine; for the flame of hope leaped up in
-her heart, and she felt as though something bright and beautiful had
-come into her life. The Duke had shown interest in the subject of the
-young actor, who had saved her from injury on the night of the
-performance at their house. He did not gibe at her half-formed fancy.
-On the contrary, he seemed disposed to examine for himself the possible
-truth of the tale. He would seek out Grey--for Grey, she knew, it was.
-He would raise him out of obscurity and poverty into the position to
-which he was born. There seemed no end to the possibilities of good
-fortune which might come to him with the favour and gratitude of the
-Duke. The girl passed a happy, dreamy evening, these fancies weaving
-themselves into a background for her thoughts, whilst she talked with
-the Duchess of the Duke's magnificent reception, of the palace of
-Blenheim being erected at the cost of the nation for a residence for
-him, and of the honours to which he was likely to attain through his
-genius and the favour of her Majesty.
-
-She was in the same happy frame of mind when she got into her chair
-shortly before midnight; for the Duchess kept her talking till past the
-time arranged, and it never occurred to her to be afraid of the darkness
-of the ill-lighted streets. She had her bearers--her father's liveried
-servants. And, after all, the distance to traverse was not so very
-great.
-
-She had not proceeded far, however, before she was aroused from her
-pleasant reverie by the sounds of shouts, yells, and hurrying steps.
-She felt her own bearers break into a run, and the chair swayed from
-side to side in a fashion that was alarming. Something struck sharply
-against the panels, then a shower of missiles seemed to rattle against
-its side. Her own men yelled aloud in fear or pain, and next moment the
-chair seemed to be heavily dropped, and the air was rent with sounds of
-strife, the fall of weapons, and cries of pain and terror. There was no
-mistaking what had happened. She was the object of some attack from the
-street bullies; but whether by a luckless chance or by premeditation and
-design, the frightened girl could not guess. The thought of Lord
-Sandford and his unscrupulous ways flashed into her mind, and a shudder
-ran through her frame. She could see little or nothing of what was going
-on without. Her breath had dimmed the window-panes; there was scarcely
-any light in the streets. Never was any creature more helpless than a
-lady shut into one of the cumbersome chairs of the period. She could by
-no means get out, or even let down a window from within; and before many
-minutes had elapsed, the girl was perfectly certain that her bearers had
-run wildly away to save their own skins, and that she was left to the
-mercy of one of the lawless bands of street marauders, the terror of the
-helpless old watchmen, powerless to cope with them, the scandal of the
-whole town.
-
-For a moment it seemed as though pursuers and pursued had alike left her
-alone, and she made at that juncture a frantic but useless effort to
-escape from her prison. Then roars of laughter and the trampling of
-feet assured her that her foes were coming back, and she closed her eyes
-and set her teeth, and, clasping her hands, tried to frame a few words
-of prayer, for she knew not what next would betide her. A hand seemed
-fumbling with the chair. In another moment it would be thrown open. But
-ere that moment had arrived a new sound arose. More footsteps came
-tearing along--a fierce voice--shouts of derision--more blows--more
-oaths--cries of pain and anger--fierce threats--savage recriminations.
-What was going on? Had some one flown to the rescue? Oh, when would
-the horrid scene end? These men were capable of doing to death any
-single or unarmed man who tried to stand between them and their brutal
-pastimes.
-
-But what was this? Another sound! The roll of wheels--a commanding
-voice that she knew ringing through the darkness of the night,
-dominating all other sounds.
-
-"It is the Duke--the Duke himself!" cried Geraldine, falling back almost
-fainting on the cushions; but the next minute lights were flashing round
-her, then the head of the chair was lifted off, and she saw the Duke
-himself bending towards her, his face full of concern and anxiety.
-
-"What! The Lady Geraldine! Then, indeed, I come in good time. Are you
-hurt, sweet lady? Answer quick! For these villains shall not escape so
-easily, if you are."
-
-"No, no, I am not hurt; but I fear me some one is who came to my rescue.
-I heard him shout to them to stop their coward play. They were about to
-look inside the chair, but they all turned upon him with shouts of
-derision and fury. I trow he gave them blow for blow, for I heard them
-yell and swear the fiend was in him. Oh, I fear me they must have been
-too many for him, and that he has been injured in my defence. Pray,
-your Grace, let your people see to it. I might have been grossly
-ill-treated but for his opportune arrival."
-
-"There is a young man lying in the roadway here, your Grace," spoke one
-of the servants, "his clothes half torn from his back, his head
-bleeding, and his arm broken. I think he is not of that band we
-dispersed, for I saw one of them deal him a kick and swear a lusty oath
-at him as they ran off."
-
-"Oh, it is my preserver--I know it is!" cried Geraldine, with tears in
-her eyes. "Ah, your Grace will know what to do."
-
-"Why, put him into the coach, and take him home," spoke Marlborough at
-once, his well-known humanity towards his wounded soldiers extending
-instantly to this injured citizen, who had risked perhaps life itself on
-behalf of law and order, and in defence of some unknown victim. "And as
-for you, Lady Geraldine, you must likewise return with me. I cannot
-suffer you to be abroad with these bands of ruffians prowling the
-streets. I will send a message to your father's house, and your
-dispersed servants will doubtless find their way home in time. Lord
-Romaine shall know you safe; but you must return with me to-night."
-
-Geraldine was only too thankful to do so. The very presence of the
-great Duke, calm and fearless, dissipated her fears and gave her
-confidence. She saw him superintend the lifting of the injured and
-unconscious man into the coach, heard him give directions to the
-servants to drive direct to Marlborough House, and then he himself took
-up his position beside her chair, and walked with it till they entered
-the hall of his great house, where she was suffered to alight, to be met
-by the Duchess (to whom a messenger had been hastily dispatched), and
-embraced by her with a motherly solicitude of which Lady Romaine would
-have been quite incapable.
-
-"My dearest girl, what a terrible fright has been yours! Oh, how I
-rejoice that no hurt has come to you! I should never have forgiven
-myself for detaining you so long. Ah! and what have we here? Poor
-creature! he surely is not dead! What a ghastly object! Come away,
-dearest; it is no sight for you. What? He came to your rescue? One
-against a band? No wonder he has been roughly handled. Oh, he shall be
-well tended; I warrant you that. Yes, let him be carried into yonder
-ante-room. He shall have his wounds washed and dressed, and we will hear
-his story later. Geraldine, my love, what ails you? What do you see
-that you should look like that?"
-
-For Geraldine's eyes, fixed upon the face of the wounded man being
-carried into the hall under the personal direction of the humane Duke,
-had grown fixed and glassy, and every drop of blood had ebbed from her
-face, leaving it of a marble hue.
-
-As the sense of the Duchess's questions penetrated to her senses, the
-girl grasped her by the hand and whispered in tones of unrestrainable
-emotion,--
-
-"It is he! it is he! And he has laid down his life for me!"
-
-"It is who? What mean you, child? Do you know the--the gentleman?"
-asked the Duchess, perplexed and bewildered in her turn.
-
-Geraldine's grip on her hands was firmer and faster.
-
-"It is he of whom we were speaking but this evening. It is Sir Grey
-Dumaresq himself."
-
-With an exclamation of amaze, the Duchess stepped forward to get a
-better view of the white and blood-stained face. She saw now that,
-despite his torn and muddy garments, his lack of all the fine adjuncts
-of the man of fashion, even to the falling wig, so essential to the
-equipment of the "gentleman" of the day, it was no low-born personage
-who had been carried into their stately house. Something of the
-refinement of the young man's face and features could be distinguished
-even in the midst of the disfiguring wounds and bruises and mire stains.
-She grasped her husband by the arm, and whispered in his ear,--
-
-"Husband, look well at yonder man, for Geraldine declares it to be Sir
-Grey Dumaresq, of whom we were speaking but a few hours back. What a
-strange thing, if it be!"
-
-Marlborough bent over the young man, less with the intent of identifying
-him at the present moment as of ascertaining the extent of his injuries,
-and whether life yet remained whole in him. Experience on the
-battlefield had given him considerable powers of discerning these
-things, and he knew that the bludgeons and rapiers of the young bloods
-of London streets could do as deadly work as the bullets and
-sword-thrusts of actual battle.
-
-Opening the young man's vest to ascertain whether the heart still beat,
-he saw something sparkling lying within, and the next moment had uttered
-a quick, sharp exclamation of astonishment.
-
-Beckoning to his wife to approach, he held up the token--the amethyst
-ring which he himself had given to the stranger who had risked so much
-for him upon the field of Ramillies.
-
-"Then Geraldine is right!" cried the Duchess in great excitement. "It
-is Grey Dumaresq; he is found at last."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVII.*
-
- *IN THE HOUSE OF THE DUKE.*
-
-
-When Grey became next aware of any sensation, it was of a throbbing pain
-in his head, which gradually asserted itself and dissipated the black
-cloud of unconsciousness which had blotted out for the moment time and
-space and memory itself. He had no desire to open his eyes; but in a
-faint and feeble fashion he began to wonder what it was that had
-happened, and what was the cause of this pain. Gradually he felt also a
-strange powerless numbness in one of his arms, which he was unable to
-move. Also he felt that he was reposing on something very soft, with a
-scent of lavender in his nostrils, and a warmth and comfort to his body
-that went far to atone for pain in some of his members.
-
-He heard the fall of coals in the grate; he knew that he was lying
-between smooth linen sheets; his soothed senses seemed to take in an
-atmosphere other than that of the attic which had so long been his home.
-He thought of Hartsbourne; it almost seemed as though he were back there
-once more. He decided that either this was a dream, or else that all
-which had gone before was one. Perhaps he was, in truth, a boy, and had
-been dreaming of manhood's struggles, manhood's crosses. Perhaps when
-he awoke, it would be to find his mother bending over him, and to hear
-of some boyish escapade in which he had hurt himself. Such things had
-been in the past, and might be again; but sleep overtook his drowsy
-brain ere he had reasoned matters out.
-
-How long he slept he knew not; but suddenly he woke with a mind more
-clear. The events of the previous evening came back to him sharply
-defined--the emptiness of their treasury; the urgent need upon him to
-obtain food and money; the shifts to which he had been reduced in so
-doing; and last of all, that race towards some lady's chair, attacked by
-street ruffians; the short, sharp tussle round it, and the rain of blows
-which had stretched him senseless in the gutter.
-
-Yes, he remembered it all now, and could account for the pain in his
-head and arm. But what had befallen him since, and where was he now?
-As these questions asserted themselves, Grey opened his eyes; and what
-did he see?
-
-He was lying in one of those huge canopied beds in which our ancestors
-delighted. He lay deep in a nest of down, fair linen sheets and silken
-coverlets were spread over him, and crimson curtains were drawn round
-three sides of the bed. He saw lace ruffles upon the night-robe in
-which he lay, and the air was charged with an aromatic fragrance which
-might haply proceed from a mixture of drugs and perfumes. But it was
-not upon these matters that Grey's attention was concentrated, but upon
-a quiet figure seated at a small table beside a brightly-blazing fire,
-his eyes bent fixedly upon the pages of a roll of manuscript spread open
-before him, and illumined by the soft radiance of a cluster of wax
-tapers set in a rich silver candlestick of many branches. This man was
-attired in a flowing dressing-gown (as we now call such a garment) of
-richly-embroidered silk, fastened at the throat with a jewelled clasp,
-and bound at the waist by a girdle of golden cord. The falling hair
-from the ponderous wig served in part to veil the face, which was turned
-slightly away from the bed; but as the reader moved to turn the page,
-and to trim one of the candles with the silver snuffers, his face was
-fully revealed to Grey, and the young man uttered an exclamation of
-astonishment, striving to start up in bed as he did so.
-
-"The Duke himself!"
-
-The words were scarcely articulate, for his tongue was dry and his voice
-sounded hoarse and strange in his own ears; but at the sound of it the
-Duke rose quickly from his seat, and came forward towards the bed with a
-pleasant smile upon his face.
-
-"Ah, my young friend, so you have come to your senses. That is
-well--that is very well. Nay, nay; seek not to move. You must needs
-remain quiet awhile, to mend you of your hurts; but I trust they are of
-no very serious nature, and that you will soon be sound and whole."
-
-"But, your Grace, how come I here? What means it that I find myself in
-such a place as this? I surely am not dreaming. It can be none other
-but the great Duke of Marlborough himself!"
-
-"And wherefore not," questioned the Duke, smiling, "since it was hard by
-my house that you were felled by ruffians, and in defence of a lady who
-had but lately left my doors? So now the mystery is explained; and we
-meet again, Grey Dumaresq, not on the field of battle this time, albeit
-you, who escaped without a scar or scratch at Ramillies, lie wounded
-here at Marlborough House. And right glad am I to welcome you within my
-doors; for it was but a few hours earlier that I was speaking of you
-with my wife, and wishing that I might meet you once more."
-
-"Your Grace does me too much honour," spoke Grey in bewildered accents,
-"to bring me to your house, to sit up by my side--"
-
-"Tush! That is but the habit of an old campaigner. My couch wooes me
-not as it does other men. I am used to little sleep and hard days. I
-live something too soft when I reach this land. Besides, yonder scroll
-absorbed me. For that you are responsible, my friend. Did I not tell
-you when first we met that you had the face of a poet? And for me there
-is stronger attraction in the poetry of prose than in that which
-expresses itself in rhyme and metre, which has a fashion of halting,
-like a horse whose legs begin to fail him, and who changes his feet or
-stumbles ever and anon."
-
-The colour swept over Grey's pale face. He remembered now that the
-packet containing his romance was buttoned up tightly in the breast
-pocket of the outer coat which he wore that day. Doubtless, it had
-fallen out when they took off his clothes, and there it lay spread out
-upon, the table, more than three parts read by the Duke himself.
-
-"I ask no pardon for my boldness in thus scanning your romance,"
-proceeded the great man kindly, "albeit I did open the packet with
-intent to discover if it might contain your place of abode, so that I
-might send word to your friend where you were and what had befallen you.
-Now wherefore this start and upraising? Did I not tell you it behoved
-you to lie still? Must I call the physician from his slumbers to repeat
-his orders himself?"
-
-"I crave your Grace's pardon," answered Grey, sinking back upon his
-pillows; "but your words did bring back to me the remembrance of a sick
-old man, dependent upon me for tendance and care. When I left him, I
-knew that for many hours he had all that he did need beside him. But if
-I am long detained from his side, he must needs suffer lack and hurt."
-
-"Nay; but I will see that he does neither. Tell me only where he may be
-found, and I will send a trusty messenger to do all that is needful, and
-make arrangements for his comfort during the time which may elapse
-before you can return."
-
-So Grey gave the needful information, and the Duke issued some orders to
-his servants in the outer room, returning to the bedside with a face
-expressive of a kindly curiosity and wonder.
-
-Sitting down at the bedside, and entering into friendly talk with the
-young man, it was not difficult to draw from him a full and detailed
-account of all that had betided since they first met upon the field of
-Ramillies, and Grey had gone back to his native land to see what fortune
-had in store for him there.
-
-The Duke made an excellent and sympathetic listener. He was sincerely
-interested in this young man. He owed him a personal debt of gratitude.
-Both he and his wife suspected that Lady Geraldine Adair, her favourite,
-was more than a little attracted by young Sir Grey Dumaresq, whom she
-had admitted to have met more than once during his brief career as a
-gentleman of fashion and the friend of Lord Sandford. They had seen
-self-betrayal in her face last night when he was carried in senseless,
-and she knew that he was her unknown preserver, who had diverted the
-attack of the young street ruffians from her chair, and had thus given
-time for the Duke's carriage to come up; and it had recalled to their
-minds and hearts the memory of their own young courting days, when John
-Churchill was paying his addresses to Sarah Jennings, and they could see
-and think of nothing but each other and their love. That Grey Dumaresq
-had fallen upon evil times there could be no manner of doubt, and that
-his fortunes were at the lowest ebb was manifest; yet the Duke, as he
-listened to the tale, was revolving many matters in his mind, and only
-spoke to lead the young man on by some well-timed question to express
-himself with more freedom and detail.
-
-As for Grey, when once the ice had been broken, he had no desire for
-reserve. There was a strange sense of comfort and relief in pouring out
-his tale into sympathetic ears. The only matters he held back were his
-suspicions of others--firstly, those respecting his kinsman, and any
-possible hand he might have had in hastening his father's death; and
-secondly, those concerning Lord Sandford and his possible treachery
-towards himself. It seemed to him unfair to speak of unproven
-suspicions of crime or evil plotting to one so high in station as the
-Duke of Marlborough, whose smile or frown might mean so much to those
-who merited it. But of all else he spoke with frank freedom and
-unreserve; and at the last, when his tale was told, he saw the kindly
-gaze of the Duke bent upon him with shrewd searching inquiry.
-
-"And so, Grey Dumaresq, you came actually to know the lack of food; and
-yet you bore upon your person all the while the token I had given you,
-telling you that you had but to show the same to my wife, and she would
-find means of rewarding you for the service done to her husband."
-
-"I had had my reward in your Grace's favour and kindness," answered Grey
-with quiet dignity; "I prized that token as a thing most precious. Yet
-I never desired to use it as a means of gain. I will not say I never
-thought of it," he added, after a moment's pause, his colour slightly
-rising as he spoke; "and perchance had matters gone so with my old
-friend Jonathan Wylde that privation or starvation nearly threatened
-him, I might e'en have swallowed my pride, and become a suppliant for
-favour. But I should have fallen in my own esteem had I been forced to
-such a step. It may be pride--false pride--haughtiness of spirit--I
-know not; but in the days of my prosperity I would not seek to curry
-favour by making capital out of something which I desired to retain as a
-pleasant memory. And when poverty had fallen upon me, and I had dropped
-my name and my title, and was known only as a poor actor, living in
-obscurity and poverty, how could I hope to be admitted to the presence
-of the Duchess? How could I desire to parade my fallen fortunes before
-the eyes of her train of servants? Your Grace had called me
-friend--that was my reward."
-
-With a smile the great man slowly shook his head. Although a love for
-money amounting to greed was his own besetting sin, he could admire
-disinterestedness and honourable pride in others. He knew that had Grey
-played his cards well, seeking only personal advancement and place, he
-might by this time have risen, through the influence of the Duchess,
-into some position which would have secured him ease and affluence. He
-knew that in his place he would not have scrupled to do this, nor would
-nine-tenths of the men of the day. Although he smiled at the romantic
-folly and chivalrous scruples of the youth of poetical temperament, he
-could yet admire those highly unpractical qualities which had gone near
-to bring him to ruin.
-
-"Well, my young friend," he said at last, "there must be an end of this
-masquerading in rags and tatters. I shall make it my business to bring
-your case before the Queen herself. I trow that you have been scurvily
-treated by your kinsman, and that that matter requires investigation.
-In addition to this, no man with that book in his hands," and he pointed
-to the roll upon the table, "should lack for daily bread. There should
-be a fortune in it, or in the hands of the man who owns the brain that
-conceived and the hand that penned it. See here, Sir Grey. The Queen
-is not exactly a critic of literature or a patron of all genius, but she
-has a love for what is pure and beautiful and simply true. I warrant
-that yonder romance will go home to her heart. My wife shall take it
-and read it to her this very afternoon, when she is to be in attendance
-upon her Majesty. When that has been done, take my word for it, you
-will have half the publishers of the town crowding cap in hand to crave
-the favour of bringing it out for the world to read. Oh, you need not
-blush, like a young mother when her firstborn babe is praised! I trow I
-know a good book when I see it; and that is one which will mightily
-please her Majesty, since it sings the praise of pure love and
-chivalrous fidelity, and all those virtues which seem well-nigh out of
-date, but which the Queen would fain see restored as in the bygone days
-of knights-errant and King Arthur's Round Table."
-
-"I was told that there was no sale nowadays for aught but scurrilous
-libels and bitter lampoons, or at best for political pamphlets treating
-of subjects of which I know naught."
-
-"Ay, men love garbage, when they can get it; and the strife of bitter
-tongues is entertaining to those who would fain believe all that is bad
-of their fellows. Yet are there enough pure and loving souls left in
-this great Babylon to appreciate such work as yonder; and when once her
-Majesty's favour has been shown to it and its writer, you will see how
-these same publishers will change their tone. Every aspirant to
-literary fame needs a patron, and your patron shall be the Queen."
-
-It was almost too wonderful for belief. Grey was not sure still that he
-did not dream. And after he had swallowed the draught which his host
-mixed and held to his lips, he quickly fell into a sound slumber from
-which even dreams were banished. But when he woke again the sun must
-long have been up, and surely he was again dreaming; for here was Dick
-himself, clad once more in the livery of a well-to-do servant, standing
-at his bedside with a tray containing a light but savoury breakfast.
-
-"Dicon! Why, will wonders never cease? Man alive, how came you here?"
-
-"Why, if you will but sit up, and let me give you of this broth which
-has been specially prepared for you, I will gladly tell you all.
-Master, my dear master, I trow that all our troubles are ended now!"
-
-"If I could be sure I were not dreaming, good Dicon, belike I might say
-the same; but my head is so bewildered, I know not what to believe. Yet
-it is good to see your honest face again, even in a dream."
-
-"Faith, I am no dream, master, and my tale can soon be told. I came
-into the town soon after dawn, to tell you I had discovered Don Carlos
-in Lord Sandford's stables at St. Albans, where he keeps the beasts he
-uses for racing and such like. And no sooner had I stepped into a
-tavern not so far from here for a pot of ale and crust of bread, when I
-did hear that all the town was ringing with the tale of how young Sir
-Grey Dumaresq, who had disappeared mysteriously not long since had
-risked his life not far from Marlborough House in beating off a gang of
-Mohawks from besetting and perhaps injuring the Lady Geraldine Adair,
-who was returning homewards after an evening spent with the Duchess.
-Nay, master, what ails you? You are white as a ghost. Lie down again,
-and let me fetch the leech."
-
-"Nay, nay, good Dicon; 'tis but a passing qualm. Heed it not. So it was
-the Lady Geraldine who was in that chair?"
-
-"Yes; and there is no knowing what might have befallen her, but for the
-timely arrival of Sir Grey. That is what all the town is buzzing about.
-Well, when I heard that, I thought I would make bold to present myself
-here, and lay claim to be your servant. And who should come to speak
-with me but the Duke himself, who even remembered having seen my face
-that day at Ramillies! I vow he did talk with me for hard upon an hour;
-and I did tell him--oh, I told him everything that I could think
-of--things I have not yet dared to speak to you, my master. I have told
-him what Jock Jarvis and I do think of old Barty at Hartsbourne, and
-what I think of my Lord Sandford, and how he did first seek to cause you
-to break your neck, and then robbed you by foul means of your horse--the
-horse that carried his Grace so bravely through the battle of Ramillies.
-Oh, I saw how his eyes flashed. I trow he will have a rod in pickle for
-my Lord Sandford yet! He is a noble and knightly gentleman; and when he
-had heard all I had to say, he did call me an honest fellow; and he gave
-me some gold pieces, and sent me out with one of his servants to get me
-a livery such as it became Sir Grey's servant to wear. And he told me
-to come back to wait upon you, my master, for that he and her Grace were
-about to go to Whitehall to attend upon the Queen this afternoon and
-evening; and I warrant they will tell a tale to her Majesty which will
-put a spoke in some fine gentleman's wheel."
-
-Grey lay back upon his pillows breathless with wonder and excitement;
-but it was excitement of that joyful kind which acts rather as a tonic
-upon the system than as a deterrent to recovery. He sent Dick away to
-make inquiries about the Old Lion; and as the man went out, the Duke's
-physician entered and examined the wound upon Grey's head and the
-condition of the broken arm, which he had skilfully set, and ended by
-permitting his patient, after other two hours of quiet rest, to leave
-his bed for a few hours to sit in the adjoining room for a while under
-the care of his servant.
-
-"Had you been like too many of our young gallants, full-blooded, heated
-with wine, softened by gluttony and rich living, these injuries might
-have involved blood-letting and other severe remedies. But your
-temperate life and meagre living of late tell in your favour now. You
-need heartening up and strengthening by good food and a little old wine
-carefully administered, and you will soon cease to feel any ill effects.
-I congratulate you heartily on the occasion which has brought you once
-again into the notice of the Duke, who can be a stanch and true friend,
-as I have reason to know."
-
-When Dick returned to him he was laden with fine clothing, such as Grey
-had been wont to wear, and which the man spread out with an air of pride
-and delight that was good to see.
-
-"See there! The Duke's own clothes--those he wore some few years since,
-when he was something slimmer than now. He bade his man look them out
-for you, seeing that your own garments were all torn and
-mud-bespattered--"
-
-"Ay, and of fustian, in lieu of cloth, and silk, and velvet," added
-Grey, as he looked smilingly at the rich clothing before him. "Well,
-well, Dicon, when one comes suddenly into the midst of an enchanted
-palace, one must take the good the gods provide. But tell me of Mr.
-Wylde. Have you learned aught concerning him?"
-
-"Why, truly yes. I saw the messenger who had been to him; and at the
-sight of the Duke's livery the whole house was astir, and not a creature
-there but will wait hand and foot upon the old man till other
-arrangements for him can be made. The fellow saw him and gave him news
-of you, and he was right well content. He said he should lack for
-nothing; and the man did leave with the host two gold pieces sent by his
-Grace, and told him that he would have to answer to the Duke if aught
-went amiss with him. After that you need have no fear."
-
-Grey's last anxiety thus set at rest, he seemed to have nothing left to
-wish for. He drowsed away another hour in peaceful dreamy fashion, and
-felt fully equal to the fatigue of being dressed by Dick, and walking
-with the help of his arm into the adjoining room--a pleasant sunny
-apartment, on the table of which stood a great bowl of pure white
-snowdrops, at which Grey gazed with an infinite delight; for the sight
-of white flowers always brought back to his mind one particular face and
-form, and the very thought of his nearness to her last night set his
-heart beating tumultuously within him.
-
-He was lying back luxuriously in a deep armchair, beside the glowing
-heat of the fire. The sunlight filtered in through the great mullions
-of the window, and the light seemed to concentrate itself upon the
-whiteness of the flowers near at hand. Dick had retired into the inner
-room to set his master's things in order there. Grey was alone--alone
-with his bewildering thoughts of happiness to come, scarce knowing how
-much of all he had heard could be true, or what would be the outcome.
-
-Had he slept as he sat there musing? What was that sound somewhere in
-the room? He lifted his head and looked round. A tall, slender,
-white-robed figure was standing outlined against the rich tapestry of
-the wall behind. He had not heard the door open or the arras lifted.
-But she was there; and somehow he was not astonished. It seemed only
-natural to see her, the golden shafts of sunlight seeming to cling to
-her, and to follow her as she came slowly forward with that inimitable
-grace of movement he knew so well.
-
-For one moment he sat spellbound, and then struggled to his feet,
-holding out his hands.
-
-In a moment she was beside him, holding them--holding them fast; for he
-was weaker than he knew, and he swayed a little, a mist before his eyes.
-Then he was back in his chair, and she was standing over him. She was
-holding something to his lips. He drank, and his senses cleared.
-
-"Forgive me," she said; "I should not have come yet; but I so longed to
-thank you myself, and to be assured that you had not suffered too much
-in my service."
-
-"I could not suffer too much in such service," he answered. "And from
-my heart I thank you for coming. I have been so hungry for the sight of
-you, Geraldine."
-
-"And I too," she answered in the lowest whisper, as she just touched his
-hair lightly with her hand.
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XVIII.*
-
- *"GOOD QUEEN ANNE."*
-
-
-Sir Grey Dumaresq bent the knee before the little upright figure in the
-great carved chair, and the courtiers and ladies pressed one upon the
-other, as far as etiquette permitted, to get a sight of a personage who,
-for the moment, was all the talk of the town.
-
-In her gentle, rather thin and high-pitched voice the Queen spoke, and a
-deep hush fell upon the great room.
-
-"Rise, Sir Grey. I have sent for you here, inasmuch as I have heard
-much of your story from both the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, my
-very good friends; and I have desired to see you, and to hear somewhat
-of many matters from your own lips."
-
-"Your Majesty has but to speak, and I will answer."
-
-"I hear that you did first encounter his Grace of Marlborough upon the
-field of Ramillies, and that you did there render him no small succour
-in a moment of personal peril."
-
-"It was my good fortune, madam, to possess a horse of great courage, and
-strength, and mettle; and when the Duke was for the moment surrounded by
-a party of the enemy, and had to force his own horse to a perilous leap,
-which caused him to fall and become useless, I was able, being close at
-hand, to mount him upon my good steed, which carried him through that
-day, which his own genius and courage has rendered for ever glorious."
-
-"How came it that you did adventure yourself into the heart of the
-danger, not being a soldier, or having any call to risk your life in the
-cause?"
-
-"Madam, I am an Englishman, and every true-born Englishman is called to
-adventure himself wherever he may by happy chance be able to serve his
-country. That is my excuse for being where perchance I had no right to
-be, save the right of which I have spoken, and of which I pray that your
-Majesty will not rob me. To serve his Queen and his country must needs
-be the desire of every man worthy the name, be he soldier or be he
-none."
-
-A smile played over the pleasant countenance of the Queen. The pale,
-handsome face, the graceful bearing, the courtly address of the young
-man, pleased her well. Simply attired, without any of the extravagances
-of frippery which distinguished so many courtiers, and with his own
-curly brown locks floating round his head, his appearance was striking
-and prepossessing enough. To be sure, the Queen could resent any too
-great easiness in dress amongst her courtiers; and when one of her
-ministers, coming in haste, had appeared before her in a small wig, such
-as gentlemen used at their toilets, rather than in full dress, she had
-remarked to her ladies that she supposed his lordship would present
-himself in his night-cap next! But there was nothing slovenly in the
-rich plainness of Grey's attire; and he looked so much the poet and the
-dreamer, with the pallor of illness still upon him, and that slimness of
-figure partly due to privations now past, and partly to his active and
-temperate life, that the Queen regarded him with increasing favour, and
-a smile of decided approval was his reward.
-
-"Well and bravely spoken, my young knight. And let me in my own person
-thank you for the service rendered that day to one who has been, and
-still will be, I doubt not, his country's most able defender. Had aught
-befallen the Duke on the field of Ramillies, a glorious victory would
-have become, I cannot doubt, a fearful defeat. France would have swept
-the Netherlands with her victorious armies, and there would have been
-none with genius and power to roll back the tide of battle. Wherefore
-England herself owes you a debt of gratitude, Sir Grey, which must not
-be forgotten."
-
-"Madam, I have been richly repaid already for any poor service of
-mine--first by the gracious favour of the Duke, and now in still fuller
-measure by these words from your Majesty. Had fortune not so far
-favoured me that I was close at hand at the moment, I cannot doubt but
-that a score of others would have done what I was favoured by doing. To
-serve the man who serves his country so well is its own reward."
-
-"Ah, my young friend, it is easy to see you were never bred up in
-courts," spoke the Queen, with a smile for Grey, and a quick searching
-glance round at the knots of courtiers and gentlemen filling the room.
-At this most of them shrank back, a little abashed at her look and her
-words. Shameless place-hunting was all the fashion of the day; and for
-any man to make light of service rendered, and to desire no reward, was
-a thing almost unheard of.
-
-But after having just launched this shaft, the Queen said no more on
-that subject. She was by nature timid and gentle, and though not
-lacking in wit or in a quiet penetration, which was not always
-appreciated by those about her, was for the most part an indulgent
-mistress, not disposed to overmuch blame even where she saw weakness.
-
-"And I hear more of you than this, Sir Grey. You are not only a man of
-prompt action, but you are also a dreamer and a poet. I have read with
-pleasure your romance of pure chivalry, and I would that we could find
-in these degenerate days more knights and gentlemen, more spotless
-maidens and virtuous women, such as those of whom your pen delights to
-tell, and my ears delight to hear."
-
-The young man bowed low, the crimson flush, which praise of his courage
-had not evoked, dyeing his cheek now that the child of his brain and
-hand was praised. The Queen continued graciously,--
-
-"I have heard the whole romance, and its beauty touches my heart, and
-pleases also those amongst my ladies and gentlemen as are best able to
-appraise the merits of such poetic work. I desire, Sir Grey, that you
-will dedicate the tale to me, as one who has read and approved it, and
-would desire it to be widely known and read in the land. To be a patron
-of all true and beautiful art is the privilege of rulers, and therefore
-do I give this charge to you. I desire that such a story as you have
-conceived and penned should be circulated amongst my faithful subjects.
-They will learn from it loyalty, love, purity, and singleness of heart,
-and surely no nation can thrive or excel in which these virtues be
-absent."
-
-A little buzz of amaze and gratulation went round the room as the Queen
-spoke thus. The young man's fortune as a writer was assuredly made. A
-second Philip Sidney had suddenly come to light. All the world would
-delight to honour the man approved of royalty.
-
-Grey himself was speechless. Such a eulogy was altogether unexpected
-and bewildering. If Dame Fortune had, in the past, showed an unkind
-face towards him, surely she was atoning for her frowns by the most
-gracious of smiles now.
-
-Perhaps the young author's confused and blissful silence pleased the
-Queen more than any florid words of gratitude such as she was used to
-hear. She spoke again, still in her most gracious and kindly way.
-
-"Moreover, Sir Grey, I have heard somewhat of your history from his
-Grace of Marlborough, and it doth appear to me that you have been
-scurvily treated with respect to your rightful inheritance, the manor of
-Hartsbourne, which, though your property, you are debarred from
-enjoying. I have made strict inquiry into this matter, and have sent
-down special commissioners to seek speech with your kinsman now in
-possession, and to make some settlement with him for the restitution to
-you of the estate. It is not fitting that one to whom the country and
-its Queen owe a debt of gratitude should be ousted from his inheritance
-either by the cunning craft of a greedy miser, or for lack of means to
-satisfy a creditor and release his lands from debt. From what hath been
-told me, I misdoubt that unscrupulous means have been employed to oust
-you from possession and enjoyment of your house and lands. But whether
-or not this be so, it is not fitting that things should longer continue
-as now. Sir Grey Dumaresq of Hartsbourne Manor must live upon his
-hereditary acres in becoming style. That fiat hath already gone forth.
-England's Queen and people will have it so. It were shame to both if the
-preserver of her great General should go unrewarded."
-
-Grey, overwhelmed by the magnitude of the grace bestowed upon him, could
-only sink upon his knees before the Queen, murmuring some confused but
-heartfelt words of gratitude and loyalty. The royal lady gave him her
-hand to kiss, and looked smilingly upon him.
-
-"Sir Grey," she said gently, "had you come hither to the Court at once
-on your return, boasting of what you had done, displaying the Duke's
-token, and seeking fame and fortune for yourself, belike I should have
-thought but little of the matter. I am for ever hearing the petitions
-of those seeking great things for themselves--seeking place, preferment,
-emoluments, with or without desert. Had you come thus, you had been
-lost in a crowd. I perchance should scarce have heard your name. But
-you have asked nothing for yourself. You endured hardship, privation,
-misery; you thought not scorn to win your bread--and the bread of
-another who had befriended you--by following a humble vocation. With
-that in your possession which would have at least placed you above want,
-you faced want itself rather than stultify your noble act by seeking to
-trade upon it. You rather sought to win the fame you merit by using
-those great gifts of poetry and art which it hath pleased God to bestow
-upon you. Therefore are you different from others; therefore hath your
-story touched the heart of your Queen; therefore is her favour won, in
-that she can value a man who seeks and asks nothing for himself, but
-rather desires that the glory of a noble deed shall be its own reward."
-
-Again she tendered her hand, which Grey kissed in deepest reverence and
-gratitude. Then at a sign from the Duchess, who had all this time been
-standing behind the Queen's chair, he rose and made a deep inclination.
-
-"I thank your Majesty a thousand times," he said in a very low voice.
-"I have no words in which to tell my gratitude, but I pray Heaven that
-in the future I may have the opportunity to show how deep and true that
-gratitude is."
-
-"Deeds, and not words, will be your motto through life, I take it, Sir
-Grey; and in such fashion shall you best please your Queen and serve
-your country."
-
-Then Grey found himself, he scarce knew how, in the outer room, thronged
-by courtiers and nobles and gentlemen, all eager to make his
-acquaintance, all agog to hear such parts of his story as were yet
-unknown to them, and above all eager to read the book of which it had
-pleased the Queen to speak in such high praise. To these worthies Grey
-was already a rising star, and they longed to bask in the light of his
-rays.
-
-Quietly and courteously Grey replied to direct questions and to the
-advances showered upon him by the Court; but he disengaged himself as
-quickly as he could, and was glad to find himself in the coach which had
-brought him, and on his way to Marlborough House, where he was still a
-guest. For although he had quickly mended from his hurts, his hosts
-would not hear of his returning to his old quarters; and the Old Lion
-had been equally insistent on this point when Grey visited him, which he
-did on the first opportunity, to tell in person his marvellous tale.
-
-"Nay, nay, my boy; you are now Sir Grey Dumaresq, and your life will run
-in different grooves. I did guess from the first that you were not what
-you seemed, and ever have I hoped that you would be restored to your
-rightful position in the world. As for me, I am well content. I have
-no lack of tendance--thanks to the liberality of the Duke, and to that
-wonderful personal visit he did pay me, which has raised me to a
-pinnacle of glory in the eyes of all men here. It contents me well to
-know that I am not forgotten, that you still have kindly thought to
-spare for the Old Lion. But for us to dwell beneath the same roof would
-not now be fitting or seemly. So think of that no more."
-
-"When I have a roof of mine own I shall think of it much," spoke Grey
-with quick decision; "but for the nonce I am naught but a guest beneath
-that of the hospitable Duke. Well, let it remain so in the present; but
-for the future I make no pledge."
-
-It was more than a week now since those words had been spoken, but they
-recurred to Grey's mind as he was driven homewards through the sunny
-streets. Hartsbourne! The name seemed to thrill in his ears like a
-clarion note of joy. Hartsbourne--his own old home--so well-beloved, so
-fair! Could it be possible that he would be master there again? The
-thought filled him with a sense akin to intoxication. The blood mounted
-to his head; he almost laughed aloud in his joy. Hartsbourne and its
-revenues his own! His romance published, and bringing him gold as well
-as fame! What might he not accomplish? How often had he dreamed in
-bygone years of what he would do for the restoration and adornment of
-the beautiful old house, and how he and his mother would live there in
-peace and happiness! True, that last part of the dream could not be
-realized now. His mother lay sleeping beneath the churchyard sod. Her
-eyes beheld, he doubted not, fairer sights than these. But yet, must
-his dream be altogether without fulfilment? Was there none
-other--nearer, dearer, if possible, than a mother--who might be the
-sharer of his joys? Had he not read something dazzling, wonderful,
-well-nigh unbelievable, in one pair of sweet eyes whose light seemed
-shining on him now? His lips had not dared to frame as yet either
-question or protestation; but did they not understand each other? His
-heart beat high with rapture. Perfect love had cast out fear. He knew
-that they belonged to each other for time and for eternity. And now
-what hindered him from taking her to his heart, and telling her that he
-had loved her from the first moment of their meeting?
-
-
-The Duke sat in his private closet, where he transacted his more
-important business, and Grey stood before him, having been summoned
-thither from his own apartments. He was received with a pleasant smile,
-and bidden to be seated.
-
-"Well, my young friend," questioned the Duke, who, having been absent
-from home for a few days, had not seen his guest in private just
-recently, "and how has the world been serving you? And how goes the
-matter of the book?"
-
-"Ah, I must tell you of that. I had, as your Grace did warn me, quite a
-levee of publishers desiring to issue it, each with some tempting offer
-as to payment. But I did as you bade me, and referred the matter to Mr.
-Poysner, by whose advice, I told them, I should be guided. And, in
-sooth, methinks he hath advised well; for not only have I received a
-handsome sum in gold already for the work, but I shall receive more
-according to the sale; and it is even now being printed as fast as the
-presses can work. Her Majesty is to have the first copy, bound with the
-choicest skill that can be brought to bear upon such work. Other
-choicely-bound volumes are to be reserved for my friends, after which it
-will be sold to the public; and already they say that the book is being
-eagerly asked for. Truly the word of a Queen and the patronage of the
-great are mighty factors in the world of letters!"
-
-"As men of letters are fast learning, my young friend," replied the Duke
-with a smile. "Genius without a patron is like (as some wag remarked
-not long since) 'Paradise Lost' without the devil! It falls flat and
-unfruitful on unheeding ears. But now for another matter of import to
-yourself. Have you had news from Hartsbourne since her Majesty did
-speak to you anent that matter?"
-
-"No, my lord; I have heard nothing. My servant Dick was sent thither by
-request to answer certain questions made by her Majesty's messengers,
-but he hath not yet returned, and I know nothing of what has transpired
-there."
-
-His face expressed a keen desire for information, and the Duke at once
-satisfied this wish.
-
-"Something strange has happened there which simplifies matters not a
-little. Your kinsman, Mr. Dumaresq, when questioned by the Queen's
-Commissioners as to his rights and position there, showed a number of
-papers which seemed on the face of them fair and right; but his
-uneasiness was manifest, and awoke suspicion. Also it was not clear
-that he possessed all the rights he claimed over the estate, or that Sir
-Hugh had signed all the papers; for upon some the writing of the name
-looked to practised eyes little like his. The more Mr. Dumaresq was
-questioned, the more uneasy did he become. So they left him that day,
-saying that they would come again on the morrow and finish the inquiry.
-By that time your man Dick had arrived, and he with an old man upon the
-place had long talk with the messengers that night in the old man's
-room. It seems as though Mr. Dumaresq or his servant must have had some
-way of listening to what passed. A terrible suspicion was broached that
-your father's end was hastened by foul means. This was a point which
-the Commissioners declared must be thoroughly investigated later. They
-went away, but on the morrow returned--to find Mr. Dumaresq dead in his
-bed. His servant said he had been subject to seizures of late, and that
-agitation had probably caused the attack. Old Jock Jarvis and your man
-Dick are, however, strongly of opinion that he precipitated his own end
-by the use of perhaps the very same drug which he is suspected of having
-employed in your father's case. Be that as it may, the man is dead, and
-he has died without a will, so that whether or not he was ever legally
-entitled to what he so long held, you are now absolute master of
-Hartsbourne and all its revenues, without the need of any action or
-interference upon the part of the lawyers of the Queen."
-
-Grey stood like one in a dream. He could scarce take in the meaning of
-it all. He had known that Hartsbourne was to be restored to him--he had
-had the Queen's word for that--but he had expected vexatious delays,
-complications, and difficulties. He had not dared to let himself hope
-to escape these. And now the Gordian knot had been cut--cut in a rather
-terrible fashion, perhaps, but still effectually cut. He was absolute
-master of his own again. He could ride to Hartsbourne and take
-possession so soon as his kinsman was laid to rest in the grave, where
-all enmity and all unhallowed secrets are buried. He had not found his
-tongue to express his feelings before the door opened and a secretary
-glided in and whispered something into the Duke's ear.
-
-"He comes in good time," spoke Marlborough; "let him enter at once.
-Probably he brings news of the matter in hand."
-
-Grey looked up, and behold there was Dick, travel-stained and
-bespattered with mud, but with a glowing, eager face, evidently full of
-news.
-
-"Well, sirrah," spoke the Duke, smiling, "so you have come post haste
-with news. What wonderful tidings do you bring?"
-
-The man made his semi-military salute, first to the Duke and then to his
-master. He needed no further encouragement in order to unburden himself
-of his tale.
-
-"May it please your Grace, and you, my master, I have news of a
-wonderful discovery made by Jock and myself at Hartsbourne at dawn
-to-day. We have had our eye sharp upon old Judas, as we call Mr.
-Barty's wall-eyed Peter; and we have known right well that he has been
-up to some trick of his own ever since his master died. He has been
-prowling like a wild beast all about the house. We have heard him
-knocking and even sawing, when he thought himself alone there. It was
-old Jock to whom the thought first came. 'The old man has some secret
-hoard; and Judas knows of it, but not the place. He is looking for it,
-trying to find it ere he is turned out. Well, that is a game that two
-can play at. You and I will look too, Dicon.' That is what old Jock
-said. Whilst Mr. Dumaresq was buried, and his man must for decency's
-sake go and stand beside the grave, we searched the house from basement
-to garret; but we had no more luck than Judas had."
-
-"But you have had luck ere this, honest fellow; I see it in your eyes,"
-spoke Marlborough with a laugh. "Come, let us know what you found, and
-what is the value of the treasure."
-
-"It was to me the thought came," spoke Dick, with honest pride. "I was
-lying awake at night puzzling and pondering, when suddenly I remembered
-that first and only night you spent there, master, and how that you saw
-the old man suddenly appear behind your bed with a shining knife in his
-hand, and that he vanished ere you could grapple with him, and it seemed
-more like a vision than a reality. But I sprang from my bed, and I
-roused old Jock, and I yelled in his ear, 'Man, man, I know where the
-treasure is hid! Behind the wall of the tapestried guest-chamber, where
-my master slept, and where the wall did move from behind the bed head,
-and let his foe steal upon him unawares!'"
-
-"Good thought!" ejaculated Grey excitedly; "and was it so?"
-
-"We rose and dressed, and made our way into the house and up to the
-bed-chamber, and a tough job we had. And, my master, you must pardon us
-for the havoc we have made of woodwork and panelling; for the trick of
-the opening we could not find till all had been hewn away. But when it
-was at last laid bare, we saw the spring, and then the wall swung
-inwards with a noiseless, ghostlike motion, and within was a secret
-chamber well-nigh filled with coffers, some containing jewels--Dumaresq
-jewels, I doubt not--some gold pieces, some silver vessels. We did not
-open all. We had found enough. Master, there are the savings of
-years--the revenues of the broad lands which were paid to him--stowed
-away in yonder chamber. Oh, I can almost forgive him his villainies,
-now that all hath come to you! It is all there: it is all safe. We did
-pack Judas off with his wages and his belongings, and his master's
-clothes, which, I trow, none will grudge him; and we did get in a few
-trusty fellows from the place who hate Barty and long to see Sir Grey
-reigning at Hartsbourne again. And having made all safe, and the house
-in charge, under Jock, of these trusty lads, I did take horse forthwith
-to bring the news to my master, and here am I."
-
-"And you shall not lose your reward, my trusty Dicon," spoke Grey with
-fervour; "for the love and trust of a loyal heart is worth more than
-treasure and gold."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XIX.*
-
- *LOVE'S TRIUMPHING.*
-
-
-"Mother, I cannot. I have tried--in all truth, I have. But it is all
-of no avail. I cannot love Lord Sandford. I cannot be his wife."
-
-"You could be his wife very well, if you chose obstinate girl; and as
-for loving him--poof!--love matters little when there is wealth and
-title, broad lands, and all that heart can desire into the bargain. You
-put me out of all patience with your mincing ways and disdainful airs.
-What more do you want than Lord Sandford offers? Does a countess's
-coronet not satisfy you? Do you desire to be a duchess, and take
-precedence of your own mother?"
-
-And Lady Romaine brought her ivory fan down upon her daughter's shoulder
-with a tap that was almost like a blow. Tears of vexation and
-disappointment stood in her eyes. In her hand held an open letter,
-across the bottom of which the word "Sandford" could be easily read,
-traced in a large and firm hand.
-
-Before Geraldine had found words in which to reply, Lady Romaine had
-burst out again more petulantly than ever.
-
-"To think of all the trouble I have been at with you! Do you think I
-want a great lumbering girl, looking ten years older than her years, and
-with all the affectations of a Quaker--horrid people!--in her gait and
-dress and speech, for ever in my train? Do you think it is pleasant for
-me to hear men laughing at your prim ways and silly scruples, and
-wondering where you learned them? Do you know what they call you behind
-your back? 'Mistress "No, I thank you, sir."' Faugh! it makes me sick.
-Who are you, to hold up your opinions against the whole world? It makes
-me blush with shame and anger. And then, when I have gotten you a
-suitor in one of the best known nobles of the gay town, and reckon to
-have you off my hands and in the keeping of a husband who will know how
-to deal with your airs and graces, you must needs turn stubborn as a
-mule, and refuse his offer. Lard! it makes me sick to think I should
-have such a daughter."
-
-"I am very sorry that you are vexed, mother," answered Geraldine
-quietly, "but my father does not seem greatly to desire the match with
-my Lord Sandford. He did speak of it to me awhile back, but of late I
-have heard nothing anent the matter from him."
-
-"Tush, girl! your father is no judge in such matters. He is wrapped up
-in politics, and has no thought to spare for other things more close at
-home. And because, forsooth, Lord Sandford finds the Court too dull for
-him, and is seen there but seldom, your father must needs think lightly
-of him. As though half the gayest and most fashionable of the younger
-nobility did not eschew the deadly dullness of the Queen's
-presence-chamber! Why, I should die of boredom in a week had I to dance
-attendance on her Majesty. Lord Sandford shows his good sense by staying
-away. Oh to hear the tales some of them tell! Saints preserve me from
-the like!"
-
-Geraldine answered no word. She hoped that the had now blown itself
-out. Not to her mother could she speak of those tender, wonderful,
-beautiful thoughts and hopes and feelings which had lately come into her
-life. In her heart of hearts she knew herself beloved of Grey
-Dumaresq--knew that it would not be long ere he declared himself. She
-had heard also rumours of what the world was saying about him--that his
-name was becoming known to all men, and that he was regarded as one who
-would rise to eminence and prosperity. But it was not for these things
-that she loved him. Her heart had been his long before--almost before
-she knew it herself--in the days of his poverty and obscurity, when she
-dreamed of him, rather than thought consciously, wondering whither he
-had gone, and what he was doing, and whether he was holding fast to the
-resolutions he had made. She knew how her heart had leaped at sight of
-him in the guise of the Youth--how he had flown to her rescue before all
-others when peril menaced her. Then her eyes had been opened to the
-love which had sprung up all unknown in her heart; but she had lost him
-once more, only to find him again in the unknown champion who had risked
-his life, without knowing for whom he did it, in the dark streets of
-London some few weeks back now. Since then she had seen him but once,
-and their words had been few, but their eyes had spoken more eloquently
-than their lips, and she knew that she had only to possess her soul in
-patience, and that all would be well. The Duke and the Duchess were her
-friends: that would be enough, and more than enough, for her father. As
-for Lady Romaine, she had always been the warm advocate of Lord
-Sandford's suit, and being ignorant of what was passing elsewhere,
-jealous of her daughter's friendship with the Duchess, wrapped up in her
-own trivial round of vanity and pleasure, imagined that the only way of
-getting rid of the incubus of this grave and stately daughter was by
-marrying her off-hand to the only suitor whom the girl had ever
-tolerated for a moment. Therefore this absolute refusal on Geraldine's
-part, and the indifference of Lord Romaine, who had merely told her he
-would not have the girl forced to any such step against her will, awoke
-in her a chagrin and vexation which were hard to bear, and which vented
-themselves in positive tears of passion and pain.
-
-"Then you shall give the man his dismissal yourself, you minx, you
-obstinate hussy!" cried the enraged lady at last, flinging down the
-letter upon the table. "He says he will come to hear his fate to-morrow
-evening, and I vow I will have no hand in the telling of the tale of
-your shilly-shally and folly. Here have you been leading him on all
-these months--"
-
-"Mother, that is not true," spoke Geraldine, rising to her feet and
-flashing one of her strange, earnest glances full upon her mother's
-face; "I did never lead him on. I did never encourage him. I did but
-obey your strict injunctions to speak with him, to make his
-acquaintance, to try if so be that I might learn to return the affection
-with which he professed to honour me."
-
-"And was that not enough to encourage him, in one who played the prude
-or the vixen so well in other quarters?" fumed Lady Romaine. "That you,
-who chose to send away every other man who addressed compliments to you
-with a flea in his ear--that you should suffer him to attend upon you,
-and seem to take pleasure in his converse--was not that enough? Why
-make yourself the talk of the town with him, to send him away now?"
-
-The injustice of this accusation caused the girl's cheek to flame; but
-she retained her self-control, and answered gently: "Methinks you are
-hard to please, mother; for whether I send men away or listen to them
-awhile, I am always in the wrong. I did but do your bidding in the
-matter of Lord Sandford, and I do not deny that I found him ofttimes an
-interesting talker, and that for a while I was willing to regard him as
-a friend. But then, as I came to know more and to hear more, my opinion
-was forced to change. I fear me that Lord Sandford himself did change,
-and for the worse. Nevertheless, I would not judge him; only this I
-say--that I cannot and I will not marry him."
-
-"Then go your own way and die a spinster, soured with your own tempers
-and megrims!" cried Lady Romaine in a towering passion, as she swept
-from the room, her high heels clattering on the polished floor, her
-draperies making an angry hissing, like that of a snake disturbed. "I
-wash my hands of you from this time forth. Give Lord Sandford his
-dismissal yourself, and lose me one of my best and most useful friends.
-That is always the way with daughters. Young vipers they should be
-called!" And having now reached the door, Lady Romaine passed out and
-banged it hard behind her, as a further mark of her displeasure.
-
-Geraldine, left alone, took up the letter and read it. It contained a
-definite proposal for her hand, was written to her mother (always Lord
-Sandford's friend and ally in this), and asked leave for the writer to
-present himself upon the following evening to learn his fate. The girl
-raised her eyes with a start, for it was upon the following day that the
-Duke and Duchess had invited themselves to dine with Lord and Lady
-Romaine, and to bring with them a guest whom they desired to present
-afresh to their hosts. Lady Romaine had shrugged her shoulders and
-professed to be bored at the prospect, though in reality somewhat
-gratified at the idea of entertaining such illustrious guests. Her lord
-had been undisguisedly gratified, and believing the invitation in some
-sort due to his daughter, had regarded her with increased favour. But as
-Geraldine revolved the situation, it seemed to her a strange and rather
-dangerous complication that Lord Sandford should appear upon that very
-night; for was it not said that he and Sir Grey Dumaresq had quarrelled
-bitterly, and that the former had even sought to compass the life of his
-friend?
-
-Geraldine went to seek her father, but he was not to be found. Her
-mother refused her entrance into her rooms, and the girl was forced to
-await the result of the following evening without communicating her
-vague fears to any one. After all, who would be likely to heed them,
-and what could she say? It was only the vaguest rumours she had heard;
-the rest was but her own intuitions, which others would never consider.
-
-
-"Sir Grey Dumaresq, let me present you to my daughter, Lady Geraldine
-Adair, whom you will perhaps lead to the dinner-table when the time
-comes."
-
-So spoke Lord Romaine, his face beaming with gratification and pleasure.
-The Duke and Duchess had arrived, the last of the select company invited
-for that day, and the Duke had held a short, low-toned conversation with
-his host, which had brought many gratified smiles to the face of his
-interlocutor. Now Geraldine's hand was within that of the young baronet,
-and her voice trembled a little as she said to her father,--
-
-"Sir Grey and I have met before."
-
-"Ah yes; I believe that is so. But Sir Grey's appearance was something
-too brief and meteor-like that last time. Now I hope he comes as a
-fixed star to shine steadily in the sky. If all we hear be true, his
-brilliance will add a lustre to the times in which he lives."
-
-"You do me too much honour, sir," answered Grey a bow; but there was no
-time for more, for the company was already moving, and Geraldine's hand
-was upon his arm, and the delicate fragrance which seemed always to
-cling about her brought a strange intoxication to his senses, which made
-speech at the first difficult to him.
-
-Perhaps she shared this feeling, for she was silent too; but the
-delicate flush upon her face, and the soft shining of her eyes, enhanced
-her beauty to an extent which made many marvel that they had not
-observed it before. Now and again the eyes of the undeclared lovers met
-in a quick, eloquent glance; but for a while they did not directly
-address one another, for the table was silent, listening to the words of
-the Duke, who was addressing his host, and discussing with him some
-matter of general interest. It was only later on, when the hum of talk
-became more dispersed, that Geraldine was able to say in a low voice,--
-
-"I have heard of the success of your book. It has made my heart glad
-and happy. I did read some or it ere it went to the Queen. I thought
-it more beautiful than I can say."
-
-"It should be beautiful, in all sooth, fair lady," answered Grey in a
-very low voice, "for the thought of it was inspired by the looks and
-words of one who is of all living creatures the fairest, the purest, the
-most precious. If my poor work meets with success in the world, it will
-be due not to any skill of mine, but to the goodness of two gracious
-ladies, one who inspired and the other who approved its motive."
-
-Geraldine's face burned; there was a great joy in her heart. She could
-not misunderstand the look he bent upon her. Could it indeed be true
-that she had had any part or lot in this matter? The thought was
-bewildering, unspeakable. She sat as one in a dream. She heard him
-tell softly the tale of those strange events which had brought him
-unexpected wealth and prosperity. She realized that the time of trial
-and poverty and struggle was over, and that the sun of success was
-shining in his sky, and her heart was glad within her. Yet she rejoiced
-to think that he had faced privation and poverty bravely, and had sought
-by no unworthy way to mend his broken fortunes. She had trusted him and
-loved him in the hour of darkness: she was not ashamed to admit it now;
-she was proud and glad that it had been so.
-
-Later on in the evening they found themselves together and alone in the
-little room at the far end of the reception suite, where they could talk
-undisturbed and unheard. It was sweet with the scent of violets, and
-the soft light of the wax candles in silver sconces illumined it only
-dimly. He closed the door, and let the curtain fall across it, and then
-he held out his uninjured hand to her. The broken arm, though mending
-fast, was still in a sling.
-
-"Geraldine! my beloved!"
-
-She went straight to him then, like a bird to its nest. No
-protestations were needed between them. They loved each other, and they
-knew it.
-
-How long they had been alone, they did not know--time flies so quickly
-at times like these. It seemed but a few minutes to them, though it
-might well have been an hour, when the handle of the door was turned,
-and the curtain drawn back. Geraldine uttered a little cry of startled
-amaze. It was Lord Sandford who hail entered, and she had forgotten his
-very existence!
-
-Had her mother, in one of her spiteful moods, told him that he would
-find her here? It was not impossible; and the girl's face grew a little
-white, for Lord Sandford's rapier dangled at his side, as was indeed the
-fashion of the times, and he was a man upon whose hot passions nobody
-could absolutely reckon. Strange stories had been told of him before
-this.
-
-The young Earl stood for a moment framed in the doorway, his powerful
-face set in lines the meaning of which it were hard to read aright.
-Grey had risen and stood close to Geraldine, his eyes fixed vigilantly
-upon the massive figure of the man who had once been his friend. To the
-girl it seemed as though their eyes met, and glanced one against the
-other, like the blades of duellists in a preliminary pass. Her breath
-came thick and fast. She felt the anxious, tumultuous beating of her
-heart.
-
-Lord Sandford was the first to break the tense silence.
-
-"Lady Geraldine, I came hither to-night to receive an answer to the
-offer of marriage which I sent to you through your mother, Lady Romaine.
-Is this the answer you have prepared for me?"
-
-He looked straight at the girl, and then at Grey, with a wide, unabashed
-gaze that did not shrink or falter. Grey made one step forward, and
-spoke in low, quiet tones.
-
-"My lord, you may receive your answer at my hands, for the Lady
-Geraldine Adair is now my promised wife."
-
-"Lady Geraldine," spoke Lord Sandford, "is this the truth?"
-
-"It is, my lord, albeit I had not meant to give you your answer in such
-like fashion. I thank you for the honour you have done me; but my heart
-is given elsewhere."
-
-"Right!" spoke Lord Sandford, in his resonant and emphatic tones. He
-had dropped the curtain behind him, and now came forward several paces.
-His face was not easy to read, but he held his head proudly, and looked
-the lovers straight in the eyes. "I would not have it otherwise, Lady
-Geraldine; for you have chosen well. You have chosen such an one as you
-must needs choose. Like will seek like; virtue, fidelity, purity, and
-honour must fly upward, will not be dragged downward. I saw it from the
-first; and at the first I rebelled. I swore it should not be so. I
-stooped to dishonour to remove an obstacle from my path. I thought I had
-succeeded; but soon I knew I had not advanced my cause one whit. I was
-rightly served. I did wrong with open eyes. I sinned, as it were, with
-a cart-rope; and I have had my deserts. I lost my friend, but I won no
-wife. I was outwitted, at every point. I went on hoping. I am not a
-man who easily gives up what my heart is set on. Up to the last I hoped
-to win. But yesterday, after my letter was written and dispatched, I
-knew that I was beaten at every point."
-
-"Yesterday," faltered Geraldine.
-
-"Even so, lady. I have been absent from town of late; but yesterday in
-the afternoon I returned. I went as usual to the coffee-house to learn
-the news, and I learnt it."
-
-Lord Sandford's gaze flashed full upon Grey. He stood squarely in front
-of him, and held out his hand.
-
-"Grey Dumaresq, I did once seek to do you a great and a grievous wrong.
-I confess the same with shame of heart. Will you accept my hand in
-friendship now, and with it my heartiest good wishes for your happiness
-in life with the lady of your choice?"
-
-Grey did not hesitate; his hand was in Lord Sandford's, clasping it
-close. All was forgotten, at that moment save the old attraction and
-fascination which this man had exercised upon him from the first.
-
-"I love the lady of your choice," spoke the Earl, without the faintest
-shade of hesitation in his tone. "I have loved her long. I doubt me if
-ever I shall love another in like fashion. And because I love her with
-every best and truest feeling of my heart, so am I able to desire above
-all else in the world her best happiness. That happiness she will find
-with you rather than with me. I am not fool enough not to know that.
-If I could have won her, I would have sought to make her happy. I swear
-it before God! But having failed, I yet desire above all things to see
-her happy with the man of her choice; and I say that she has chosen
-wisely."
-
-It was indeed a triumph of love. The innate strength and nobility of
-this man's nature had been brought out by the honest fervour of his
-love. He had enough greatness of soul to be able to give the right hand
-of fellowship to his successful rival, though he himself must forego
-that happiness which he had long been seeking to attain. Grey felt that
-in the days that were to come Lord Sandford must needs show himself in
-different colours from those of the past. This victory must surely be a
-stepping-stone on which he would rise to higher and nobler things.
-
-Geraldine now stood before him, all shrinking over, her eyes alight with
-pure womanly gratitude, admiration, and affection.
-
-"I thank you, my lord, for such good words. Forgive me if I have ever
-misjudged you."
-
-"Nay, lady, you never did that; you did but appraise me too truly."
-
-"Yet I had ever some liking for you, my lord--think it not
-otherwise--save when I thought, I feared--"
-
-"Yes, yes; I know, I understand. Friendship you had for me, so long as
-I deserved it; but love--never. And you were right, Lady Geraldine; you
-were right to withhold that. Perchance if your sweet eyes, like wells
-of liquid light, had not seen so clearly, had not read the secrets I
-sought to hide, my own love might not have blazed so fiercely. It is
-ever the unattainable which men desire to possess. But let us think of
-that no more. Let us bury the past, and live anew in the future.
-Friendship is left to us--a friendship which, I trust, will last a
-lifetime." And so speaking he turned once more to Grey, and said with a
-smile lighting his face,--
-
-"And shall I, for a wedding-gift, restore to you your good horse, Don
-Carlos, at present in my stables at St. Albans?"
-
-He spoke so freely and openly that Grey heard him in amaze.
-
-"Have you Don Carlos?" spoke Geraldine, much astonished. "I did think
-that he was stolen from Sir Grey."
-
-"And so think I; but I have had no hand in that business, save that I
-did hear something of the matter, and fearing foul play I resolved to
-become master of the gallant beast. Grey had disappeared, I knew not
-where. My evil anger had burned itself out, and I loathed myself for
-what I had done in the past. I thought that I might perchance make some
-reparation by purchasing the good horse he loved, since I heard it was
-to be sold, that I might keep it awhile, and restore it to its owner if
-kind fortune gave me the chance. It seemed to me all the amends I might
-ever make to the steed and his rider for the mischief I sought once to
-do to both. So, my friend, the horse is yours whensoever you like to
-lay claim to him. I restore him the more readily in that none of my
-people can ride him. He brooks not long a strange rider on his back.
-He has condescended to carry me for a brief while, but he goes
-unwillingly; he frets after his old master. He would win no races for a
-new one. So tell me only where and when to deliver him, and you shall
-have him so soon as you desire. I trow the old miser of Hartsbourne,
-who, I hear, is now dead, filched him from you by subtlety, for you
-would never sell your friend."
-
-Grey, ashamed of the thoughts he had harboured against Lord Sandford in
-this matter, told the whole tale of the creature's disappearance; but he
-added, with a smile,--
-
-"I suspect that whatever price you paid for him is lying in one of the
-coffers now discovered in the old house, and I will gladly buy him
-back."
-
-"Nay, nay; that must not be. It is my wedding-gift to you or to your
-gentle lady here; and all I ask is, that upon some future day you will
-suffer me to visit you in your wedded home at Hartsbourne, and see Don
-Carlos and his master united once more."
-
-
-
-
- *CHAPTER XX.*
-
- *MERRY AS A MARRIAGE BELL.*
-
-
-The brilliant light of a sunny June morning was illumining the private
-chapel, where a marriage was being solemnized in presence of the Queen,
-and of certain favoured persons connected with the Court, of whom the
-Duchess of Marlborough was one.
-
-The Duke himself was in Holland, whither he had gone so soon as the army
-was able to leave its winter quarters. The year of victory, from which
-he had returned a few months before, was destined to be followed by a
-year of disaster to the Allies, and already the brow of the Duchess
-seemed somewhat clouded by care. She had her own troubles, too, at
-Court. The Queen's favour was distinctly waning, and the imperious
-temper of the Duchess knew not how to put up with what seemed to her
-coldness or slights. She felt the influence of Harley, and of her
-kinswoman and his, Mrs. Masham, gaining ground daily; and the presage of
-coming trouble seemed to be hanging over her now. Yet she bore herself
-bravely, and to-day her face was wreathed in smiles; for Sir Grey
-Dumaresq was her particular favourite, and had been her guest for a
-great part of the year, whenever he was in town; and the Queen's
-interest in the young man and his career and success was one of the
-strongest links which still bound them together.
-
-And to-day Grey Dumaresq was to wed the Lady Geraldine, and the Queen
-had decreed that the ceremony should take place at an early hour in her
-own private chapel in Kensington Palace, that she might witness the
-nuptials herself; for she had been greatly pleased by the beauty and
-modesty and gentleness of Geraldine, who had been presented to her by
-the Duchess, and she desired to show her approval of the young baronet's
-choice by her own presence at his espousals.
-
-Lady Romaine had forgotten her anger and jealousy against her daughter
-in her pride and delight at the honour bestowed upon them. It had
-pleased her to speak slightingly of the Queen and her Court at such
-times as she had been uncertain of the nature of her own reception
-there; but now she could not boast sufficiently of the condescension and
-kindness of the Queen, of her intimacy with the Duchess, and of the
-favour in which her son-in-law-elect was held by royalty and by all the
-Court. The matron had even found it well to throw aside some of those
-frivolities and follies that hitherto had been jealously retained, as
-giving her favour in the eyes of the young bloods of fashion, with whom
-she had been wont to amuse herself. Her ready observation told her that
-she was derided for these by graver persons, and that at the Court they
-would hinder rather than help her advance to favour. With quick
-adaptability, she had sought to model herself upon the graver ladies
-surrounding the Queen, and even to emulate the Duchess of Marlborough in
-her stately dignity of demeanour. If she had not succeeded in this, she
-had at least gained much that had hitherto been lacking, and her husband
-and daughter rejoiced heartily in the change. If some of her admirers
-forsook her, she found their place taken by men of far greater standing,
-who regarded Lord Romaine as a man likely to be useful to his party, and
-paid a certain polished court to his handsome wife. The lady began to
-talk politics now, to discuss the Act of Union, the Occasional
-Conformity Bill, and other topics of the day, with an air of interest
-and knowledge; and being gifted with considerable quickness and powers
-of assimilation and reproduction, she was soon able to hold her own, and
-pass for a woman of acuteness and observation.
-
-She had found her daughter of great use to her at the first, for
-Geraldine was remarkably well educated, and had a very clear notion of
-the state of parties and the history of public movements. All her
-stores of information were at her mother's disposal, and so a new link
-had been formed between them during the months of the girl's betrothal,
-and instead of the mother's looking forward with delight to being rid of
-the incubus of a grown-up daughter, she was disposed to be pathetic over
-the separation and her own personal loss.
-
-Now this was a very happy change for Geraldine, for the lack of a
-mother's love had been very keenly felt by her. Her face, as she stood
-at the altar, plighting her troth to the man she loved, was full of a
-wonderful happiness and joy--a different face from the grave and almost
-wistful one of the past; different, and yet with an enhanced beauty
-which riveted the eyes of all beholders, and caused the Queen to wipe
-her eyes with her lace kerchief as she gazed, whisper softly in the ear
-of one of her ladies,--
-
-"Ah me! it is good to be young and beloved! Heaven send she may never
-know aught to dim that joy and that love!"
-
-Sir Grey's happiness and joy was no whit less than that of his bride,
-and was written almost as clear upon his face. Bride and bridegroom
-were both clad in white, as became the season and the ceremony; and the
-young man's gleaming whiteness was well set off by the gorgeous colours
-of Lord Sandford's attire, as he stood beside him as his supporter and
-"best man." This he did by his own request, and with the ready consent
-of the Queen. She had been told enough of Lord Sandford to be
-interested in that rather remarkable personage. She had given him
-audience more than once, and had intrusted him earlier in the year with
-a special embassy to the Duke of Marlborough and Prince Eugene, which he
-had so ably carried out that it was whispered he was likely to obtain
-more such secret service errands. It was the sort of work for which he
-was eminently fitted, and the responsibility had sobered him and kept in
-check all disposition on his part to break out into any of the wild
-excesses with which he had been wont to amuse himself in order to while
-away the time. He was now setting to work to get his affairs into
-order. Having failed to win the fortune of the heiress, he had to turn
-his mind to other methods. He had sold his horses for large sums to the
-gilded dandies who fluttered about him, and with some heavy winnings at
-the card-tables he paid off a number of his debts, and began to feel
-like a free man. The sale of his property at St. Albans, which he no
-longer wanted, enabled him to pay off a mortgage upon his ancestral
-acres; and with a little care and moderate luck in gaming (for Lord
-Sandford was not possessed of the scruples which had harassed Grey, and
-which were far in advance of his day), he hoped soon to retrieve the
-position of a man of wealth and position, which he had been inclined to
-fling away for the pleasures of a careless and vicious age.
-
-His friendship with Grey Dumaresq, strangely begun, and strangely
-broken, was now cemented afresh, and seemed likely to last and to
-increase. It was by his own wish that he stood beside him on his
-marriage day. He had so schooled himself that he could do this without
-pain, and he would have grudged the place to any other, claiming his own
-right as being Grey's oldest available friend.
-
-And now the brief ceremony was ended. Sir Grey and his bride came down
-from the steps of the altar to receive the felicitations and
-gratulations of their friends. The Queen kissed the bride upon her
-brow, wished her happiness, and presented her with a beautiful clasp of
-diamonds and pearls, which she took from the laces about her throat, and
-bade the young wife wear for her sake. Then when the royal lady had
-taken her departure, and the little procession had left the chapel,
-other friends and well-wishers crowded round, prophesying happiness and
-all other good things to the youthful pair. They streamed out--a
-rainbow-tinted bevy--into the courtyard, where coaches waited to convey
-them to the wedding feast at Lord Romaine's house; and this they found
-laid out in _al fresco_ fashion beneath the trees of the beautiful old
-garden, which had been Geraldine's place of refuge for so long, and to
-which she would be half sorry now to bid farewell.
-
-"Do you remember, sweetheart," whispered Grey in her ear, as they stood
-together and a little apart at the conclusion of the banquet--"do you
-remember that summer morning a year ago when I did hear you singing, and
-could not keep away?"
-
-"Remember! Do I ever forget it as I stand here looking at the shining
-river? Ah dear my lord, methinks it was upon that day that my heart
-first did leave mine own keeping, albeit it was long ere I knew it!"
-
-"Could we but have seen how it would be a year hence with us, how little
-would the clouds and darkness which followed have disturbed and troubled
-our peace!"
-
-"And yet methinks, dear love, it is better not to know; for so do we
-learn to trust the love of our heavenly Father, and to put our faith and
-confidence in Him. So He leads us from darkness into light, and our
-hearts are filled with love and gratitude towards Him."
-
-Grey bent and kissed her on the brow.
-
-"You shall teach me more of your pure faith and love, my wife, that we
-may be one in all things."
-
-
-Don Carlos was pawing the stones of the courtyard, in fretted impatience
-which Dick had some ado to curb. Beside him stood a light, graceful
-barb, bearing a lady's saddle on his back. A little in the rear were
-some half-dozen horses and some liveried servants. The clock in the
-tower of Lord Romaine's house had just struck the hour of three.
-
-The doors were flung open wide, and forth there came a gay company of
-guests, all eager to speed upon their way the newly-wedded pair. These
-had changed their wedding finery for riding dress. Grey wore his
-favourite workman-like suit of fine buff, stamped in silver, with white
-buckskin breeches and long boots. His lady was habited in a
-riding-dress of white face-cloth, with lacings of golden cord, a white
-hat with a drooping plume, and long white gauntlet gloves. Her palfrey
-was snow-white too, as became the bearer of a bride; and as Grey swung
-her deftly to her saddle, the pretty creature curveted and pranced, as
-though in pride at bearing so fair a burden.
-
-The next minute the bridegroom had leaped upon Don Carlos, and both
-riders were waving their hands in response to the eager clamour of
-gratulation and farewell which sprang to the lips of the bystanders.
-Smiling and waving his hat, Grey put Don Carlos at a trot, and the
-little procession swept out of the courtyard in all the glory of the
-summer afternoon, with the voices of their friends sounding gaily in
-their ears.
-
-"We shall be at Hartsbourne ere the day dies, sweet wife," spoke Grey,
-as he looked up at the sunny sky. "You will not be fatigued by the
-ride, after all you have gone through? You would not rather spend a
-night upon the way?"
-
-"Ah no; this is rest," answered Geraldine, as her light, mettlesome
-palfrey cantered gently alongside the stalwart Don Carlos. "I could
-ride for ever through this clear, soft sunshine, with the wind fanning
-our faces. Nay, nay, but we will reach Hartsbourne to-night. Have I
-not waited long enough to see my future home, O tyrant husband, who
-would not take me there before?" and a laugh sparkled in her eyes as she
-spoke these words, for it had always been one of their cherished jests
-that not till she came there as his wife should she look upon the
-beauties and the charms of Hartsbourne.
-
-"Did you desire it then so much, dearest?" he asked. "It was my wish
-that it should be made a meet and fitting home for you ere I did bring
-you thither. It looked so desolate when I reached it after being long
-absent. I did desire to take away that air of desolation ere your dear
-eyes should behold it. Yet had I thought you wished it so much--"
-
-"I wish nothing but to do your will, good my lord," she answered, with a
-look in her eyes that set his heart beating tumultuously within him.
-"And is not this worth waiting for? Can any sight of it be precious as
-this one will be, when my husband takes me home?"
-
-They had distanced their servants, and were riding alone in the lane;
-for they skirted the great city instead of passing through it, and kept
-to the softer, pleasanter tracks through fields and woodlands; so he
-could reach forth and take her hand, and hold it in his as they rode
-onwards with free elastic stride.
-
-"My beloved, my beloved, my beloved!" he replied, and his tongue refused
-all other words.
-
-
-The glory of the summer sunset was in the sky as they breasted the last
-wooded ridge which hid them from the hollow in which Hartsbourne lay.
-The woods, shimmering in their exquisite dress of golden green, seemed
-to take fire from the level glory of the ruddy rays lying across them.
-The waving grass tossed like a restless sea of light, as the breeze
-played over it; and the birds in the thickets, silent during the hours
-of heat, now burst into liquid melody to sing to rest the dying day.
-
-Halting at the top of the ridge, as Grey had halted there so long ago,
-as it now seemed to him, he pointed downwards with his whip, and there
-was a little quiver in his voice as he said,--
-
-"Yonder, in that hollow, lies our home. You can scarce see it for the
-screen of the trees; but you will see it anon--there where the shining
-stream meanders and the glades of the wood open out. Come, let us leave
-the road, and ride through my favourite glade. So shall I show you a
-glimpse of your home, where to my eyes it looks the fairest."
-
-They moved along side by side. The horses' feet made scarce a sound,
-sunk deep in grass and moss. The golden glamour of the beech wood
-encircled them, lights and shadows played hide-and-seek along the sward,
-flowers gemmed the hollows, and the breath of the honeysuckle was sweet
-to their senses as they pursued their way. The deer got up in haste at
-their approach, and scuttled away into deeper shadow; and squirrels and
-rabbits whisked hither and thither, astonished at this sudden invasion
-of their silvan solitude.
-
-But the bride and bridegroom scarce exchanged a word; their hearts were
-well-nigh too full. The happiness was almost oppressive. Suddenly Grey
-paused, and, drawing her a little to the left, pointed through an
-opening in the trees and said,--
-
-"There is your home, my dearest!"
-
-She saw it then, and her heart gave a great throb. They were looking
-upon the west front of the gray old house, no longer lying desolate,
-forlorn, shut up, its windows broken or shuttered, neglect and decay
-everywhere. No, all that was changed now. The windows shone between
-their carved mullions; the creepers which curtained the walls had been
-cut and trained, so that they could bloom and breathe once more, instead
-of hanging in vast masses, almost broken down by their own weight. The
-last of the sunlight gilded the tracery of oriel window and ancient
-carving; lay like a caress upon the smooth green of the wide terrace in
-front, with its clipped yew trees, its stone vases and statues, and its
-ancient sundial. Two stately peacocks walked up and down, uttering from
-time to time their strange, melancholy trumpet note. A great hound rose
-up from a sheltered corner, threw his head into the air, sniffed for a
-few moments, and then bounded towards them with a mighty baying sound.
-
-"Our first welcome, dear heart," spoke Grey. "This is one of the
-guardians of Hartsbourne's treasure. Well, he must learn that he has a
-new and a greater treasure to guard now."
-
-The hound knew the master well. He fawned upon him with delight; and,
-after having gravely sniffed at Geraldine's proffered hand, took her
-once and for all beneath his protection, and shared the love of his
-faithful heart betwixt her and her lord.
-
-The young wife slipped from her saddle as they reached the little wooden
-bridge which led over the stream, and the servants coming up in a few
-moments took the horses round by the road, whilst husband and wife went
-onwards with the hound in attendance, up the sloping greensward, where
-flowers gemmed the borders, and roses gave forth their sweetness upon
-the evening air; through the gardens, already partially restored, and in
-time to be made yet more beautiful; towards the house which was their
-home, lying dim and dreamlike in the gathering twilight.
-
-"Dear heart, we are at home. Welcome to Hartsbourne!" spoke he. And
-she could only lift her quivering lips to his, for she had no words in
-which to answer him.
-
-And so they passed into the ancient house together, to receive the
-loving greetings of their retainers and servants, who all knew the
-master by this time, and were eager and joyfully ready to receive the
-bride of his choice. Old Jock was there, in the glory of his new place
-as house-steward, the tears of joy standing in his eyes as he kissed the
-hand the lady graciously extended, when she thanked him for his
-protestations of devotion, and told him how she had heard of his
-fidelity to his master. It was all so happy, so full of simple joy and
-good will. She read affection to her lord in every face; she saw by the
-flower-decked rooms and the loving care everywhere visible throughout
-the quaint old house how much all had desired that this home-coming
-should bring joy to their hearts and bespeak the welcome of loving
-service. That was more to her than the beauty of the things her eyes
-rested upon--the soft hangings, the quaint carvings, the pictures, the
-plenishings, the rare and costly objects which met her gaze at every
-turn.
-
-"They were found in the secret chamber, most of them," Grey told her as,
-after having supped, they walked hand in hand through the house, which
-was all lighted up for their inspection. "When and how and whence they
-came there, I know not. Jock declares that many are heirlooms, which
-must have been hidden away in some time of peril--possibly at the rising
-of Monmouth, or at the Revolution; some perhaps even in the civil war;
-others, methinks, my poor father must have won from luckless gamblers,
-and have sold to his kinsman, or paid over to him as interest upon
-debts. I know not, I cannot tell; but here they are, and all men tell
-me they are mine. They will serve to make a fitting setting for the
-priceless jewel which my house doth now enshrine; and in so doing, they
-and we must needs find contentment."
-
-It would have been hard, in sooth, not to feel contentment in such
-environment. Grey had taken care not to destroy, but to restore, when
-the old house passed into his keeping once more. The old world charm
-hung yet upon it; nothing garish or bizarre was to be found there, as in
-the houses of fashionable dames such as Lady Romaine, who loved to
-jumble together trophies and curiosities from every part of the globe in
-confusion worse confounded. There was none of this lavish profusion or
-confusion here; but each thing looked in its own place, set off by
-polished panelling or dusky arras. And even the scent of rose leaves
-was the same as in his mother's day; and Grey whispered to his bride
-that he liked to think she could see them now, and share in some sort
-their happiness.
-
-As they reached the end of a long gallery, which brought their
-wanderings almost to a close, Grey paused before the door of a certain
-room, and instead of turning the handle immediately, he knocked upon the
-panels of the door.
-
-A deep sonorous voice bade him enter; and taking his wife's hand in his,
-he led her into a large, low, airy apartment, which had windows looking
-both south and west, where, upon a cleverly-contrived couch, running
-very easily upon wheels, lay an old man with a lion-like face and a mass
-of snow-white hair, whose hands were extended in eager yet restrained
-and dignified greeting.
-
-"Welcome--thrice welcome--happy bridegroom! Methought you would not fail
-to come and visit me to-night!"
-
-"Of course I should not fail, good friend; and here I bring you my wife,
-whom you have ofttimes desired to see.--Geraldine, need I tell you that
-this is my friend, Mr. Jonathan Wylde, whom last you saw as Father Time
-with his scythe and hour-glass? Well, he has cheated both, you see,
-albeit he was like to be mown down once. He will remain as our honoured
-guest and friend so long as he is spared to us. For he did come to my
-aid when I was very near to desperation and despair, and we have stood
-shoulder to shoulder ever since."
-
-"I know all the tale," answered Geraldine, and she knelt down and took
-the old man's hands in hers, bending upon him one of her sweetest
-glances. "It is a tale that goes to my heart, for it is hard to think
-even of sufferings past, where those we love are concerned. I thank you
-from my heart for all you did at that time for my husband. And indeed
-it was (under Providence) through you that his bark reached at the last
-so fair a haven, and that we are here together this night."
-
-The tears which had sprung to the old man's eyes slowly rolled down his
-cheeks. His happiness in seeing again the man he loved with his bride
-at his side was almost too much for him. Geraldine saw this, and
-pressed his hands gently, rising to her feet at the same time.
-
-"Nay, nay," he answered brokenly; "I was but an instrument in the hands
-of Providence--a link of the chain not made by human hands."
-
-"Yes, truly, we will think of it like that. It is God who has brought
-good out of evil, peace out of strife, calm out of storm for us all. To
-Him will we give the thanks and the praise. And now, good friend, we
-must bid you farewell, though only till the morrow."
-
-He took their hands, one in each of his, and looked at them as one of
-the old patriarchs might have gazed upon his beloved ones.
-
-"God bless and prosper you, my children!" he said; and they softly
-answered, "Amen."
-
-
-
-
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