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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68398 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68398)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The time spirit, by J. C. Snaith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The time spirit
- A romantic tale
-
-Author: J. C. Snaith
-
-Release Date: June 24, 2022 [eBook #68398]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by University of California
- libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TIME SPIRIT ***
-
-
-
-
-
-THE TIME SPIRIT
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Three pairs of eyes met in challenge]
- [PAGE 84]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- TIME SPIRIT
-
- _A Romantic Tale_
-
- BY
-
- J. C. SNAITH
- AUTHOR OF “THE COMING,” “THE SAILOR,” ETC.
-
-
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
- NEW YORK 1918
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY
- D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
-
-
- Printed in the United States of America
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. THE ARRIVAL 1
- II. AUNT ANNIE AND AUNTY HARRIET 32
- III. FLOWING WATER 68
- IV. BRIDPORT HOUSE 87
- V. ALARUMS AND EXCURSIONS 120
- VI. PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT 149
- VII. A TRAGIC COIL 170
- VIII. A BUSY MORNING 186
- IX. AN INTERLUDE 210
- X. TIME’S REVENGE 232
- XI. A BOMB 253
- XII. ARDORS AND ENDURANCES 273
- XIII. EVERYTHING FOR THE BEST 293
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- FACING
- PAGE
-
- Three pairs of eyes met in challenge _Frontispiece_
- “How did you come by it, Joe?” 24
- “You give up your young man--simply because of that?” 198
- “We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the light
- fringed her eyelids 296
-
-
-
-
-THE TIME SPIRIT
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE ARRIVAL
-
-
-I
-
-THE fog of November in its descent upon Laxton, one of London’s
-busiest suburbs, had effaced the whole of Beaconsfield Villas,
-including the Number Five on the fanlight over the door of the last
-house but two in the row. To a tall girl in black on her way from the
-station this was a serious matter. She was familiar with the lie of
-the land in the light of day and in darkness less than Cimmerian, but
-this evening she had to ask a policeman, a grocer’s boy, and a person
-of no defined status, before a kid-gloved hand met the knocker of her
-destination.
-
-It was the year 1890. Those days are very distant now. Victoria
-the Good was on the throne of Britain. W.G. went in first for
-Gloucestershire; Lohmann and Lockwood bowled for Surrey. The hansom was
-still the gondola of London. The Tube was not, and eke the motor-bus.
-The _Daily Mail_ had not yet invented Lord Northcliffe. Orville Wright
-had not made good. William Hohenzollern used to come over to see his
-grandmother.
-
-Indeed, on this almost incredibly distant evening in the world’s
-history, his grandmother in three colors and a widow’s cap, with a blue
-ribbon across her bosom, surmounted the sitting-room chimney-piece of
-Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas. And at the other end of the room,
-over the dresser, was an old gentleman with a beard, by common consent
-the wisest man in the realm, who talked about “splendid isolation,” and
-gave Heligoland to deep, strong, patient Germany in exchange for a tiny
-strip of Africa.
-
-Yes, there were giants in those days. And no doubt there are giants in
-these. But it is not until little Miss Clio trips in with her scroll
-that we shall know for certain, shall we?
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the first crisp tap the door of Number Five was flung open.
-
-“Harriet, so here you are!”
-
-There was welcome in the eyes as well as in the voice of the eager,
-personable creature who greeted the visitor. There was welcome also in
-the gush of mingled gas and firelight from a cosy within.
-
-“How are you, Eliza?”
-
-The tall girl asked the question, shut the door, and kissed her
-sister, all in one breath, so that only a minute quantity of a London
-“partickler” was able to follow her into the room.
-
-The hostess pressed Harriet into a chair, as near the bright fire as
-she could be persuaded to sit.
-
-“What a night! I was half afraid you wouldn’t face it.”
-
-“I always try to keep a promise.” The quiet, firm voice had a gravity
-and a depth which made it sound years older than that of the elder
-sister.
-
-“I know you do--and that’s a lot to say of anyone. How’s your health,
-my dear? It’s very good to see you after all these months.”
-
-Chattering all the time with the artlessness of a nature wholly
-different from that of her visitor, Eliza Kelly took the kettle from
-the hob and made the tea.
-
-Beyond a superficial general likeness there was nothing to suggest the
-near relationship of these two. The air and manner which invested the
-well-made coat and skirt, the lady-like muff and stole, with a dignity
-rather austere, were not to be found in the unpretentious front parlor
-opening on to the street, or in its brisk, voluble, easy-going mistress.
-
-“Harriet, you are really all right again?” Eliza impulsively poured
-out the tea before it had time to brew, thereby putting herself to the
-trouble of returning it to the pot.
-
-“Oh, yes.” Harriet removed her gloves elegantly. She was quite a
-striking-looking creature of nine-and-twenty. In spite of a recent
-illness, she had an air of strength and virility. The face and brow had
-been cast in a mold of serious beauty, the eyes, a clear deep gray,
-were strongholds of good sense. Even without the aid of a considered,
-rather formidable manner, this young woman would have exacted respect
-anywhere.
-
-“Take a muffin while it’s warm.”
-
-Harriet did so.
-
-“I had no idea your illness was going to be so bad.”
-
-The younger woman would not own that her illness had been anything of
-the kind; she was even inclined to make light of it.
-
-“Why, you’ve been away weeks and weeks. And Aunt Annie says you’ve had
-to have an operation.”
-
-“Only a slight one.” The tone was casual. “Nothing to speak of.”
-
-“Nothing to speak of! Aunt Annie says you have been at Brighton I don’t
-know how long.”
-
-“Well, you know,” said Harriet in a discreet, rather charming voice,
-“they thought I was run down and that I ought to have a good rest. You
-see, the long illness of her Grace was very trying for those who had to
-look after her.”
-
-“I suppose so. Although her Grace has been dead nearly two years.
-Anyhow, I hope the Family paid your expenses.” The elder sister and
-prudent housewife looked at Harriet keenly.
-
-“Everything, even my railway fare.” A fine note came into the voice of
-Harriet Sanderson.
-
-“Lucky you to be in such service,” said Eliza in a tone of envy.
-
-Slowly the color deepened in Harriet’s cheek.
-
-“By the way, what are you doing at Buntisford? Does it mean you’ve left
-Bridport House for good?”
-
-“It does, I suppose.”
-
-“But I thought Buntisford had been closed for years?”
-
-“His Grace had it opened again, so that he can go down there when he
-wants to be quiet. He was always fond of it. There’s a bit of rough
-shooting and a river, and it’s within thirty miles of London; he finds
-it very convenient. Of course, it’s quite small and easy to manage.”
-
-“What is your position there?”
-
-“I’m housekeeper,” said Harriet. “That is to say, I manage everything.”
-
-The elder sister looked at her with incredulity, in which a little awe
-was mingled. “Housekeeper--to the Duke of Bridport--and you not yet
-thirty, Hattie. Gracious, goodness, what next!”
-
-The visitor smiled at this simplicity. “It’s hardly so grand as it
-sounds. The house doesn’t need much in the way of servants; the Family
-never go there. His Grace comes down now and again for a week-end when
-he wants to be alone. Just himself--there’s never anyone else.”
-
-“But housekeeper!” Eliza was still incredulous. “At twenty-nine! I call
-it wonderful.”
-
-“Is it so remarkable?” Harriet’s calmness seemed a little uncanny.
-
-“The dad would have thought so, had he lived to see it. He always
-thought the world of the Family.”
-
-The younger sister smiled at this artlessness.
-
-“Every reason to do so, no doubt,” she said with a brightening eye and
-a rush of warmth to her voice. “I am sure there couldn’t be better
-people in this world than the Dinnefords.”
-
-“That was the father’s opinion, anyway. He always said they knew how to
-treat those who served them.”
-
-“Not a doubt of that,” said Harriet. “They have been more than good to
-me.” The color flowed over her face. “And his Grace often speaks of
-the father. He says he was his right hand at Ardnaleuchan, and that he
-saved him many a pound in a twelvemonth.”
-
-“I expect he did,” said Eliza, her own eyes kindling. “He simply
-worshiped the Family. Mother used to declare that he would have sold
-his soul for the Dinnefords.”
-
-“He was a very good man,” said Harriet simply.
-
-“It would have been a proud day for him, Hattie, had he lived to see
-you where you are now. And not yet thirty--with all your life before
-you.”
-
-But the words of the elder sister brought a look of constraint to the
-face of Harriet. Mistaking the cause, Eliza was puzzled. “And it won’t
-be my opinion only,” she said. “Aunt Annie I’m sure will think as I do.
-She’ll say you’ve had a wonderful piece of luck.”
-
-“But the position _does_ mean great responsibility”--there was a sudden
-change in Harriet’s tone.
-
-Eliza kept her eyes on the face of the younger woman, that fine Scots
-face, so full of resolution and character. “Whatever it may be, Hattie,
-I’m thinking you’ll just about be able to manage it.”
-
-“I mean to try.” Harriet spoke very slowly and softly. “I mean to show
-myself worthy of his Grace’s confidence.”
-
-The elder sister smiled an involuntary admiration; there was such a
-calm force about the girl. “And, of course, it means that you are made
-for life.”
-
-But in the eyes of Harriet was a fleck of anxiety. “Ah! you don’t know.
-It’s a big position--an awfully big position.”
-
-Eliza agreed.
-
-“There are times when it almost frightens me.” Harriet spoke half to
-herself.
-
-“Everything has to run like clockwork, of course,” said the
-sympathetic Eliza. “And it’s bound to make the upper servants at
-Bridport House very jealous.”
-
-“It may.” The deep tone had almost an edge of disdain. “Anyhow it
-doesn’t matter. I don’t go to Bridport House now.”
-
-“But you can’t tell me, my dear, that they like to hear of her Grace’s
-second maid holding the keys in the housekeeper’s room.”
-
-The calm Harriet smiled. “But it’s only Buntisford, after all. You
-speak as if it was Bridport House or Ardnaleuchan.”
-
-Eliza shook a knowledgeable head. “They won’t like it all the same,
-Hattie. The dad wouldn’t have, for one. He was all his life on the
-estate, but he was turned fifty before he rose to be factor at
-Ardnaleuchan.”
-
-“Well, Eliza”--there was a force, a decision in the words which made an
-end of criticism--“it’s just a matter for the Duke. The place is not of
-my seeking. I was asked to take it--what else could I do?”
-
-“Don’t think I blame you. If it’s the wish of his Grace there is no
-more to be said. Still, there’s no denying you’ve a big responsibility.”
-
-At these words a shadow came into the resolute eyes.
-
-Said the elder sister reassuringly, “You’ll be equal to the position,
-never fear. That head of yours is a good one, Hattie. Even Aunt Annie
-admits that. By the way, have you seen her lately?”
-
-“Seen--Aunt Annie?” said Harriet defensively. The sudden mention of
-that name produced an immediate change of tone in her distinguished
-niece.
-
-“She’s been asking about you. She wants very much to see you.”
-
-The shadow deepened in Harriet’s eyes. But an instant later she had
-skillfully covered an air of growing constraint by a conventional
-question.
-
-“How’s Joe, Eliza?”
-
-“Pretty much as usual. He’ll be off duty soon.”
-
-Joe Kelly was Eliza’s husband, and a member of the Metropolitan police
-force. In the eyes of her family, Eliza Sanderson had married beneath
-her. But Joe, if a rough diamond, was a good fellow, and Eliza could
-afford not to be over-sensitive on the score of public opinion. Joe had
-no superficial graces, it was as much as he could do to write a line
-in his notebook, high rank in his calling was not prophesied by his
-best friends, but his wife knew she was well off. They had been married
-eight years, and if only Providence had blessed a harmonious union in
-a becoming manner, Eliza Kelly would not have found it in her heart to
-envy the greatest lady in the land. But Providence had not done so, the
-more was the pity.
-
-“By the way,”--Eliza suddenly broke a silence--“there’s a piece of news
-for you, Hattie. A friend is coming to see you at five.”
-
-“A friend--to see me!”
-
-“To see you, my dear. In fact, I might say an admirer. Can’t you guess
-who?”
-
-“I certainly can’t.”
-
-“Then I think you ought.” Mischief had yielded to laughter of a rather
-quizzical kind.
-
-“I didn’t know that I had any admirers--in Laxton.”
-
-The touch of manner delicately suggested ducal circles.
-
-“You can have a husband for the asking, our Harriet.” The eternal
-feminine was now in command of the situation.
-
-Harriet frowned.
-
-“I can’t think who it can be.”
-
-“No?” laughed the tormentress. “You are not going to tell me you have
-forgotten the young man you met the last time you were here?”
-
-It seemed that the distinguished visitor had.
-
-“I do call that hard lines,” mocked Eliza. “You have really forgotten
-him?”
-
-“I really have!”
-
-“He has talked of you ever since. When was Miss Sanderson coming again?
-Could he be invited to meet her? He wanted to see her aboot something
-verra impoortant.”
-
-A light dawned upon Harriet’s perplexity.
-
-“Surely you don’t mean--you don’t mean that red-headed young
-policeman----?”
-
-“Dugald Maclean. Of course, I do. He has invited himself to meet you at
-five o’clock.” Eliza sat back in her chair and laughed at the face of
-Harriet, but the face of Harriet showed it was hardly a laughing matter.
-
-“Well!” she cried. Her eyes were smiling, yet they could not veil their
-look of deep annoyance.
-
-“Now, Hattie,” admonished the voice of maternal wisdom, “there’s no
-need to take offense. Don’t forget you are twenty-nine, Dugald Maclean
-is a smart young man, and Joe says he’ll make his way in the world. Of
-course, you hold a very high position now, but if you don’t want to
-find yourself on the shelf it’s time you began to think very seriously
-about a husband.”
-
-“We will change the subject, if you don’t mind.” The tone revealed a
-wide gulf between the outlook of Eliza Kelly and that of a confidential
-retainer in the household of the Duke of Bridport.
-
-“Very well, my dear. But don’t bite. Have the last piece of muffin. And
-then I’ll toast another for Constable Maclean.”
-
-
-II
-
-The clock on the chimney-piece struck five. Before its last echo had
-died there came a loud knock on the front door.
-
-Constable Maclean was a ruddy young Scotsman. He was tall, lean,
-large-boned, with prominent teeth and ears. Although freckled like a
-turkey’s egg, he was not a bad-looking fellow. His boots, however,
-took up a lot of space in a small room, and the manner of his entrance
-suggested that the difficult operation known as “falling over oneself”
-was in the act of consummation. But there was an intense earnestness in
-his manner, and a personal force in his look, which gave a redeeming
-grace of character to a shy awkwardness, verging on the grotesque.
-
-“Good afternune,” said Constable Maclean, removing his helmet with a
-polite grimace.
-
-One of the ladies shook hands, the other welcomed the young man with
-a cordial good-evening and bade him sit down. Constable Maclean,
-encumbered with a regulation overcoat, sat down rather like a
-performing bear.
-
-At first conversation languished. Yet no welcome could have been more
-cordial than Eliza’s. She felt like a mother to this young man. It was
-her nature to feel like a mother to every young man. Moreover, Dugald
-Maclean, as he sat perspiring with nervousness on the edge of a chair
-much too small for him, seemed to need some large-hearted woman to feel
-like a mother towards him.
-
-Miss Harriet Sanderson was to blame, no doubt, for the young
-policeman’s aphasia. Her coolness and ease, with a half quizzical, half
-ironical look surmounting it, seemed to increase the bashfulness of
-Dugald Maclean whenever he ventured to look at her out of the tail of
-his eye.
-
-It was clear that the young man was suffering acutely. Nature had
-intended him to be expansive--not in the Sassenach sense perhaps,--but
-given the time and the place and a right conjunction of the planets,
-Dugald Maclean had social gifts, at least they were so assessed at
-Carrickmachree in his native Caledonia. Moreover, he was rather proud
-of them. He was an ambitious and gifted young police officer. For many
-moons he had been looking forward to this romantic hour. Since a first
-chance meeting with the semi-divine Miss Sanderson he had been living
-in the hope of a second, yet now by the courtesy of Providence it was
-granted to him he might never have seen a woman before.
-
-The lips of Constable Maclean were dry, his tongue clove to the roof of
-an amazingly capacious mouth. As for Miss Sanderson, mere silence began
-to achieve wonders in the way of gentle, smiling irony. But the hostess
-was more humane. For one thing she was married, and although Fate had
-been cruel, she had a sacred instinct which made her regard every young
-man as a boy of her own.
-
-Every moment the situation became more delicate, but Eliza’s handling
-of it was superb. She brewed a fresh cup of tea for Constable Maclean,
-and then plied the toasting-fork to such purpose that the young man
-became so busy devouring muffins that for a time he forgot his shame.
-Eliza could toast and butter a muffin with anyone, Constable Maclean
-could eat a muffin with anyone--thus things began to go better. And
-when, without turning a hair, the young man entered upon his third
-muffin, Miss Sanderson dramatically unbent.
-
-“Allow me to give you another cup of tea.” The voice was melody.
-
-A succession of guttural noises, which might be interpreted as “Thank
-ye kindly, miss,” having come apparently from the boots of Constable
-Maclean, Miss Harriet Sanderson handed him a second cup of tea.
-
-Still, the conversation did not prosper. But the perfect hostess,
-kneeling before the fire in order to toast muffin the fifth, had still
-her best card to play. It was the ace of trumps, in fact, and when she
-rose to spread butter over a sizzling, delicious, corrugated surface,
-she decided that the time had come to make use of it.
-
-Perhaps the factor in the situation which moved her to this step was
-that only one muffin now remained for her husband when he came off duty
-half-an-hour hence, and that his young colleague of the X Division
-seemed ready to go on devouring them until the crack of doom.
-
-“That reminds me,” Eliza suddenly remarked as she cut the fifth muffin
-in half, “I promised Mrs. Norris I would go across after tea to have a
-look at her latest.”
-
-“You are not going out, Eliza, such a night as this?” said Harriet in a
-voice of consternation.
-
-“A promise is a promise, my dear, you know that. Mrs. Norris has just
-had her sixth--the sweetest little boy. Some people have all the luck.”
-
-“But the fog--you can’t see a yard in front of you!”
-
-“It’s only just across the street, my dear.”
-
-
-III
-
-As soon as Eliza, hatted and cloaked, had gone to see Mrs. Norris’s
-latest, a change came over Constable Maclean. He was a young man of
-big ideas. But all that they had done for him so far was to turn life
-into a tragedy. By nature fiercely sensitive, the shyness which made
-his life a burden had a trick of crystallizing at the most inconvenient
-moments into a kind of dumb madness. A crisis of this kind was upon him
-now. Yet he had a will of iron. And in order to keep faith with the
-highest law of his being that will was always forcing him to do things,
-and say things, which people who did not happen to be Dugald Maclean
-could only regard as perfectly amazing.
-
-His acquaintance with Miss Sanderson was very slight. They came from
-neighboring villages in their native Scotland; many times he had gazed
-from afar on his beautiful compatriot, but only once before could he
-really be said to have met her. That was months ago, in that very room,
-when he had been but a few days in London. Since then a very ambitious
-young man had thought about her a great deal. The force and charm of
-her personality had cast a spell upon him; this was a demonic woman if
-ever there was one; he had hardly guessed that such creatures existed.
-It would be wrong to say that he was in love with her; his passion was
-centered upon ideas and not upon people; yet Harriet Sanderson was
-already marked in the catalogue as the property of Dugald Maclean.
-
-“Do you like vairse?” inquired the young man, with an abruptness which
-startled her.
-
-The unexpected question was far from the present plane of her thoughts,
-but it was answered to the best of her ability.
-
-“Yes, I like it very much,” she said, tactfully.
-
-“I’m gled.” Constable Maclean unbuttoned his great coat.
-
-Somewhere in the mind of Harriet lurked the romantic hope that this
-remarkable young man was about to produce a hare or a rabbit after the
-manner of a wonder-worker at the Egyptian Hall. But in this she was
-disappointed. He simply took forth from an inner pocket of his tunic
-several sheets of neatly-folded white foolscap, and handed them to Miss
-Sanderson without a word. He then folded his arms Napoleonically and
-watched the force of their impact upon her.
-
-“You wish me to read _this_?” she asked, after a brief but sharp
-mingling of confusion and surprise.
-
-The young man nodded.
-
-With fingers that trembled a little, she unrolled the sheets of a fair,
-well-written copy of “Urban Love, a trilogy.”
-
-She read the poem line by line, ninety-six in all, with the face of a
-sphinx.
-
-“What do ye think o’ it, Miss Sanderrson?” There was a slight tremor in
-the voice of the author. The silence which had followed the reading of
-“Urban Love, a trilogy” had proved a little too much, even for that
-will of iron.
-
-“It is very nice, if I may say so, very nice indeed,” said Miss
-Sanderson cautiously.
-
-“I’ll be doin’ better than that, I’m thinkin’.” A certain rigidity came
-into the voice of the author of the poem. The word “nice,” was almost
-an affront; it had come upon his ear like a false quantity upon that of
-a classical scholar.
-
-“Did you really do it all by yourself?” The inquiry was due less to
-the performance, which Harriet was quite unable to judge, than to the
-author’s almost terrible concentration of manner, which clearly implied
-that it would not do to take such an achievement for granted.
-
-“Every worrd, Miss Sanderrson. Except----”
-
-“Except what, Mr. Maclean?”
-
-“Mr. Lonie, the Presbyterian Minister, helped me a bit wi’ the
-scansion.”
-
-“If I may say so, I think it is remarkably clever.”
-
-It appeared, however, that these pages were only the opening stanzas of
-a poem which was meant to have many. They were still in the limbo of
-time, behind the high forehead of the author, but upon a day they would
-burst inevitably upon an astonished world. Would Miss Sanderson accept
-the dedication?
-
-Miss Sanderson, blushing a little from acute surprise, said that
-nothing would give her greater pleasure. She was amazed, she wanted to
-laugh, but the intense, almost truculent earnestness of the young man
-had put an enchantment upon her.
-
-But all this was simply a prelude to the great drama of the emotions
-which Constable Maclean had now to unfold. He had broken the ice
-with the charmer. The butterfly was pinned down with “Urban Love, a
-trilogy,” through its breast. Miss Sanderson had never had time for
-reading, therefore she was in nowise literary. Thus, perhaps, it was
-less the merit of the work itself, which must be left to the judgment
-of scholars, than the force, the audacity, the driving-power of its
-author which seemed almost to deliver her captive into his hands.
-
-She, it seemed, was its _onlie_ true begetter. The poem was in her
-honor. Heroica, calm and fair, was the protagonist of “Urban Love, a
-trilogy,” and she was Heroica. The position was none of her seeking,
-but it carried with it grave responsibilities.
-
-In the first place it exposed her to an offer of marriage. “Urban Love,
-a trilogy,” had broken so much of the ice that Dugald Maclean plunged
-horse, foot and artillery through the hole it had made. At the moment
-he could not lead Heroica to the altar; it would hardly be prudent for
-a young constable of eight months’ standing to offer to do so, but he
-sincerely hoped that she would promise to wait for him.
-
-Galled by the spur of ambition, Dugald Maclean took the whole plunge
-where smaller men would have been content merely to try the depth of
-the water.
-
-Miss Sanderson was frozen with astonishment. It was true that “Urban
-Love, a trilogy,” had half prepared her for a declaration in form,
-but she had not foreseen the swiftness of the onset. This was her
-first experience of the kind, but she was a woman of the world and she
-gathered her dignity about her like a garment.
-
-“Ye’re no offendit, Miss Sanderrson?” There was something titanic in
-the slow mustering of his forces to break an arid pause.
-
-“I am not offended, Mr. Maclean.” The tone of Miss Sanderson said she
-was offended a little. “But I do think----”
-
-“What do ye think, Miss Sanderrson?” The naïveté of the young man
-provoked a sharp intake of breath.
-
-“I think, Mr. Maclean”--the candor of Miss Sanderson was deliberate but
-not unkind--“if I were you, before I offered to marry anybody, I should
-try seriously to better myself.”
-
-The words, pregnant and uncompromising, were masked by a tone so deep
-and calm that a first-rate intellect was able to treat them on their
-merits. In spite of a flirtation with the Muses, this young man was a
-remarkable combination of wild audacity and extreme shrewdness. He had
-a power of mind which enabled him to distinguish the false from the
-true. Thus he saw at once, without resentment or pique, that the advice
-of Heroica was that of a friend.
-
-She had a strong desire to box the ears of this rawboned young
-policeman for his impertinence; but at heart this was a real woman,
-and the dynamic forces of her sex were strong in her. It was hard to
-keep from laughing in the face of this young man in a hurry, who rushed
-his fences in a way that was simply grotesque; yet she could not help
-admiring the power within him, and she wished him well.
-
-“It’s gude advice, Miss Sanderrson.” His tone of detachment drew a
-ripple from lips that laughed very seldom. “I’m thinkin’ I’ll tak’ it.
-But ye’ll bear the matter in mind?”
-
-“I make no rash promises, Mr. Maclean.”
-
-“Well, if ye won’t, ye won’t. But I’m thinkin’ I’d work the better at
-the Latin if I could count on ye.”
-
-“Studying Latin, are you, Mr. Maclean?” The surprise of Miss Sanderson
-was rather respectful.
-
-“Mr. Lonie is learnin’ me,” said the young man, with a slight touch of
-vainglory. “And I’m thinkin’ he’ll verra soon be learnin’ me the Greek.”
-
-“Are you going to college?”
-
-“Maybe ay. Maybe no. You never can tell where a pairson may get to.
-Anyhow I’m learnin’ to speak the language. Ae day I’ll be as gude at
-the Saxon as you and your sister have become, Miss Sanderrson.”
-
-It was hard not to smile, yet she knew her countrymen too well to treat
-such a matter lightly.
-
-“And I’ve a’ready set aboot writin’ for the papers.”
-
-“Begun already to write for the papers, have you, Mr. Maclean?” This
-was not a young man to smile at. “Well, wherever you may get to,” Miss
-Sanderson’s tone was softer than any she had yet used, “I am sure I
-wish you well.”
-
-“Thank ye,” said the young man dryly. “But why not gie a pairson a
-helping hand?”
-
-“I am not sure that I like you well enough.” Such candor was extorted
-by the seriousness with which she was now having to treat him. “You
-see, Mr. Maclean, it is all so sudden. We have only met once before.”
-
-“May I hope, Miss Sanderrson?”
-
-Suddenly he moved his chair towards her and took her hand.
-
-“Mr. Maclean, you may not.” The hand was withdrawn firmly.
-
-“Well, think it owre, Miss Sanderson.”
-
-The young man moved back his chair to its first position in order to
-restore the _status quo_.
-
-Harriet shook her head. And then all at once, to the deep consternation
-of Constable Maclean, she broke into an anguish of laughter, which good
-manners, try as they might, were not able to control.
-
-
-IV
-
-In the midst of this unseemly behavior on the part of Miss Sanderson,
-the door next the street was flung open with violence. A figure Homeric
-of aspect emerged from the night.
-
-It was that of Constable Joseph Kelly, of the Metropolitan Police; an
-ornament of the X Division, a splendid man to look at, nearly six feet
-high. Broad of girth, proportioned finely, his helmet crowned him like
-a hero of old. His face, richly tinted by daily and nightly exposure
-to the remarkable climate of London, was the color of a ripe apple,
-and there presided in it the almost god-like good-humor of the race to
-which he belonged.
-
-This emblem of superb manhood was laden heavily. There was his long
-overcoat, a tremendous, swelling affair; there was his furled oilskin
-cape; at one side of his girdle was his truncheon-case, his lamp at
-the other side of it; in his left hand was a modest basket which had
-contained his dinner, and in his right was a larger wicker arrangement
-which might have contained anything.
-
-“Is that our Harriet?” said Constable Kelly, in the act of closing the
-door deftly with his heel. “Good evening, gal. Pleased to see you.”
-
-He set down the large basket on the floor in a rather gingerly manner,
-placed the small one on the table, came to Harriet, kissed her audibly,
-and then turned to the room’s second occupant with an air of surprise.
-
-“Hello, Scotchie! What are _you_ doing here?”
-
-Before Dugald Maclean could answer the question he was in the throes of
-a second attack of dumb madness. This malady made his life a burden.
-When only one person was by he seldom had difficulty in expressing
-himself, but any addition to the company was apt to plunge him into
-hopeless defeat.
-
-“Up to no good, I expect.” Joseph Kelly, disapproval in his eyes,
-answered his own question, since other answer there was none. “I never
-see such a feller. Been mashing you, Harriet, by the look of him.”
-
-It was a bow drawn at a venture by a shrewd colleague of the X
-Division. An immediate effusion of rose pink to the young man’s
-freckled countenance was full of information for a close observer.
-
-“Durn me if he hasn’t!” Gargantuan laughter rose to the ceiling.
-
-Harriet blushed. But the look in her face was not discomfiture merely.
-There was plain annoyance and a look of rather startled anxiety for
-which the circumstances could hardly account.
-
-“Scotchie, you’re a nonesuch.” But Joe suddenly lowered his voice in
-answer to the alarm in the face of his sister-in-law. “You are the
-limit, my lad. Do you know what he did last week, Harriet? I’ll tell
-you.”
-
-“Let me make you a cup of tea, Joe.” And his sister-in-law, who seemed
-oddly agitated by his arrival, rose in the humane hope of diverting the
-attack.
-
-But the story was too good to remain untold.
-
-“It’ll take the X Division twenty years to live it down.” Kelly
-throbbed and gurgled like a donkey-engine as he fixed his youthful
-colleague with a somber eye. “This young feller, what do you think he
-did last week?”
-
-“The kettle will soon boil, Joe.”
-
-“Harriet!”--the rich rolling voice thrilled dramatically--“about
-midnight, last Monday week as ever was, this smart young officer saw
-an old party in an eyeglass and a topper and a bit o’ fur round his
-overcoat, standin’ on the curb at Piccadilly Circus. He strolls up,
-taps him on the shoulder, charges him with loitering with intent and
-runs him in.”
-
-“Here’s your tea, Joe.” The voice was sweetly polite.
-
-“And who do you think the old party was, my gal? Only a Director of the
-Bank of England--that’s all. The rest of the Force is guying us proper.
-They want to know when we are going to lock up the Governor.”
-
-“Joe, your tea!”
-
-“We’ll never get over it, gal, not in my time. Scotchie, you are too
-ambitious. There isn’t scope for your abilities in the Metropolitan
-Force. Turn your attention to some other branch of the law. You ought
-to take chambers in the Temple, you ought, my lad.”
-
-But in answer to the look in the eyes of Harriet, her brother-in-law
-checked the laugh that rose again to his lips. There was a strange
-anxiety upon her face, an anxiety that was now in some way communicated
-to him. It was clear from the glances they exchanged and the silence
-that ensued, that both were much embarrassed by the presence of Maclean.
-
-However, after the young man had entered upon a struggle for words
-with which to meet this persiflage and they had refused to come forth,
-he suddenly noticed that the hands of the clock showed a quarter to six
-and he rose determinedly.
-
-“Yes, it’s time you went on duty,” said the sardonic Kelly with an air
-of relief.
-
-Constable Maclean, feeling much was at stake, made a great effort
-to achieve a dignified exit. He was an odd combination of the
-thick-skinned and the hypersensitive. At this moment the shattering wit
-of his peer of the X Division made him wish he had never been born, but
-he was too dour a fighter to take it lying down.
-
-“Gude-nicht, Miss Sanderrson.” With one more grimace he offered a hand
-not indelicately.
-
-“Good-night, Mr. Maclean.” The tone of studied kindness was a salve for
-his wounds. The effrontery of this young man did not call for pity. And
-yet it was his to receive it from the sterling heart of a true woman.
-
-The smile, the arch glance, the ready handshake did so much to restore
-Dugald Maclean in his own esteem, that he was able to retire with even
-a touch of swagger, which somehow, in spite of an awkwardness almost
-comically ursine, sat uncommonly well on such a dashing young policeman.
-
-Indeed, the exit of Constable Maclean came very near the point of
-bravado. For as he passed the large wicker basket which Kelly had
-placed on the floor, the young man turned audaciously upon his
-tormentor. Said he with a grin of sheer defiance:
-
-“What hae ye gotten i’ the basket, Joe?”
-
-“Never you mind. ’Op it.”
-
-Less out of natural curiosity, which however was very great, than a
-desire to show all whom it might concern that he was again his own man,
-Dugald Maclean laid his hand on the lid of the basket.
-
-“What hae ye gotten, Joe? Rabbuts?”
-
-“If you must know, it’s a young spannil.” The answer came with rather
-truculent hesitation.
-
-“A young spannil, eh? I’m thinkin’ I’ll hae a look.”
-
-“Be off about your duty, my lad.” Joe began to look threatening.
-
-“Juist a speir.”
-
-“’Op it, I tell you.”
-
-But in open defiance, Dugald Maclean had already begun to untie the
-string which held the lid of the basket in place. The majestic Kelly
-rose from his tea. Without further words he seized the young man firmly
-from behind by the collar of his coat. And then he hustled him as far
-as the door in a very efficient professional manner, straight into the
-arms of Eliza, who at that moment was in the act of entering it.
-
-
-V
-
-At the open door there was a brief scurry of laughter and protest which
-ended in a riot of confusion. And then happened an odd thing. But of
-the three persons struggling upon the threshold of Number Five only
-one was aware of it, and he had the wit to raise a great voice to its
-highest pitch in order to conceal a fact so remarkable.
-
-“For heaven’s sake hold your noise, Joe, else you’ll frighten the
-neighbors,” said Eliza, getting in it at last and indulging in
-suppressed shrieks at the manner of Dugald Maclean’s putting out.
-
-An instant later, the young policeman was in the street and the door of
-Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas, had closed upon him. But his singular
-exit was merely the prelude to an incident far more amazing.
-
-In the uproar of Joe had been fell design. As soon as it ceased the
-reason for it grew apparent. An incredible sound was filling the room.
-
-“Whatever’s that!” Eliza almost shrieked in sheer wonderment.
-
-Harriet’s behavior was different. For a moment she was spellbound. The
-look in her eyes verged upon horror.
-
-It seemed that a child was crying lustily.
-
-“Wherever can it be!” cried the frantic Eliza.
-
-A wild glance round the room told Eliza that there was only one place
-in which it could be. Her eyes fell at once on the large wicker basket,
-which had been set on the floor near the fire.
-
-“Well, in all my born days!”
-
-She rushed to the basket and began furiously to untie the lid. But
-the maxim “the more haste the less speed” was as true in 1890 as it
-is today. Eliza’s fingers merely served to double and treble knot the
-string.
-
-Uncannily calm, Harriet rose from the table, the bread knife in
-her hand. In silence she knelt by the hearth and cut the knot. The
-deliberation of her movements was in odd contrast to Eliza’s frenzy.
-
-[Illustration: “How did you come by it, Joe?”]
-
-The lid was off the basket in a trice. And the sight within further
-emphasized the diverse bearing of the two women. Harriet rose a statue;
-Eliza knelt in an ecstasy. One seemed to gloat over the sight that
-met her eyes; the other, with the gaze of Jocasta, stood turned to
-stone.
-
-It was the sweetest little baby. In every detail immaculate, bright as
-a new pin, its long clothes were of a fine quality, and it was wrapped
-in a number of shawls. A hot-water bottle was under its tiny toes, and
-a bottle of milk by its side.
-
-Eliza’s first act was to take the creature out of its receptacle. And
-then began the business of soothing it. Near the fire was a large
-rocking-chair, made for motherhood, and here sat Eliza, the foundling
-upon her knee. Evidently it had a charming disposition. For in two
-shakes of a duck’s tail it was taking its milk as if nothing had
-happened. Yet the calm, tense Harriet had a little to do with that.
-The milk was her happy thought. Moreover, she tested its quality and
-temperature with quite an air of experience. And the effect of the milk
-was magical.
-
-As soon as sheer astonishment and the cares of motherhood would permit,
-a number of searching questions were put to Constable Kelly.
-
-“How did you come by it, Joe?” was question the first.
-
-Before committing himself in any way, Joe scratched a fair Saxon poll
-like a very wise policeman, indeed. It was as if he had said, “Joseph
-Kelly, my friend, anything you say now will be used in evidence against
-you.”
-
-At last, cocking at Harriet a cautious eye, he replied impressively,
-“I’ll tell you.” But it was not until Eliza had imperiously repeated
-the question that he came to the point of so doing.
-
-So accustomed was Joseph Kelly to the giving of evidence that
-unconsciously he assumed the air of one upon his oath.
-
-“I was _perceding_” said he, “about twenty-past four through Grosvenor
-Square, on my way to Victoria, when I see through the fog this bloomin’
-contraption on a doorstep.”
-
-“What was the number?” Eliza asked.
-
-“I was so flabbergasted, I forgot to look.”
-
-“Well, really, Joe!”
-
-“When I saw what was in the basket, I was so took, as you might say,
-that it was not until I was at the end of the street that I thought of
-looking for the number. And then it was too late to swear to the house.”
-
-“In Grosvenor Square?” said Harriet.
-
-“I’m not _per_cisely sure. The fog was so thick in Mayfair you could
-hardly see your hand before you. It may have been one of them cross
-streets going into Park Lane.”
-
-“A nice one you are, Joe.” And Eliza began to croon softly to the babe
-in her arms.
-
-Kelly stroked his head perplexedly.
-
-“I am,” he said, solemnly. “A proper guy I’ll look when I take it to
-the Yard tomorrow and they ask me how I come by it.”
-
-“Take it to the where?” asked Eliza sharply.
-
-“To Scotland Yard the first thing in the morning, to the Lost Property
-Department.”
-
-“There’s going to be no Scotland Yard for this sweet lamb.”
-
-“If I had done my duty it’d ha’ gone there tonight.”
-
-Said Eliza: “You haven’t done it, Joe, so it’s no use talking. And if I
-have a say in the matter, you are not going to do it now.”
-
-Here were the makings of a very pretty quarrel. But Eliza had one
-signal advantage. She knew her own mind, whereas Joe evidently did not
-know his. By his own admission he had already been guilty of a grave
-lapse of duty. And in Eliza’s view that was a strong argument why the
-creature should stay where it was. It would be foolish for Joe to give
-himself away by taking it to Scotland Yard.
-
-The argument was sound as far as it went, but when it came to the
-business of the Metropolitan Force, Joe was a man with a conscience. As
-he said, with a dour look at Harriet, two wrongs didn’t make a right,
-and to suppress the truth by keeping the kid would not clear him.
-
-But Eliza was adamant. Joe had made a fool of himself already. He had
-nothing to gain by landing himself deeper in the mire, whereas the
-heart of a mother had yearned a long eight years for the highest gift
-of Providence. The truth was that from the outset Joseph Kelly had
-precious little chance of doing his duty in the matter.
-
-Perhaps he knew that. At any rate he did not argue his case as strongly
-as he might have done. And Eliza, rocking the babe on her knee, in the
-seventh heaven of bliss, rent Joe in pieces, laughed him to scorn.
-Harriet, standing by, a curious look on her face, well knew how to
-second her; yet the younger woman did not say a word.
-
-In a very few minutes Joe had hauled down his flag. Really he had not
-a chance. It was a very serious lapse from the path of duty, but what
-could he do, the simpleton!
-
-“‘Finding is keeping’ with this bairn,” said the triumphant Eliza.
-
-It was then that the silent, anxious, hovering Harriet claimed a share
-of the spoils of victory.
-
-“Eliza,” she said, “if you are to be the sweet thing’s mother, I must
-be its godmother.”
-
-“You shall be, my dear.”
-
-Harriet sealed the compact by a swift, stealthy kiss upon the cheek
-of the foundling, who now slept like a cherub on the knee of its new
-parent.
-
-“The lamb!” whispered Eliza.
-
-Tears of happiness came into the eyes of the mother-elect. Harriet
-turned suddenly away as if unable to bear the sight of them.
-
-Said Joe to himself: “This is what I call a rum ’un.” But even in the
-moment of his overthrow, he did not forget the philosophical outlook of
-that august body of men, whose trust he had betrayed. He turned to his
-long neglected cup of tea, now cold alas! and swallowed it at a gulp.
-He then went on with the solemn business of toasting bread and eating
-it.
-
-To add to Joe’s sense of defeat, the two women paid him no more
-attention now than if he had not been in the room at all.
-
-“The sweetest thing!” whispered the one ecstatically.
-
-“What shall we call it?” whispered the other.
-
-“A boy or a girl?”
-
-“Oh, a girl.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“By its mouth. A boy could never have a mouth like that.”
-
-“I don’t know that, my dear. I’ve seen boys with mouths----”
-
-“But look at the dimples, my dear.”
-
-“I have seen boys with dimples----”
-
-“----Joe Kelly, you are the durnedest fool alive.” This emotioned
-statement was the grace to a very substantial slice of buttered toast.
-Joe ate steadily, but his countenance now bore a family likeness to
-that of a bear.
-
-“Suppose we say Mary? It’s the best name there is, I always think.”
-
-“But it may turn out a George, my dear. I hope it will.”
-
-“I feel sure it’s a Mary,” affirmed the godmother of the sleeping babe.
-“I wonder who are the parents?”
-
-“Whoever’s child it may be,” said the mother-elect, “one thing is sure.
-They are people well up. I don’t think I ever saw a child so cared for.
-And, my dear, look at the shape of that chin and the set of that ear.
-And that lovely hand--a perfect picture with its filbert nails. Look at
-the fall of those eyelids. No wonder it comes out of Grosvenor Square.”
-
-“Grosvenor Square I’ll not swear to,” came a further interpellation
-from the table.
-
-“Get on with your tea, Joe,” said the mother-elect. “What we are
-talking of is no concern of yours.”
-
-The miserable Joe took off his boots and put on a pair of carpet
-slippers.
-
-“You’ve made a bad slip-up, my boy,” he remarked, as he did so.
-
-The two women continued to croon over the wonder-child. Joe took
-a pipe, filled it with shag and lit it dubiously. This was a bad
-business. He was a great philosopher, as all policemen are, but
-whenever a grim eye strayed across the hearth, it was followed by a
-frown and a grunt of perplexity.
-
-Joe smoked solemnly. The women prattled on. But quite suddenly, like
-a bolt from a clear sky, there came a very unwelcome intrusion. The
-street door was flung open and a young constable entered breathlessly.
-
-Dugald Maclean was received with surprise, anger, and dismay. “Now
-then, my lad, what about it?” demanded Joe, with a snarl of suppressed
-fury.
-
-“I’m seekin’ ‘Urban Love, a trilogy,’” proclaimed Dugald Maclean; and
-he spoke as if the fate of the empires hung upon his finding it.
-
-“Seekin’ what, you durned Scotchman?” said the alarmed and disgusted
-Joe.
-
-With deadly composure, Harriet rose from the side of the sleeping babe.
-
-“Mr. Maclean, it is there,” she said, icily. And she pointed to the
-table where the precious manuscript reclined.
-
-“Thank ye,” said Dugald, coolly. And he proceeded to button into his
-tunic “Urban Love, a trilogy.”
-
-But the mischief was done. The alert eye of an ambitious police
-constable had traveled from the open basket at one side of the fire to
-the object at the other, sleeping gently now upon Eliza’s knee. A slow
-grin crept over a freckled but vulpine countenance.
-
-“Blame my cats,” he muttered, “so there’s the young spannil.”
-
-Joe rose majestically. He said not a word, but again taking the
-intruder very firmly by the collar of his regulation overcoat, hustled
-him with quiet truculence through the open door into the street.
-Closing the door and turning the key, he then went back to his
-meditations, looking more than ever like a disgruntled bear.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-AUNT ANNIE AND AUNTY HARRIET
-
-
-I
-
-AUNT ANNIE was the first to be told the great news. In the view of
-both nieces it was in the natural order of things that this august
-lady should take precedence of the rest of the world. She was so
-incontestably the family “personage,” the eminence she occupied was
-such a dizzy one, that it would have been just as unthinkable not to
-grant her priority in a matter of such vital importance, as it would
-have been to deny it to Queen Victoria in an affair of State.
-
-In point of fact, Aunt Annie, within her own orbit, was the counterpart
-and reflection of her Sovereign. In an outlook they were alike, they
-were alike in the range of their ideas, and well-informed people had
-said that they had tricks of speech and manner in common. This may have
-been a little in excess of the truth, one of those genial pleasantries
-it is the part of wisdom to accept in the spirit in which they are
-offered, but it would be wrong to deny that in the suburb of Laxton
-Aunt Annie took rank as a very great lady.
-
-It is true that she lived in a small and modest house in an
-unpretentious street, but all the world knew that the flower of her
-years had been passed in abodes very different. And not only that, it
-was also known that every year on her birthday, the twenty-sixth of
-March, those whom it is hardly right to mention in these humble pages
-came to call on her. On the twenty-sixth of every March, sometime
-in the afternoon, a remarkable equipage would appear before the
-chaste precincts of “Bowley,” Croxton Park Road. At that hour every
-self-respecting pair of eyes in the immediate neighborhood would be
-ambushed discreetly behind curtains in order to watch the descent of a
-real live princess with a neat parcel.
-
-The contents of the parcel were said to vary from year to year. Now it
-would be a piece of choice needlework, fashioned by the accomplished
-hands of Royalty itself, which would take the shape of a cushion or
-a footstool, now a framed photograph of Prince Adolphus or Princess
-Geraldine in significant stages of their adolescence, now a chart of
-the august features of even more important members of the family. Many
-were the historical objects disposed about Aunt Annie’s sitting-room,
-which the elect of the neighborhood had the privilege of seeing and
-handling when they came to call upon her. But when all was said, the
-undoubted gem of the collection was a superb edition, bound in full
-calf, of the Poems of A. L. O. E., with a certain signature upon the
-fly-leaf. This was always kept under glass.
-
-It chanced that Aunt Annie had invited herself to tea at Number Five,
-Beaconsfield Villas, the day after the arrival of the babe. This was
-strictly in accord with rule and precedent. She was far too much a
-personage to be invited by her niece Eliza, but if she intimated by
-a letter, which was the last word in precision, that she proposed to
-call on a certain day, Eliza humbly and gratefully overhauled the best
-tea service and polished the lacquer tray which was only used on State
-occasions.
-
-Not merely the mother-elect, but also godmother Harriet, saw the hand
-of a very special Providence in the impending visit of Aunt Annie to
-Beaconsfield Villas. It was only right and fit that the news should be
-first told to her. The matter must have her sanction. By comparison the
-rest of the world was of small account. The entire clan Sanderson lived
-in awe of her, and particularly her imprudent and démodé niece Eliza.
-The prestige of Aunt Annie was immense, and it did not make things
-easier for those who lived within the sphere of her influence that the
-old lady was fully alive to the fact.
-
-Eliza confided to Harriet that she would breathe more freely when the
-morrow’s visit had taken place. Harriet boldly said it didn’t really
-matter what view Aunt Annie took of the affair. But Eliza knew better.
-In spite of the joys of vicarious motherhood, there could be no peace
-of mind for Eliza until the fateful day was over.
-
-Half-past four in the afternoon was the hour mentioned in the official
-note. And it was then, punctual to the minute, that a vehicle of
-antique design even for that remote period of the world’s history,
-in charge of a Jehu to match it, drew up on the cobblestones exactly
-opposite Number Five. The fog had cleared considerably since the
-previous evening, therefore three urchins, spellbound by the appearance
-of such a turnout in their own private thoroughfare, beheld the slow
-and stately emergence of a superbly Victorian bonnet of the most
-authentic design and a black mantle of impressive simplicity.
-
-Jehu, like the equipage itself, jobbed for the occasion, was the mirror
-of true courtliness. He had an uncle in the Royal stables, therefore
-he knew the deference due to the august Miss Sanderson. In promoting
-her descent from the chariot he did not actually take off his hat, but
-he stood with it off in spirit; a fact sufficiently clear to the three
-youthful onlookers, one of whom remarked in a voice of awe, “It’s the
-mayoress.”
-
-Eliza, quaking over her best tea service on its elegant tray, knew
-without so much as a glance through the window that Aunt Annie had
-come. But she waited for the knock. And then apronless, in her best
-dress, with never a hair out of place, she opened the door with a
-certain slow stateliness. Before her _mésalliance_ she had had great
-prospects as lady’s maid.
-
-“Good morning, dear Eliza.”
-
-It was four o’clock in the afternoon, but the distinguished visitor
-undoubtedly said, “Good morning, dear Eliza.” Moreover, she offered a
-large and rigid cheek and Eliza pecked at it rather nervously.
-
-The door of Number Five closed upon Jehu, upon his wonderful and
-fearful machine, and also upon the general public.
-
-“And how is Joseph?”
-
-“Nicely, thank you, Aunt Annie. I hope _you_ are quite well.”
-
-“As well as my rheumatism will permit.”
-
-“Won’t you take off your things?”
-
-“Thank you, no, my dear.”
-
-Aunt Annie would rather have died than take off her things in that
-house. In her heart she had never been able to forgive Eliza her
-marriage. Joseph Kelly was a worthy fellow no doubt, a good husband,
-and a conscientious police officer, but by no exercise of the
-imagination could he ever occupy the plane of a Sanderson. It may have
-been mere pride of family but then pride of family is a queer thing.
-
-Poor Eliza had fallen sadly from grace. She had come down in the world,
-whereas a true Sanderson always made a point of going up in it. Even if
-Eliza’s relations as a whole were inclined to take a sympathetic view
-of her marriage, the one among them who really counted, was never quite
-able to overlook the fact in her dealings with her. Eliza had cause to
-feel nervous for Aunt Annie was never so impressive as when she entered
-the modest front parlor of Number Five.
-
-It was easy for Aunt Annie to do that, because nature was on her side.
-With the honorable exception of her friend, Alderman Bradbury, the
-present mayor of the borough, she had more personality than anyone in
-Laxton. For forty years she had moved in the highest circles in the
-land. Moreover, she had moved in them modestly, discreetly, with the
-most punctilious good sense. She had known her place exactly, had kept
-it, therefore, with ever increasing honor and renown; but the spirit of
-imperious self-discipline which had entered into her in the process,
-sternly required that ordinary people in their dealings with her should
-know their place, too, and also be careful to keep it. In the domestic
-circle Aunt Annie was a pitiless autocrat, and in public life even
-the Mayor of Laxton and its leading Aldermen did not withhold their
-deference when she condescended to converse with them upon matters
-relating to the infant life of the borough.
-
-No wonder Laxton’s leading inhabitants kow-towed to Aunt Annie. No
-wonder niece Eliza cowered in spirit when she superbly entered that
-modest dwelling and sat in its most capacious chair. Tea was offered
-her, without sugar and with only a very little milk according to her
-stoical custom.
-
-“Thankee, my dear.”
-
-The great lady removed a black kid glove, and coquetted with a delicate
-slice of bread and butter. If you have lived in palaces most of your
-days you know that simplicity in all things is the true art of life.
-Right at the back, as Eliza well knew, Aunt Annie was by no means so
-simple as she made a point of seeming. Her tastes and manners were
-modeled upon a sublime Original, but as the memoirs of the time have
-shown in the one case that things may not be always what they seem, the
-same held true in the other.
-
-Eliza had never felt so nervous in her life. Even the historic hour
-in which she had first announced her engagement to Joe could hardly
-compare with this. But it was not until Aunt Annie had passed to her
-second piece of bread and butter that the thunderbolt fell.
-
-“A cradle, my dear!”
-
-It was quite true that a cradle was in the chimney corner, within three
-yards of Laxton’s leading authority on the subject. Moreover, it was a
-cradle of the latest design, a cradle of the most elegant contour, it
-was a cradle provided with springs and lace curtains.
-
-Eliza blushed hotly and murmured something about Harriet having had it
-sent that morning. And then all at once she became so confused that she
-began to pour out her own tea into the slop-basin instead of the cup
-provided for the purpose.
-
-“Harriet who, my dear?”
-
-There was only one Harriet, and Eliza knew that Aunt Annie knew that.
-It was a mere ruse to gain time--if such a word can be used without
-impropriety in such connection. Eliza sought to cover her confusion by
-a sedulous holding of the tongue, and by an attempt to pour out her tea
-as if she really knew what she was about.
-
-“What is there in it?”
-
-The demand was point-blank. It was almost passionate.
-
-Without waiting to be told what there was in it, Aunt Annie rose, tea
-cup and all, and with the glower of a sibyl drew aside the curtains.
-
-
-II
-
-Mary was sleeping. Empirical science had proved her beyond a doubt to
-be a Mary. And she was sleeping as the best Marys do at the age of one
-month and a bittock, with her thumb in her mouth--if they are allowed
-to do so.
-
-To say that Aunt Annie was taken aback would be like saying that Zeus
-was a little offended with certain events when he blew the planet Earth
-out of the firmament in the year 19--. However!--it was as much as Aunt
-Annie could do to believe the evidence of her eyes. She fronted her
-niece augustly.
-
-“And you never told _me_, my dear.”
-
-“It didn’t come till last evening,” stammered Eliza.
-
-But a leading authority, even upon a subject so recondite, is not
-deceived in that way.
-
-“The child is five weeks old if it’s an hour,” scornfully affirmed
-the expert. “Besides,”--the eye of the expert transfixed her niece
-piercingly--“do you suppose--a woman of my experience--needs to be
-told--but why pursue the subject!”
-
-For the moment Eliza felt so guilty that she was quite unable to pursue
-the subject. Yet there was no reason why she should allow herself to
-be overwhelmed, except that Aunt Annie had an almost sublime power
-of putting people in the wrong. The situation in sheer grandeur and
-magnitude was altogether too much for her. And the mind of Aunt Annie,
-capable of volcanic energy when dealing with the subject it had made
-its own, had already traveled an alarming distance before Eliza could
-impose any check upon it.
-
-“A very fine child--a very fine child indeed--but----!”
-
-The portentous gravity of the words should have brought a chill to
-the soul of Eliza. But for some odd reason it caused her to laugh
-hysterically.
-
-“It is not a laughing matter,” said the face of Aunt Annie; her stern
-lips made no comment on the preposterous behavior of her niece.
-
-“She’s mine,” gasped Eliza, when laughter had brought her to the verge
-of tears.
-
-“Tell that to the Marines,” said the face of Aunt Annie. In fact the
-face of Aunt Annie said more than that. It said, “Eliza, I should like
-to give you the soundest shaking you have ever had in your life.”
-
-“Joe and I have adopted it,” gurgled Eliza at last.
-
-Aunt Annie drew herself up to her full, formidable, dragoon-like height
-of five feet ten inches, and gazed sublimely down from that Olympian
-elevation.
-
-“Then why not say so, my dear, in so many words, without making
-yourself so profoundly ridiculous?”
-
-
-III
-
-With tingling ears, Eliza humbly admitted her fault. But as soon as
-she had done so, there arose a serious problem, for a simple creature
-in whose sight the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth
-was very precious. Aunt Annie began to ask questions--questions which
-forbade a person of ordinary discretion to answer with candor.
-
-Whose was the child? What was its origin? What did the parents----? Why
-did the parents----? When did the parents----? Did Eliza fully realize
-the grave nature of the responsibility she was taking upon herself?
-
-It was the last question of the series that Eliza answered first. And
-this she did for a sufficient reason: to answer the others was wholly
-beyond her power.
-
-“We may be doing a very unwise thing,” said Eliza. “Joe and I know
-that.”
-
-“I am sure I hope you do, my dear. But tell me, where did you get it?”
-
-The voice of truth enjoined on a doorstep in Grosvenor Square, but the
-voice of prudence said otherwise. And the voice of prudence sounded a
-very clear and masterful note in Eliza’s ear, for Joe, Harriet, and
-she were fully agreed that the true story must not be given to the
-world. Diplomacy was called for. Such a forthright creature was quite
-unversed in that dubious art, but she must prepare to use it now.
-
-“I promised I wouldn’t tell.” Alas! that crude formula was all in the
-way of guile that poor flustered Eliza could muster at the moment.
-
-Less by instinctive cleverness than by divine accident there was a
-world of meaning, however, in that faltering tone. And a word to the
-wise is sufficient. There was not a wiser woman in England than Aunt
-Annie, except--of course, that is to say!--speaking merely for the
-lieges of the realm--.
-
-“Very well, I don’t press the question.” It was the tone she had once
-accidentally overheard a very great Personage use to Lord Gr-nv-lle.
-
-Eliza sighed relief.
-
-“But, let me say this,” Aunt Annie looked steadily at her niece. “I ask
-no questions in regard to the parents, but whoever they may be, you
-must know that you run a risk. The offspring of a regular union are
-often unsatisfactory, the offspring of an irregular union, although I
-praise heaven I have had no personal experience of them, always bring
-sorrow to those with whom they have to do.”
-
-Eliza could only reply that the creature was such a dear lamb that she
-was quite prepared to take the risk. Aunt Annie shook a solemn head at
-her niece, and then surveyed the infant in true professional style.
-The babe still slept. Before the great critic and connoisseur made any
-comment she removed the thumb from the delightful mouth. And the act
-was done with such delicacy as not to bring a cloud to the dreams of
-this wonderful Mary.
-
-This was a rosebud of a creature, and she lay in her grand cradle as
-if she simply defied even the highest criticism to dispute the fact.
-Certainly one who knew what babies were did not try to do so. Only one
-remark was offered at that moment, but to the initiated it was worth
-many volumes.
-
-“Whoever’s child it may be,” said Aunt Annie, “and mind I don’t go into
-that, it is not a child of common parents.”
-
-
-IV
-
-For some odd reason, Eliza was so intensely flattered by Aunt Annie’s
-words, that she felt a desire to hug her. None knew so well as Eliza
-that it was not a child of common parents, but it was not the way of
-this expert to say so. The wonderful creature was “wrapt in mystery,”
-but the hallmark of quality must have been stamped very deep for such a
-one as Aunt Annie to commit herself to any such statement. Her standard
-was princes and princesses. Every babe in Christendom was judged
-thereby, and there was perhaps one in a million that could hope to
-survive the test.
-
-A miracle had happened, but it was really too much to expect that the
-cradle would have a share in it. Aunt Annie shook her head over the
-cradle. It had too many fal-lals. She approved neither its curtains nor
-its air of grandeur. She was a believer in plainness and simplicity. If
-before incurring an unwarrantable expense, her niece had only mentioned
-the matter, the great lady would have gone to Armitt’s personally and
-have arranged for a replica of the hygienic but unpretentious design
-supplied by that famous firm to the Nursery over which she had presided.
-
-Eliza, however, could accept no responsibility for the cradle. Harriet
-had sent it that morning quite unexpectedly. Aunt Annie was a little
-surprised that the taste of Bridport House in cradles was not a little
-surer. Yet upon thinking the matter over she found she was less
-surprised than she thought she was. The Dinnefords were a good family,
-the Duke was esteemed, his late Duchess, for a brief period, had been
-Mistress of the Posset, but after all Bridport House was not Bowley.
-After all a Gulf was fixed.
-
-It was vain for Eliza to show how disappointed Harriet would be; the
-cradle had so clearly cost a great deal of money. It had cost too much
-money, that was the head and front of the cradle’s offending. There was
-an air of the parvenu about it. Such a cradle would never have been
-tolerated at Bowley, nay, it was open to doubt whether it would have
-been tolerated at Bridport House.
-
-Aunt Annie was still discoursing upon cradles out of a full mind, when
-Harriet herself came on the scene. She was spending a few days at
-Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas before going down to Buntisford, and
-she had now returned from a day’s shopping in London. She knew that
-Aunt Annie was coming to tea, yet in spite of being forewarned, the
-sight of the dominant old lady seated at the table seemed to dash her
-at once.
-
-For one thing, perhaps they were not the greatest of friends. It may
-have been that Bowley set too high a value upon itself in the eyes
-of Bridport House, it may have been that Bridport House held itself
-too independent in the eyes of Bowley. The clan Sanderson, one and
-all, revered Aunt Annie; there was no gainsaying that her career had
-been immensely distinguished; but at this moment Harriet’s greeting
-certainly seemed just a little perfunctory; it might even be said to
-have a covert antagonism.
-
-Harriet’s health was tenderly inquired after, she was solemnly
-congratulated on her recent appointment, which did her much credit and
-conferred honor upon her family; but it was soon apparent that there
-was only one subject, to which, at that moment, Harriet could give her
-mind. Had she been the mother of the babe, instead of the godmother
-merely, her impatience to draw aside the curtains of the cradle could
-hardly have been greater, or her delight in looking upon a ravishing
-spectacle when she had done so.
-
-Even the stern criticism of those curtains she did not heed, until
-she had gazed her fill. It was a babe in a million. And when at last
-she was up against the curtains, so to speak, instead of meeting the
-curtains fairly and squarely, she began to paint extravagant pictures
-of the future.
-
-Her name was Mary. That was settled. She was to be brought up most
-carefully; indeed, it was decided already that she was to have a
-first-rate education.
-
-“A first-rate education!” There was a slight curl of a critical lip.
-
-“Why not?” inquired godmother Harriet.
-
-“The expense, my dear!”
-
-“I think I shall be able to afford it.”
-
-“_You_, my dear,” said Aunt Annie, rather pointedly.
-
-“I am the godmother,” said Harriet, with the light of battle in her
-eyes.
-
-“So I hear. But don’t forget she is to be the child of a police
-constable.”
-
-“She is not the child of a police constable,” said Harriet, with a
-mounting color.
-
-“I don’t know whose child she is. That is a question I prefer to avoid.
-But in my humble opinion it will be a grave mistake to educate her
-above the class to which it has pleased Providence to call her. No good
-can come of it.”
-
-“That’s nonsense!” The fine voice had a slight tremble in it.
-
-Aunt Annie looked down her large nose. “At any rate, that has always
-been my view. And it has always been the view of, I will not say who.
-It is very perilous to tamper with the order of Divine Providence.
-And I am surprised that one who has been called to a position of high
-responsibility should think otherwise.”
-
-The quick flush upon Harriet’s cheek showed that the old lady had got
-home. She was always formidable at close quarters; even Harriet had to
-be wary in trying a fall with her.
-
-“The child must have a good, sensible upbringing. Let her be taught
-cooking, sewing, plain needlework, and so on. And _I_ shall be very
-glad to give a little advice from time to time. But I repeat it will be
-most unwise to set her up, no matter who her parents may be, above the
-station in life to which it has pleased Providence to call her.”
-
-Again the light of battle darkened the eyes of Harriet.
-
-“It is early days at present to talk about it,” she said. And she
-laughed suddenly in a high-pitched key.
-
-
-V
-
-Water flowed under London Bridge. The flight of time demanded that Mary
-should fulfill her promise of being the most wonderful child ever seen.
-She did not fail, but grew in grace and beauty like a flower. At the
-date of her arrival her age was deemed to be one month. By the time it
-had been multiplied by twelve a personality had begun to emerge, twelve
-months later it was possible to gauge it.
-
-There never was such a child. Eliza held that opinion from the first,
-and godmother Harriet shared it. Aunt Annie was more discreet, but her
-actions expressed an interest of the highest kind. From the moment she
-had committed herself to the memorable statement that “Whoever’s child
-she may be, she is not a child of common parents,” there was really no
-more to be said. But as the months passed and Mary became Mary yet more
-definitely, the old lady, to the astonishment of both her nieces, began
-to identify herself intimately with the fortunes of the creature.
-
-The critical age of two was safely passed. And the age of three found
-Mary more than ever the cynosure of Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas.
-The infant had such health, her eyes were so blue, her laugh was so
-gay, her rose-bloom tints were so dazzling, that the childless hearth
-of the Kellys’ was somehow touched with the hues of Paradise. In
-moments of gloom Joe had his doubts, and now and again expressed them.
-He had certainly done very wrong, the whole matter was most irregular,
-but the look in Eliza’s face was a living contradiction to official
-pessimism.
-
-In the meantime Aunt Annie sat many an hour, spectacles on nose, making
-“undies” for her new niece. The old lady was much courted by the rest
-of her family. Even amid the remoter outposts of the clan, her word was
-law. Apart from the romance of her career, she enjoyed a substantial
-pension, she owned house property, and the stocking in which she kept
-her savings was known to be a long one. But beyond all things was the
-woman herself. It was sheer weight of character that gave her such a
-special place among her peers.
-
-The clan Sanderson was extensive, and inclined to exclude. There were
-Sandersons holding positions of trust in various parts of London and
-the country. There was Mr. George Sanderson, who was in a bank at
-Surbiton, who, if he did not actually share the apex with his cousin
-Annie, was immensely looked up to; there was Francis, who, from very
-small beginnings, had blossomed into a chartered accountant; there was
-young Lawrence, of the new generation, who had given up being a page
-boy in very good service, for the lures of journalism. He was far from
-being approved by his Aunt Annie, and he had not the sanction of his
-Uncle George, but he was understood to be doing very well, and if he
-only kept on long enough and made sufficiently good in this eccentric
-way of life, the mandarins of the family might regard him a little more
-hopefully. Finally, there was Harriet. Hers was a truly remarkable
-case.
-
-At the age of twenty-nine, without special training or any particular
-influence, she had been made housekeeper to the Duke of Bridport at
-Buntisford Hall, Essex. The more modern minds among the clan might
-affect to despise a success of that kind, but for generations there had
-been a sort of feudal connection between the great house of Dinneford
-and the honest race of yeomen who had served it. Chartered Accountant
-Francis might smile in a superior way, young Lawrence of Fleet Street,
-a perfect anarchist of a fellow, might scoff, but every true-blue
-Sanderson of the older generation was amazed at Harriet’s achievement,
-and felt a personal pride in it.
-
-Aunt Annie, who had a temperamental dislike of Harriet, was the
-first to admit that the rise of her niece had been very remarkable.
-The august Miss Sanderson was an unequaled judge of what Mr. George
-Sanderson called “general conditions.” Her own historical career
-had given her peculiar facilities for gauging the lie of a country,
-socially speaking, her sense of values was absolutely correct, and she
-was constrained to admit, much as it hurt her to do so, that Harriet’s
-success had no parallel in her experience.
-
-Eliza Kelly occupied a very different place in the hierarchy. She was
-perilously near the base of the statue. Her brothers, her sisters, her
-uncles, her cousins, and her aunts, had always made a practice of going
-up in the world, but she had unmistakably come down in it. It was not
-that they had anything against Joe personally. He was sober, honest, a
-good husband, and he well knew the place allotted to him by an all-wise
-Providence. But when the best had been said for him he was not, and
-could never hope to be, a Sanderson.
-
-It was, therefore, the more surprising that Aunt Annie should take so
-great an interest in the waif that the Kellys had adopted. None knew
-the name of its parents, none so much as ventured to hint at the source
-of its origin, yet the mandarin-in-chief accepted it as soon as she
-set eyes upon it, and month by month, year by year, to the increasing
-surprise of the clan as a whole, her regard for the creature waxed in
-ever growing proportions.
-
-Mrs. Francis--A Miss Best, of Sheffield--had given an account of her
-afternoon call at Bowley, which she had timed as usual for the day
-after Royalty had paid its annual visit. Mrs. F.--in the family, she
-was always Mrs. F.--had then seen Mary for the first time. And although
-she had five of her own, the child had made a great impression. She was
-like a fairy, with vivid eyes and wonderful hair, which Aunt Annie used
-to brush over a stick every time she came to Croxton Park Road; her
-clothes were simple and in perfect taste, but of a style and quality
-far beyond the reach of Mrs. F.’s own progeny. She was then a little
-more than three, and not only Mrs. F., but _others_, according to Aunt
-Annie’s account of the matter, had been greatly struck by her. She
-certainly made a picture with her dainty limbs, her laughing eyes, her
-flaxen curls. All the same, it was very absurd that the child should be
-turned out in that way. Eliza and Joe could not possibly afford it, and
-if the old lady was responsible, as was feared was the case, she ought
-to have had more sense than to set her up in that way.
-
-As the result of inquiries, Mrs. F. felt bound to make in the matter,
-and there were very few matters in which Mrs. F. did not feel bound
-to make inquiries of one kind or another, it appeared that Aunt Annie
-was not responsible for her clothes. The clothes lay at the door of
-godmother Harriet. She had insisted on choosing them, and had further
-insisted on sharing the considerable expense they involved. Mrs.
-F. gathered that in the opinion of Aunt Annie and also in that of
-Eliza, godmother Harriet was inclined to abuse her position. She was
-always insisting. No detail of the creature’s upbringing escaped her
-interference. She must have her say in everything; indeed, she came
-over from Buntisford regularly once a week for the purpose of having
-it. At Beaconsfield Villas, and also at Bowley, she took a very high
-tone, which Eliza and Aunt Annie strongly resented. But it seemed there
-was no remedy. Harriet was the godmother, she had her rights, her will
-was as imperious as Aunt Annie’s own--and her purse seemed fathomless.
-
-As soon as Mary was four, it was settled that she should go every
-morning to Bowley to be taught her letters. And she must be taken
-there by a girl “who spoke nicely.” It seemed that a girl, who spoke
-nicely, was a rather rare bird in Laxton. At any rate Eliza having
-been compelled in the first place to yield to a nursemaid, had many to
-review before one was found whose style of delivery could satisfy the
-fastidious ear of Aunty Harriet.
-
-Eliza might be piqued by such “officiousness,” but she could not deny
-that Harriet had reason on her side. Perhaps it was overdoing things
-a bit for people in their position, but Eliza, if fallen from high
-estate, was still at heart a Sanderson. Therefore she knew what was
-what. And the secret was hers that the child’s real home was a long way
-from Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas, Laxton. Eliza could never quite
-forget the source of origin of her adopted daughter.
-
-Every month that went by seemed to make it increasingly difficult to
-forget that. Princess Geraldine herself, that figure of legend who used
-to call at Bowley every twenty-sixth of March, could never have been
-in more devout or judicious hands than little Mistress Mary in that
-of the Council of Three, not to mention those of Miss Sarah Allcock,
-specially coöpted. No child so tended and cared for, whose welfare was
-so carefully studied by experts, could have failed to grow in beauty
-and grace. She was so perfectly charming and superb when in the charge
-of the discreet Miss Allcock, she took the air with her wonderful hair,
-her patrician features and her white socks, that the nearest neighbors
-began to resent it. It was considered rather swank on the part of the
-Kellys to set up such a child at all. They were surprised that Joe, a
-popular man, should not have a truer sense of the fitness of things.
-They were less surprised at Mrs. Joe, who was not quite so popular. But
-Joe was a sensible fellow, and he should have seen to it that the child
-did not become the talk of the neighborhood.
-
-Yet, after all, it may not have been so much the fault of Joe or of
-Eliza, his wife, that the child became the talk of the neighborhood.
-In the purview of local society, whose salon was Mrs. Connor’s, the
-greengrocer’s lady, at the end of the street, the blame lay at the door
-of Miss Sarah Allcock. The truth was the incursion of Miss Allcock was
-keenly resented by the local ladies. She was altogether too fine--yet
-the odd thing was that she was not fine at all. But she was in every
-way uncommonly superior. No greater tribute could have been paid to
-the social supremacy of the presiding genius of Croxton Park Road,
-or to the strength of character of Aunty Harriet, than that such a
-one as Miss Allcock should condescend to Beaconsfield Villas. Truth
-to tell, Miss Allcock was a remote connection of the clan Sanderson,
-although never admitted as such by the mandarins. But she knew there
-were strings to pull, and a good place had been guaranteed her when she
-really started out in service.
-
-All the same, as far as the neighbors were concerned, Miss Sarah
-Allcock was an error of judgment. She was amazingly neat and trim, she
-had the true Sanderson refinement of manner and address, she was fond
-of airing her voice to her charge with all sorts of subtle Mayfair
-inflections, and she looked _away_ from the neighbors as if they were
-dirt. As if they were dirt--that was the gravamen of their complaint in
-the sympathetic ear of Mrs. Bridgit Connor.
-
-Mrs. Bridgit Connor, the greengrocer’s wife, was a widespread lady
-of Irish descent, of great but fluctuating charm, and unfailing
-volubility. Her vocabulary was immense, but scorn often taxed it. Her
-scorn of Miss Allcock taxed it to the breaking point. Born on a bog and
-descended in the remote past from the kings of the earth, Mrs. Connor
-had facilities of speech and gesture denied to the common run of her
-kind. She avenged the slights put by Miss Allcock upon herself and
-friends by alluding to that lady’s charge in a loud voice whenever
-opportunity offered as “a by-blow,” or “a no-man’s child.”
-
-When Mary was five there arose the grand question of her education
-proper. At first a great clash of wills was threatened. Aunt Annie
-had her views. Aunty Harriet had hers. Eliza, being merely “the
-mother,” was not allowed to have any. Aunty Harriet thought perhaps the
-kindergarten. Aunt Annie did not believe in such new-fangled nonsense.
-Besides no kindergarten would take her.
-
-“Why not?” asked Aunty Harriet. But as she spoke there came a slight
-flush to the proud face.
-
-“Because they won’t,” said Aunt Annie with stern finality. “All schools
-of the better sort are very particular.”
-
-Aunty Harriet bit her lip sharply. She retorted, perhaps unwisely, that
-if they were not very particular they would cease to be schools of the
-better sort.
-
-“Quite so,” said Aunt Annie.
-
-For the moment it looked as if daggers were going to be drawn. These
-two were always at the verge of conflict. Both were impatient of any
-kind of opposition, and in the matter of young Mistress Mary they
-seldom saw eye to eye. Aunt Annie did not disguise her opinion that
-Aunty Harriet was inclined to take too much upon herself, and Aunty
-Harriet had no difficulty in returning the compliment.
-
-But Harriet had great common sense, and she was a woman of action. She
-was not the one tamely to accept the decree about schools of the better
-sort, but began to make researches of her own into the subject. She
-was very hard to please, both in regard to the style of the school
-and the condition of the scholars, and when at last one had been
-found which met the case, there arose the difficulties Aunt Annie had
-predicted. A child of parentage unknown, adopted by the family of a
-police constable, did not commend herself to the Misses Lippincott of
-Broadwood House Academy. To Aunty Harriet this seemed a great pity; the
-school presided over by those ladies was exactly suitable. Its tone
-was high but not pretentious; the small daughters and the smaller sons
-of Laxton’s leading tradesmen mingled with those of its professional
-classes, and its reputation was so good that Aunty Harriet, after a
-discreet interview with the elder Miss Lippincott, a bishop’s daughter
-and a university graduate, set her mind upon it.
-
-Howbeit, the austere Miss Lippincott showed no inclination to receive
-the adopted child of a police constable as a pupil at Broadwood
-House Academy. This was not conveyed to Miss Harriet Sanderson in so
-many words, but in the course of the next day she received a letter,
-delicately-worded, to that effect. However, she did not give in, as
-smaller and weaker people might have done, but she put her pride in
-her pocket and, looking the facts in the face, went to take counsel at
-Bowley.
-
-“What did I tell you, my dear!” said Aunt Annie. To refrain from that
-observation would have been superhuman. But the observation duly made,
-the old lady also revealed the divine gift of common sense. From all
-that she had heard the establishment of the Misses Lippincott was
-immensely desirable. Moreover, she clearly remembered the Bishop, their
-late father, coming to spend the week-end at the real Bowley, and
-hearing him preach a singularly moving sermon in the little parish
-church. Small wonder, then, that the tone of Broadwood House Academy
-was “exactly right” in every human particular; besides, Aunt Annie had
-met and approved Miss Priscilla Lippincott on two occasions. Therefore,
-the old lady promised Aunty Harriet that she herself would see what
-could be done in the matter.
-
-The first thing Aunt Annie did was to induce the Mayoress, Mrs.
-Alderman Bradbury, to say a word on the child’s behalf. She promptly
-followed up this piece of strategy by ordering her state chariot to
-drive Mistress Mary and herself to Broadwood House Academy.
-
-The child was looking her best. Her carefully-brushed tresses shone
-like woven sunbeams, her slight, trim form was clothed with taste and
-elegance, her laughing eyes were frankly unabashed by the demure Miss
-Priscilla, nay, even by the august Miss Lippincott herself. The effect
-she made was entirely favorable. Besides, the Mayoress had taken the
-trouble to call the previous afternoon in order to speak for her, and
-Miss Sanderson, as the Misses Lippincott knew, was looked up to in
-Laxton; therefore, out of regard for all the circumstances, a point
-was waived and little Miss Kelly was reluctantly admitted to Broadwood
-House Academy.
-
-
-VI
-
-The Misses Lippincott never had cause to rue their temerity. Little
-Miss Kelly remained in their care until she was big Miss Kelly, a
-brilliant and dashing creature with a quite extraordinary length
-of black stocking. Neither Miss Lippincott nor Miss Priscilla ever
-regretted her democratic action. In fact, it was a source of jealous
-remark, even among the most distinguished scholars of Broadwood House
-Academy, that not one of them could wear the black beaver hat with the
-purple ribbon and its gold monogram B. H. A., or the blue ulster with
-gilt buttons, in quite the way that these modish emblems were worn by
-Mary Kelly.
-
-It greatly annoyed Ethel Cliffe, who lived in The Park, and was a
-daughter of Sir Joseph, three times Mayor of Laxton, that in looks
-and popularity she had to yield to the offspring of very much humbler
-parents, who lived in quite an obscure part of the borough. But it had
-to be. Year by year the cuckoo that had entered the nest grew in beauty
-and favor, while the legitimate denizens of Broadwood House could only
-bite their lips and marvel. In the opinion of Ethel Cliffe and her
-peers, old Dame Nature must be a perfect idiot not to know her business
-a bit better.
-
-It was not that Mary Kelly made enemies. Her disposition was open,
-free, and fearless; her heart was gold. Then, too, in most things, she
-was amazingly quick. She never made any bones about reading, writing,
-arithmetic, geography, and so on, she was good at freehand drawing, and
-the use of the globes, in Swedish drill and ball games, particularly at
-hockey, she was wonderful, and in music and dancing there was none in
-the school to compare with her. The only things in which she did not
-really excel were plain needlework and religious knowledge. These bored
-her to tears--except that she proudly reserved her tears for matters
-which seemed of more consequence.
-
-As Mary Kelly’s stockings got longer and longer the supremacy of Ethel
-Cliffe grew even less secure. Even at Broadwood House Academy it was
-impossible to subsist entirely on your social eminence. Ethel had
-openly sneered at the outsider upon her first intrusion in the fold;
-the only daughter of a very recent knight found it hard to breathe
-the same air as the offspring of a humble police constable. But Dame
-Nature, in her ignorant way, bungled the whole thing so miserably, that
-while Ethel was always very near the bottom of the class, Mary was
-generally at the top of it; Ethel was heavy and humorless, and inclined
-to take refuge in her dignity, Mary was _bon enfant_, with very little
-in the way of dignity in which to take refuge. And in proof of that, a
-story was told of her, soon after she passed the age of ten, which ran
-like wildfire throughout Broadwood House Academy.
-
-It seemed that in the vicinity of Mary’s undistinguished home were
-certain rude boys. Foremost among them was Mrs. Connor’s Michael, the
-youngest and not the least vocal of her numerous progeny. And it often
-happened that Michael was _en route_ from his own seat of learning,
-where manners did not appear to be in the curriculum, when Mistress
-Mary was on the way home from Broadwood House Academy, where manners
-undoubtedly were. In the opinion of Michael’s mother the Connors were
-quite as good as the Kellys--very much better if it came to that!--and
-this tradition had been freely imbibed by her youngest hope. The
-Connors were quite as good as the Kellys, Michael was always careful to
-inform his peers, but the haughty beauty of Beaconsfield Villas, in her
-beaver hat and blue ulster with gilt buttons did not share that view.
-She had simply not so much as a look for Michael and his friends. This
-aloofness galled them bitterly.
-
-Had she only known such aristocratic indifference was rather cruel.
-For Michael’s one distinction among his mates, apart from his skill
-as a marble-player, which was very considerable, was that he lived in
-the same street as Miss Kelly. She was out and away the most wonderful
-creature ever seen in that part of Laxton. It was hard to forgive
-her for carrying her head in the way she did, yet it somehow added
-still greater piquancy to a personality that simply haunted the manly
-bosoms of the neighborhood. But her aloofness was felt to be such a
-reflection upon Michael himself, that at last that warrior was moved to
-a desperate course.
-
-He took the extreme measure of offering Miss Kelly his best blood
-alley. But it was in vain; Miss Kelly would have none of his best blood
-alley, or of its owner. Michael then decided upon war.
-
-In discussing the Kellys on the domestic hearth, he had heard his
-mother cast grave doubts upon the ancestry of their so-called daughter.
-Therefore, the spirit of revenge, rankling in Michael’s tormented
-breast, urged him to adopt a certain rhyme, current at the time, for
-the chastening of this haughty charmer. Together with a few chosen
-braves he lay in ambush for her as she wended her proud way home from
-Broadwood House Academy. As soon as Mary Kelly hove in sight round the
-corner of Grove Street, S.E., these heroes burst into song:--
-
- “I am Mary Plantagenet.
- What would imagine it?
- Eyes full of liquid fire,
- Hair bright as jet.
- No one knows my history
- I am wrapt in mystery
- I am the she-ro
- Of a penny novelette.”
-
-On the occasion of the first performance, Miss Kelly did not deign to
-take the slightest notice. But after it had been repeated a number of
-times with increasing _réclame_, it grew more than she could brook.
-One never-to-be-forgotten Friday evening, in the fall of the year, she
-suddenly handed her satchel of books to her friend, Rose Pierce, and
-with decks cleared for action and the flame of battle in her eyes, bore
-down upon the foe. Michael Conner afterwards took his book oath to the
-effect that he was not a coward. But the beaver hat, the purple ribbon,
-the blue ulster and the gilt buttons put the fear of God into him very
-surely. He ran. Alas, he was a stocky youth, not exactly an Ormonde,
-even in his best paces, whereas Mary Plantagenet, black stockings and
-all, moved like a thoroughbred. She chased him remorselessly the whole
-length of Longmore Street, through the Quadrant, finally cornered him
-in a blind alley in which he had the bad judgment to seek refuge, and
-soundly boxed his ears.
-
-As far as Mary Kelly was concerned the incident was closed from that
-moment. Michael Connor very wisely decided to close it also. He
-returned to his marble-playing a chastened boy. But Rose Pierce, the
-daughter of Laxton’s leading physician, told the story breathlessly at
-Broadwood House Academy on the following morning. All agreed that the
-prestige of the school had been seriously impaired, but Miss Kelly was
-Mary Plantagenet from that time on.
-
-
-VII
-
-By the time Mary was fourteen, Broadwood House Academy had taught
-her most of what it knew. Then arose the question of her future. The
-Kellys were people in humble circumstances, and it was felt that the
-child must be put in the way of getting a living. Eliza suggested a
-shop, Aunt Annie shorthand and typewriting, as she was so quick at her
-books, but Aunty Harriet vetoed them promptly. And as year by year that
-autocrat--promoted since the Duke’s breakdown in health to the very
-important post of housekeeper at Bridport House, Mayfair--had supported
-the operations of a strong will with an active power of the purse, she
-carried the day as usual. Mary must be a hospital nurse.
-
-To this scheme, however, there was one serious drawback. No hospital
-would admit her for training until she was twenty-one. The problem now
-was, what she should do in the meantime. In order to meet it the Misses
-Lippincott allowed her to stay on as a special pupil at Broadwood
-House. Paying no fees, she gave a hand with the younger children, and
-was able to continue the study of music, for which she showed a special
-aptitude.
-
-For a time this plan answered very well. The Misses Lippincott had a
-great regard for Mary. In every way she was a credit to the school. Her
-natural gifts were of so high an order that these ladies felt that a
-career was open to her. There was nothing she might not achieve if she
-set her mind upon it, always excepting plain needlework and religious
-knowledge, and perhaps freehand drawing, in which she was a little
-disappointing also. Brimming with vitality and the joy of life and yet
-with her gay enthusiasm was now coming to be mingled a certain ambition.
-
-As month by month she grew into a creature of charm and magnetism, she
-seemed to learn the power within herself. But that discovery brought
-the knowledge that she was a bird in a cage. The daily round began to
-pall. A rare spirit had perceived bars. Broadwood House Academy was
-dear to her, but she now craved a larger, a diviner air.
-
-It chanced that she was to be put in the way of her desire. Once a
-week there came to the school a Miss Waddington, to give lessons in
-dancing. A pupil of the famous Madame Lemaire, of Park Street, Chelsea,
-this lady was an accomplished, as well as a very knowledgeable person.
-From the first she had been greatly attracted by Mary Kelly. An
-instructed eye saw at once that the girl had personality. Not only was
-it expressed in form and feature, it was in her outlook, her ideas.
-There was a rhythm in all that she did, a poetry in the smallest of her
-actions.
-
-This girl was like no other. And Miss Waddington grew so much impressed
-that at last came the proud day, when by permission of the Misses
-Lippincott, Mary was taken to Park Street to the academy, in order that
-her gifts might be assessed by “Madame.”
-
-The opinion of that famous lady, promulgated in due course, caused a
-nine days’ wonder at Broadwood House. Madame Lemaire, it seemed, had
-been so much smitten by the lithe charm of young Miss Kelly, that she
-offered to take her in at Park Street and train her free of charge for
-three years.
-
-At once the girl grew wild to take her chance. It meant escape from a
-life that had already begun to cast long shadows. But her home people
-saw the thing in a very different light. In their opinion there was
-a wide gulf between the respectability of Broadwood House and the
-licentious freedom of Chelsea. Joe and Eliza were at one with Aunt
-Annie and Aunty Harriet in saying “No” to the proposal.
-
-Mistress Mary, however, was now rising sixteen with a rapidly
-developing character of her own. Therefore she did not let the strength
-of opposition daunt her. She set her mind firmly upon Park Street and
-Madame Lemaire; and very soon, to the intense surprise and chagrin of
-“her relations,” she had contrived to get the Misses Lippincott on her
-side.
-
-Very luckily for Mary, those ladies were open-minded and worldly wise.
-They saw that the career of a highly-trained dancer had prospects
-far beyond those of a half-educated schoolmistress. Mary was rapidly
-becoming an asset of Broadwood House, but the ladies, although perhaps
-a little dubious, allowed themselves to be overpersuaded by Miss
-Waddington and the girl herself.
-
-There followed a pretty to-do. Aunt Annie was horrified. Such a
-career, with all deference to the Misses Lippincott, hardly sounded
-respectable. As for Aunty Harriet, with her usual energy, she made
-first-hand inquiries in regard to Madame Lemaire. She found that the
-name of that lady stood high in her profession. But alas! one thing
-leads to another. Aunty Harriet, who had a shrewd knack of taking long
-views, had already espied the cloven hoof of the theater. It seemed
-inevitable that such a girl as Mary should drift towards it. And of
-that sinister institution Aunty Harriet had a pious horror.
-
-Therefore she opposed Park Street sternly. But the girl fully knew her
-own mind and meant from the first to have her way. And she played her
-cards so well that she got it somehow. No doubt it was judicious aid
-from an influential quarter that finally carried the day. Be that as
-it may, in spite of all sorts of gloomy prophecies, Mary was able to
-accept an offer which was to change completely the current of her life.
-
-
-VIII
-
-The move to Chelsea closed an epoch. At once Mary found herself in a
-new and fascinating world. Part of the arrangement with Madame Lemaire
-was that she should “live in” at Park Street, and have freedom to
-take a fourpenny ’bus on Sundays to Beaconsfield Villas. This was
-greatly to Mary’s liking. Chelsea, as she soon discovered, had an air
-more rarefied than Laxton; somehow it had a magic which opened up
-new vistas. She had been by no means unhappy at Broadwood House, her
-foster-parents had treated her with every kindness, but she could not
-help feeling that by comparison with the new life, the old one was
-rather deadly.
-
-Of course, it would have been black ingratitude to admit anything of
-the kind. Still, the fact was there. Park Street had a freedom, a
-gayety, a careless bonhomie far removed from the austerity of Broadwood
-House. Her life had been enlarged. The hours were long, the work was
-hard, but her heart was in it, and the novel charm of her surroundings
-was a perpetual delight.
-
-A month of Park Street brought more knowledge of the world than a
-lustrum of Broadwood House. Madame Lemaire’s establishment was a famous
-one, in fact the resort of fashion; to the perceptive Mary the people
-with whom she had now to rub shoulders had real educational value.
-
-The girl was one of a number of articled pupils, who were taught
-dancing in order to teach it again. With all of these she got on well.
-Immensely likeable herself, she had an instinct for liking others. And
-she was now among a rather picked lot, a little Bohemian perhaps in the
-general range of their ideas, but friendly, amusing, and at heart “good
-sorts.” Madame knew her business thoroughly. She seldom erred as to the
-character and capacity of those whom she chose to help her in return
-for a valuable training.
-
-Some of the girls who passed through her hands found their way on to
-the stage. Distinguished names were among them. Indeed, the atmosphere
-of Park Street was semi-theatrical. Dancing, elocution, singing,
-physical culture, and fencing were the subjects taught at Madame
-Lemaire’s academy.
-
-Mary remained nearly three years at Park Street. In that time she came
-on amazingly. Awake from the first to a knowledge of her gifts, she
-was secretly determined to use them in the carving out of a career.
-Broadwood House had sown the seed of ambition; under the able tutelage
-of Madame Lemaire it was to bear fruit. Stimulated by the outlook of
-her new friends, soon she began to feel the lure of a larger life. She
-craved for self-expression through the emotions, and all her energies
-were bent upon the satisfaction of a vital need.
-
-In the early stages she owed much to Madame Lemaire, who approved her
-ambition to the full. Here was a talent, and that lady did all in her
-power to fit a brilliant pupil for the field best suited to it. Unknown
-to Aunty Harriet, who still cherished the idea of a hospital at the age
-of twenty-one, unknown to Aunt Annie, who would have been horrified,
-unknown to Beaconsfield Villas, Mary with the future always before her,
-set to work under the ægis of Madame to make her dreams come true.
-
-After many diligent months, in the course of which a singularly dainty
-pair of feet were reënforced by a very serviceable soprano, there came
-the day when she was given her chance. A theatrical manager, who made
-a point of attending the annual display of Madame’s pupils at the
-Terpsichorean Hall, was so struck by her abilities that he offered her
-an engagement. It was true that it was merely to understudy in the
-provinces a small part in a musical comedy. But it was a beginning, if
-an humble one, and its acceptance was strongly advised. It meant the
-opening of the magic door at which so many are doomed to knock in vain.
-This girl should go far; but if the new life proved too hard, Madame
-would be more than willing for her to return to Park Street as a member
-of her staff.
-
-Alarums and excursions followed. Before a decision could be made the
-girl felt in honor bound to consult godmother Harriet. So intensely had
-that lady the welfare of Mary at heart, that she never failed to visit
-Park Street once a week when in London. There was a very real bond of
-sympathy between them, which time had deepened. Yet hitherto Mary had
-not ventured to disclose the scope and nature of her plans. Alas! she
-had now to launch a bolt from the blue.
-
-The blow fell one Wednesday afternoon when Aunty Harriet came as usual
-to drink a weekly cup of tea at Park Street with her adopted niece.
-Aunty Harriet, although she prided herself upon being a woman of the
-world, was unable to entertain such an idea for a moment. Years ago it
-had been decided that Mary was to be a hospital nurse. But Mary, now a
-strong-willed creature of eighteen had made her own decision. For many
-a month she had been working hard, unknown to her friends, in order to
-seize the chance when it came. Moreover, she felt within herself that
-she had found her true vocation.
-
-Aunty Harriet took a high tone. Three years before she had met defeat
-at the hands of this headstrong young woman in alliance with the Misses
-Lippincott. In secret, and for a reason only known to herself, she had
-never ceased to deplore that fact. She made up her mind that she would
-not be overcome a second time. But she was quite unable to shake the
-girl’s determination. And there was Madame Lemaire to reckon with.
-Indeed, that worldly-wise person seconded her clever pupil in the way
-the Broadwood House ladies had. Nor was it luck altogether that for
-a second time brought the girl such powerful backing when she needed
-it most. Behind the engaging air of simple frankness was a will that
-nothing could shake.
-
-The end of the matter was that two powerful natures came perilously
-near the point of estrangement. Both had fully made up their minds.
-That memorable Wednesday afternoon saw a veritable passage of arms, in
-the course of which Mary, her back to the wall, at last threw down the
-gage of battle.
-
-Her blunt refusal to submit to dictation came as a shock to Harriet,
-whose distress seemed out of all proportion to its cause. But to her
-the project was so demoralizing that she fought against it tooth and
-nail. She enlisted Aunt Annie, now very infirm and less active as a
-power, and the girl’s home people at Beaconsfield Villas. But all
-opposition was vain. The young Amazon had cast the die for better or
-for worse. To Harriet’s consternation she took the manager’s offer.
-Disaster was predicted. There were heavy hearts in Laxton, but the
-heaviest of all was at Bridport House, Mayfair.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-FLOWING WATER
-
-
-I
-
-ON a spring afternoon, Mary at ease, novel in lap, let her mind flow
-over the years in their passing. Four had gone by since she had defied
-her family, in order to embrace a career, which in their view was full
-of peril. But in spite of that, so far she had escaped disaster. And
-fortune had been amazingly kind in the meantime.
-
-On the table near Mary’s elbow were five cups on a tray, and opposite,
-also at ease, with her hands behind her shrewd head, was Milly Wren.
-Mary had just begun to share a very comfortable flat with Milly and
-Milly’s mother.
-
-Milly herself, in Mary’s opinion, was more than worthy of her
-surroundings. Loyal, sympathetic, full of courage, she had served a far
-longer apprenticeship to success than Mary had. She had “made good” in
-the face of heavy odds.
-
-Milly had not a great talent. Force of character and singleness of aim
-had brought her to the top, and only these, as she well knew, would
-keep her there. But with Mary it was a different story. All sorts of
-fairies had attended her birth. She had every gift for the career she
-had chosen, moreover, she had them in abundance. Milly, who had gone up
-the ladder a step at a time, would have been more than human had she
-not envied her friend the qualities she wore with the indifference of a
-regular royal queen.
-
-The clock on the chimney-piece struck four.
-
-“I’m feeling quite excited,” Milly suddenly remarked.
-
-From the depths of the opposite chair came the note which for six
-months now had cast a spell upon London.
-
-“He mustn’t know that,” laughed Mary. “Dignity, my child, touched with
-hauteur, is the prescription for a marquis. At least that’s according
-to the book of the words.” And she gayly waved the novel she had
-neglected for nearly an hour.
-
-“Oh, Sonny,” said Milly Wren, “I wasn’t thinking of _him_. I was
-thinking of the friend he is bringing, who is simply dying to know you.”
-
-Mary knew this was quite true, for that was Milly’s way.
-
-“Oh, is he!” If the tone was disdain, its sting was masked by gentle
-irony and humor. These airs and graces didn’t make enemies, they so
-frankly belonged to the wonderful Mary Lawrence--her name in the
-theater. That which might have been mere petulance in a nature thinner
-of texture, became with her a half-royal impatience for the more
-trivial aspects of the human comedy.
-
-“But I want to see him,” persisted Milly. “Sonny thinks no end of him.”
-
-“Then I’m sure he’s nice.”
-
-“Why do you think so?” Milly was a little intrigued by the warmth of
-the words.
-
-“Because Lord Wrexham is charming.”
-
-Milly laughed. The naïve admiration was unexpected, the slightly too
-respectful air was puzzling. Milly herself was so _blasé_ in regard to
-the peerage that such an attitude of mind seemed almost provincial. Yet
-she would have been the first to own that it was the only thing about
-her enigmatic friend which suggested anything of the kind.
-
-“Sonny says he raves about you.”
-
-“It’s _his funeral_.” The laugh was honestly gay. “He’ll be very
-disappointed, poor lad.”
-
-“Don’t fish.”
-
-“I never fish in shallow waters, Miss Wren.”
-
-“You are the most shameless angler I know. But you do it so beautifully
-that people don’t realize what you are at.”
-
-“Unconsciously--say unconsciously,” came a flash from the opposite
-chair.
-
-“So I used to think. Before I really knew you I thought everything you
-said and did just happened so. But now I am not quite sure that you
-have not thought everything out beforehand.”
-
-“Don’t make me out a horror.”
-
-“Anyway you are much the cleverest creature I have ever met. You are
-so deep that there is no fathoming you. Somehow you are not the least
-ordinary in anything.”
-
-Mary abruptly brought the conversation back to Sonny and his friend.
-The latter, it seemed, had first gazed on the famous Miss Lawrence in
-New York, at the Pumpernickel Theater, the previous year.
-
-“An American?”
-
-“No,” said Milly. “But he’s seen a lot of life out West.”
-
-Before other questions could rise to Mary’s lips, Mrs. Wren came in.
-Milly’s mother was an elderly lady who had been on the stage. In the
-first flight of her profession, life had given her many a shrewd
-knock, but in the process she had picked up a considerable knowledge
-of the world and its ways. She lived for Milly, in whom her every
-thought was centered, for in the daughter the mother lived again.
-Intensely ambitious for her, Mrs. Wren was a little inclined to resent
-the intrusion within the nest of a bird of such dazzling plumage as
-Mary Lawrence. At the same time that honest woman well knew that her
-daughter had more to gain than she had to lose by sharing a roof with
-such a supremely attractive stable companion.
-
-Mrs. Wren found it very difficult to place Mary Lawrence. In ideas and
-outlook, in the face she showed to the world, she was far from being a
-typical member of her calling as the good lady knew it. As Mrs. Wren
-reckoned success, this girl had won it on two continents almost too
-abundantly, but she seemed to hold it very cheap. Perhaps it had been
-gained too easily. Milly’s mother, rather jealous, rather ambitious as
-she was, could hardly find it in her heart to say it was undeserved,
-but Mary Lawrence took the high gifts of fortune so much for granted,
-almost as if they were a birthright, that the mother of her friend,
-remembering the long years of her own thornily-crowned servitude, and
-Milly’s hard struggle “to arrive,” could not help a feeling of secret
-envy.
-
-“His lordship coming to tea?” said Mrs. Wren, with a demure glance at
-the five cups on the tray.
-
-None knew so well as she that his lordship was coming to tea. She had
-made elaborate preparations in toilette and confectionery in order to
-receive him. But the phrase rose so histrionically to her lips that she
-simply couldn’t resist it. Somehow it made such a perfect entrance, for
-Milly’s mother carried a sense of the theater into private life.
-
-It would have been heartless of Milly, who belonged to another
-generation, to have uttered the words on her tongue. And those words
-were, “You know perfectly well that Sonny is coming.”
-
-“He said he was,” Milly’s reply was given with a patient smile that
-concealed an infinity of boredom. Her mother, fussy, trite, rather
-exasperating, had never quite learned amid all her jousts with the
-world, to acquire the golden mean. There were times when she sorely
-tried her clever and ambitious daughter, whose patience was little
-short of angelic.
-
-“What’s the name of the friend he is bringing?”
-
-“Mr. Dinneford.”
-
-“Not another lord?” The tone of Mrs. Wren had a tiny note of
-disappointment.
-
-“A rich commoner,” said Milly with a laugh. “At least Sonny says he
-will be one of the richest men in England when his uncle dies. His
-uncle, I believe, is a great swell.”
-
-“I don’t doubt it, dear,” said Mrs. Wren.
-
-
-II
-
-An electric bell was heard to buzz.
-
-“They are here,” said Mrs. Wren in a tone with a thrill in it.
-
-A neat parlor maid announced “Lord Wrexham, Mr. Dinneford,” and two
-stalwart young men entered cheerily. They were hearty upstanding
-fellows, curiously alike in manner, appearance, dress, yet in the
-thousand and one subtleties of character immutably different. But
-this was not a moment for the fine shades. They came into the room
-unaffectedly, without shyness, and warmly took the hands of welcome
-that were offered them.
-
-Wrexham, a subaltern of the Pinks of three years’ standing, was an
-attractive but rather irresolute young man. He knew that he was
-perilously near forbidden ground. If not exactly in the toils of an
-infatuation, the charms of Milly were growing day by day upon an
-impressionable mind. Fully content as yet to live in the moment,
-a wiser young man might have begun to pay the future some little
-attention.
-
-As for the lively, headstrong, unconventional Jack Dinneford, at
-present at a loose end in London, to whom Wrexham himself had been
-appointed as a sort of unofficial bear-leader by the express desire
-of Bridport House, that warrior was on a voyage of discovery. In
-common with half the males of his age in the metropolis he was already
-in the thrall of the wonderful Princess Bedalia. In the opinion of
-connoisseurs she was the only one of her kind; for the past two hundred
-nights she had played “to capacity” at the Frivolity Theater, and even
-Jack Dinneford, who in one way or another had seen a goodish bit of the
-Old World and the New, could not repress an exquisite little thrill as
-her highness rose with rare politeness to receive him.
-
-“She’s even more stunning than I guessed,” was the thought in Jack’s
-mind at the moment of presentation. He could almost feel the magnetism
-in her finger tips. She was so alive in every nerve that it would have
-called for no great power of imagination to detect vibration all round
-her.
-
-“I feel greatly honored in meeting you,” said the young man with
-transparent honesty. He was no subscriber evidently to the maxim,
-“Language was given us to conceal our thoughts.” Somehow she couldn’t
-help liking him for it.
-
-“The honor is mine.” The response was so ready, the humor behind it so
-genuine, that they both laughed whole-heartedly and became friends on
-the spot. There was no nonsense about Princess Bedalia, and the same
-applied to the brown-faced clear-eyed owner of the fanciful scarf pin.
-
-The neat parlor maid brought tea. Wrexham, after a little amiable
-chaffing of Mrs. Wren, whom he had met on at least six occasions,
-provided Milly with tea and a macaroon, took the like for himself, and
-sat beside her without a care in the wide world. She was forbidden
-fruit; thus to frail humanity in its present phase she conveyed an idea
-of Paradise. Such a view was quite absurd, allowing even for the fact
-that Milly was an engaging creature, with a good heart, a ready tongue,
-a rather special kind of prettiness, and a particularly shrewd head.
-
-Jack Dinneford on the opposite sofa had stronger warrant for his
-emotions. This girl whom he had first seen in New York before the news
-of a great inheritance had come to him, whom he had since viewed ten
-times from the stalls of the Frivolity Theater, was a personality.
-There was no doubt about that. And as he discovered at once their minds
-marched together. They saw men and events at the same angle. A phrase
-of either would draw forth an instant counterpart; in five minutes they
-had turned the whole universe into mockery, but without letting go of
-the fact that they were complete strangers colloguing for the first
-time.
-
-Mrs. Wren withdrew presently on the pretext that she had letters to
-write. A very pleasant hour quickly sped. Each of these four people
-was in the mood to enjoy. Life in spite of its hazards, was no bad
-thing at the moment. Wrexham, a thorough gentleman, was an immensely
-likeable young man. And while he basked in present happiness a certain
-resolution began to take shape in his mind.
-
-As for Jack Dinneford at the other side of the room, his thoughts
-followed a humbler course. But he was an elemental, a very dangerous
-fellow if once he began to play with ideas. At present he suffered from
-the drawback of being no more than the nephew of his uncle; therefore
-his sensations were not exactly those of Wrexham, who was a natural
-caster of the handkerchief. But in this fatal hour Jack was heavily
-smitten.
-
-He had met few girls in his twenty-four years of existence. In his
-naïf way he confessed as much to Miss Lawrence. She was amused by
-the confession and led him to make others. This was easy because he
-liked talking about himself, that is to say, with such a girl as Mary
-Lawrence inciting him humorously to reveal the piquant details of a
-life not without its adventures, he would have had to be much less
-primitive than he was to have resisted the lure of the charmer.
-
-She was unaffectedly interested. She differed from Mr. Dinneford
-inasmuch as she had met many young men. Therefore, her heart was not
-worn on her sleeve for daws to peck at. But he was a new type, and she
-confessed gayly to Milly as soon as he had gone, she found him very
-amusing.
-
-
-III
-
-So much happened in the crowded month that followed, that at London
-Bridge the Thames might be said to be in spate. The two young men were
-often at the theater, and now and again Mary and Milly, chaperoned by
-Mrs. Wren, would accept an invitation to supper at a restaurant. Then
-there were the happy hours these four people were able to snatch from
-their various duties, which they spent under the trees in the Park.
-These were golden days indeed, but--the shadow of the policeman could
-already be seen creeping up. The senior subaltern had been constrained
-one fine morning to take Wrexham so far into his confidence as to
-inform him with brutal precision, that if a man in the Household
-Cavalry marries an actress, he leaves the regiment.
-
-The young man was intensely annoyed. Wisdom was not his long suit, and
-although an excellent fellow according to his lights, right at the
-back was the arrogance of old marquisate. His answer to the senior
-subaltern was to arrange a most agreeable up-river excursion for the
-following Sunday. On returning late in the evening to the flat, Milly
-was in rather a flutter.
-
-Mary, who had been one of the merry party, was troubled. She had
-certain instincts which went very deep, and these warned her of
-breakers ahead. She had a great regard for Milly, and the more she knew
-of Wrexham the better she liked him. But she saw quite clearly that
-difficulties must arise if the thing went on, and that very powerful
-opposition would have to be faced in several quarters.
-
-Moreover, she had now her own problem to meet; Jack had begun to force
-the pace. And Mary, who had a sort of sixth sense in these matters, had
-already felt this to be an inconvenience. From the first she had found
-him delightful. Day by day this feeling had grown. An original, with
-a strong will and a keen sense of humor, he differed from his friend
-Wrexham inasmuch that he knew his own mind. He returned from the river
-fully determined to marry Mary Lawrence.
-
-Perhaps this heroic resolve may have been forced upon him by the
-knowledge of other Richmonds in the field. Mary was famous and admired.
-It savored of presumption for such a one as himself, in receipt of a
-modest two thousand a year from his kinsman, the Duke, to butt in where
-men far richer were content to walk delicately. But he was “next in” at
-Bridport House, he was heir to a great name, therefore, at the lowest
-estimate, he was a quite considerable _parti_. This fact must stand his
-excuse, although he was far too astute to make it one in the difficult
-game he was about to play.
-
-Jack was not afflicted with subtlety in any form, he was not even a
-close observer, but he understood well enough that it was going to
-be a man’s work to persuade Mary Lawrence to marry him. She had an
-immense independence, to which, of course, she was fully entitled, a
-wide field of choice, and under the delightfully amusing give-and-take
-which endeared her to Bohemia was a fastidious reserve which somehow
-hinted at other standards. Even allowing for a lover’s partiality this
-girl was to cut to a pattern far more imposing than Milly Wren. Her
-qualities were positive, whereas Milly had prettiness merely, a warm
-heart, a factitious charm. However, as soon as this sportsman had made
-up his mind to tackle the stiffest fence that a Nimrod has to face, he
-decided at once that the hour had come to harden his heart and go at
-the post and rails in style.
-
-The next evening, as he strolled with Mary under the trees, he may have
-been thinking in metaphor, when he let his eyes dwell on the riders in
-the Row.
-
-“How jolly they look!” he said. And then at the instance of a concrete
-thought--“By Jove, an idea! Tomorrow morning, if I job a couple of
-gees, will you come for a ride?”
-
-The response was a ready one. “I should love to, if you are not afraid
-to be seen with an absolute duffer.”
-
-“That’s a bargain. But they may be screws, as there doesn’t seem enough
-decent ones to go round at this time of the year.”
-
-“I know nothing about horses,” was the laughing reply, “except just
-enough not to look a hired horse in the knees. And the worse my mount
-the better for me, at least it reduces my chance of biting the tan.”
-
-“I expect you are a good deal better than you admit.”
-
-She was woman enough to ask why he should think so.
-
-“You have the look of a goer,” he said, as his eye sought involuntarily
-the long slender line of a frame all suppleness, delicacy, and power.
-
-“Wait till tomorrow. In the meantime I warn you that you’re almost
-certain to be disgraced in the sight of the town.”
-
-“Let’s risk it anyway,” said the young man delightedly.
-
-In a very few minutes, however, Mary seriously regretted a rash
-promise. They had only gone a few yards farther, Jack still inclined to
-exult at the pact into which he had lured her, when both were brought
-up short by a sudden clear “Hello!” from the other side of the rails.
-
-Jack had been hailed by a couple of long, lean young women with
-mouse-colored hair, on a couple of long, lean mouse-colored horses.
-They were followed at a respectful distance by a very smart groom on a
-good-looking chestnut. The set of the close-fitting black habits and
-the absolute ease of the wearers denoted the expert horse-woman.
-
-“Hello, Madge--hello, Blanche!” The casual greeting was punctuated by a
-wave, equally casual, of the young man’s hand.
-
-As the two riders went slowly by they let their eyes rest upon Mary.
-The look she received did not amount to a stare, but it had a cool
-impertinence which somehow roused her fighting instinct. Unconsciously
-she gave it back. On both sides was a frank curiosity discreetly
-veiled, but the honors, if honors there were in the matter, were with
-the occupants of the saddle. Somehow that seemed so clearly to have
-been the place for generations of these lean young women with their
-rigidity of line, their large noses, their cool appraising air of which
-they were wholly unconscious.
-
-Who are _they_? was their reaction upon Mary Lawrence.
-
-Who is _she_? was her reaction upon these horsewomen.
-
-“A couple of my cousins.” The young man carelessly answered a question
-that Mary was too proud to ask.
-
-
-IV
-
-Mary’s riding had been confined to a few lessons shared with Milly at
-the Brompton School of Equitation, and Milly was urged to make a third
-on the morrow. Mrs. Wren felt it to be the due of the proprieties that
-she should do so, but Milly herself, apart from the fact that she
-was shy of appearing in the Row, was quite convinced that it would
-not be the act of “a sport” to overlook the ancient maxim, “Two are
-company, three a crowd.” Therefore the invitation was declined. And
-this discreet action on the part of Milly gave Fate the opportunity for
-which it had seemed to be looking for some little time past.
-
-It was about twenty minutes to eleven in the forenoon of a perfect
-first of June that Jack Dinneford rode up gayly to the flat in Broad
-Place, leading a horse very likely-looking, but warranted quiet.
-It was a fair presumption that the guarantee covered the fact of
-its disposition, since it had made the perilous journey from the
-jobmaster’s, three doors out of Park Lane, and across the No Man’s
-Land yclept Hyde Park Corner, that terrible and trappy maze, without a
-suspicion of mental stress.
-
-Jack’s best hunting voice ascended to an open window of the second
-story. The complete horsewoman, in every detail immaculate, came on to
-the little balcony of Number 16, Victoria Mansions.
-
-“What a gorgeous day!”
-
-“A ripper!”
-
-If excitement there was on the side of either, self-mastery concealed
-it. Yet an inconvenient pressure of emotion was shared by both just
-then. In spite of a liberal share of self-confidence and a will under
-strong control Mary could hardly refrain from the hope that she was
-not going to make a perfect fool of herself. As soon as she beheld the
-upstanding chestnut below with its slender legs and thin tail, she
-winged an involuntary prayer to Allah that there were no tricks in its
-repertory unbecoming a horse and a gentleman. As for Jack, the presence
-of all the horses in the world would not have excited him. It was not
-in him to be excited by things of that kind, that is to say, it was
-part of his religion not to be excited by them; all the same there was
-a genuine, nay, almost terrible thrill in his heart this morning.
-
-In the course of a rather wakeful night he had made up his mind “to
-come to the ’osses” in sober verity. To the best of his present
-information the gods, in the absence of the unforeseen, would discuss
-the matter privately about twelve o’clock.
-
-“Blanche and Marjorie will have something to look at,” was the proud
-thought in the mind of the young man as the complete Diana, fit to
-greet Aurora and her courses, emerged from the Otis elevator and took
-the front of Broad Place with beauty.
-
-“I wish these clothes were a little less smart, and not quite so
-new,” was the first thought in the mind of Diana. “I am sure they
-are both of them ‘Cats,’” was the thought which followed close upon
-its heels. Until that hour it had never been her lot to harbor
-such vain companions. This gay spirit to whom the fairies had been
-kind had always seemed to breathe a larger, a diviner air. Such
-self-consciousness shamed her; but after all _those two_ with their old
-habits and their odd perfection were more to blame than she.
-
-Truth to tell, in the last seventeen hours a subtle, rather horrid
-change had taken place in her. Up till six o’clock the previous evening
-she had always been nobly sure of herself, regally self-secure. Always
-when she had measured herself against others of her age and sex she
-had had a feeling of having been born to the purple. Somewhere, deep
-down, she had seemed to have illimitable reserves to draw upon when the
-creatures of her own orbit had forced her to a reluctant comparison. In
-all her dealings with her peers, she had felt that she had a great deal
-in hand. But Marjorie and Blanche, whoever Marjorie and Blanche might
-be, had seemed to alter all that with a glance of their ironical eyes.
-
-Jack fixed her in the saddle of the tall horse and lengthened her
-stirrup with quite a professional air, while Milly and her mother
-watched the proceedings in a rather thrilled silence from the balcony
-of Number Sixteen. Their minds were dominated by a single thought,
-which, however, bore one aspect in the mind of Mrs. Wren, another in
-the mind of the faithful Milly.
-
-“She is _set_ on marrying him?”--Mrs. Wren.
-
-“He is so nice, I hope he won’t disappoint her?”--Milly the faithful.
-
-The cavalcade started. As if no such people as Marjorie and Blanche
-existed in the world, Mary waved the yellow-gloved hand of an excited
-schoolgirl to the balcony of Victoria Mansions. Jack accompanied it
-with an upward glance and a gravely-lifted hat.
-
-In the maelstrom of promiscuous vehicles which makes Knightsbridge a
-thoroughfare inimical to man, Jack took charge of the good-looking
-hireling. With solemn care he piloted the upstanding one and his rather
-anxious rider into the calm of Albert Gate.
-
-“I hope you are comfortable,” he found time to say; moreover, he found
-time to say it so nicely and sincerely, almost as if his only hope
-of happiness, here and hereafter, depended upon the answer, that the
-answer came promptly in the form of a gay “Yes,” although had she been
-quite honest she would have said she had never felt less comfortable
-in her life. Her horse was such a mountain of a fellow, that she might
-have been perched on the top of a very old-fashioned velocipede. Then
-the saddle was very different from the one at the riding school. It had
-much less room and fewer _points d’appui_ to offer. As soon as her knee
-tried to grip the pommel she knew that she must not hope to get friends
-with it. She had embarked on a very rash adventure. And if she didn’t
-make a sorry exhibition of herself in the eyes of All London, including
-_those two_, she would have cause to thank her private stars, who, to
-give them their due, had certainly looked after her very well so far.
-
-“It’s very sporting of her,” said Expert Knowledge to Jack Dinneford.
-
-“I hope the gee won’t play the fool,” said Jack Dinneford to Expert
-Knowledge.
-
-
-V
-
-Hardly had they entered the Row, when Providence, of _malice prepense_,
-as it seemed, threw them right across the path of the enemy. Cousin
-Marjorie and Cousin Blanche, walking their horses slowly along by
-the rails, were within a very few yards. Moreover, they were coming
-towards them. Mary, aided by the sixth sense given to woman, was aware
-of a subtle intensity of gaze upon her, even before she could trace
-the source of its origin. She could feel it upon her--upon her and
-everything that was hers, from the crown of her rather too modish hat
-to the tip of her tall friend’s fetlock.
-
-“Good morning, Jack,” said a clear, strong voice.
-
-“Hello,” the tone of Jack was amazingly casual--“here you are again.”
-
-There was a moment’s maneuvering, in the course of which three pairs
-of feminine eyes met in challenge, and then Cousin Blanche and Cousin
-Marjorie, smart groom and all, passed on without offering a chance
-of coming to closer quarters. Their tactics had been calculated so
-nicely that it was impossible to say whether discourtesy was or
-was not intended. But there was a subtle air about these ironically
-self-confident young women which prevented Mary from giving them the
-benefit of the doubt.
-
-For a moment she felt inclined to rage within. And then she bit her lip
-and laughed. A moment later a sudden peck of the tall horse told her
-that it would be wise for the present to give him an undivided mind.
-Soon, however, Cousin Marjorie and Cousin Blanche were forgotten in the
-delights and the perils of the discreet canter into which she found
-herself launched. It was a perfect morning for the Row. The play of the
-sun on the bright leaves, the power of its rays softened by a breeze
-from the east, the sense of rapid motion, the kaleidoscope of swiftly
-changing figures through which they passed, filled her with a zest of
-life, a feeling of high romance which left no room for smaller and
-meaner affairs. And the stride of the tall horse, as soon as she got
-used to it, was such a thing of delight in itself, that she even forgot
-the strange saddle and her general fears.
-
-They rode for an enchanted hour. And somehow, in the course of it, the
-life forces became more insurgent. Somehow they deepened, expanded,
-grew more imperious. Jack was a real out-of-doors man, who believed
-that hunting, shooting, field sports, and fresh air were the highest
-good. His look of lordly health, mingled with a charmingly delicate
-protectiveness, appealed to her in a very special way. For some weeks
-she had known that she was beginning to like him perilously much. But
-it was not until she had returned rather tired and rather hot to
-Victoria Mansions, had had a delicious bath, and a very good luncheon
-indeed that she began at last to realize that she was fairly up against
-the acute problem of Jack Dinneford.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-BRIDPORT HOUSE
-
-
-I
-
-IN the meantime Cousin Marjorie and Cousin Blanche enjoyed their ride
-very much. It was the one thing they really did enjoy in London.
-
-They were two ordinary young women, yet even so late in the Old World’s
-history as the year 1913, their own private cosmos could not quite
-make up its mind to regard them in that light. Cousin Marjorie and
-Cousin Blanche had surprisingly little to say for themselves. They were
-modest, unassuming girls, without views or ideas, very proper, very
-dull, absurdly conventional; in the eyes of some people as plain as the
-proverbial pikestaff, passably good-looking in the sight of others;
-in fact, a more commonplace pair of young women would have been hard
-to find anywhere, yet deep in the hearts of the Ladies Dinneford was
-the sure faith that the world at large did not subscribe to any such
-opinion.
-
-It was not merely that they rode rather well. They passed other
-members of their sex in the Row that morning who rode quite as well
-as themselves. No, proficiency in the saddle, the one accomplishment
-they could boast, of which they were unaffectedly modest, was far from
-explaining the particular angle at which the world chose to view
-them. Not that in any way they were fêted or acclaimed. As far as the
-vast majority of their fellow-creatures were concerned they were not
-people to look at twice. But here and there a glance of recognition or
-curiosity would greet them, winged by a smile, now of mere interest,
-now of an irony faintly perceptible.
-
-Life had been very kind to Cousin Marjorie and Cousin Blanche, yet they
-did not look conspicuously happy. With both hands it had lavished upon
-them its material best, but the gifts of fortune were taken as a matter
-of mere personal right. Providence owed it to the order of things
-they stood for. Far from being grateful, they were a little bored by
-its attentions. Moreover, these young women had not learned to regard
-people to whom the fairies had been less kind with either insight or
-sympathy. Their judgments were objective, therefore they were a little
-hard, a little lacking in tolerance.
-
-
-II
-
-“The stage!” said Marjorie with a straight-lipped smile, a rather
-famous part of her importance.
-
-“You think so?” said Blanche sleepily. But she was not at all sleepy,
-else she would not have been able to handle the Tiger, a recent
-purchase, in the way she was doing at the moment.
-
-“No mistaking it, my dear.”
-
-“Good-looking, though,” lisped the somnolent Blanche, giving the Tiger
-a very shrewd kick with a roweled heel. “Reminds me of some one.”
-
-The Tiger, worried by a bit that he didn’t like, and greatly affronted
-by the heel of his new mistress, which he liked still less, then began
-to behave in a way which for some little time quite forbade any further
-discussion of the subject.
-
-For the rest of the morning, however, it was never far from the minds
-of these ladies. Two or three times they caught sight in the distance
-of Jack and his charge. A striking-looking girl, but she didn’t in the
-least know how to ride. And somehow from that fact Blanche and Marjorie
-seemed to draw spiritual consolation.
-
-At twelve o’clock they left the Park. The policeman at the gate pulled
-himself together and regarded them respectfully. An elderly lady in
-a high-hung barouche of prehistoric design, drawn by a superb pair
-of horses and surmounted by a romantic-looking coachman and footman,
-called out to them in a remarkably strident voice as they passed her,
-“I am coming to luncheon.”
-
-“Bother!” said Marjorie to Blanche.
-
-“Bother!” said Blanche to Marjorie.
-
-They went along Park Lane, as far as Mount Street, turned up that
-bleak thoroughfare, took the second turning to the right, and finally
-entered the courtyard of the imposing residence known as Bridport
-House. Before its solemn portals they dismounted with the help of the
-smart groom. In the act of doing so they encountered a tall, rather
-distinguished-looking man, who was coming down the steps. He was about
-forty-two, clean-shaven, with sandy hair; and his clothes had an air of
-such extreme correctness as to suggest that they had been donned for a
-special occasion.
-
-The departing visitor bowed elaborately to the two ladies, but each
-returned the greeting with an abbreviated nod, backed by an intent
-smile peculiarly her own. There might be courtesy carried to the verge
-of homage on the one side, but on the other was an aloofness cold and
-quizzical.
-
-As soon as Blanche and Marjorie had gained the ample precincts of
-Bridport House each looked demurely at the other, and then yielded a
-laugh, which seemed to mean a great deal more than it expressed.
-
-“Been to see papa, I suppose,” said Blanche, as she waddled duck
-fashion towards a white marble staircase of grandiose design, whose
-cinquecento air could not save it from a slight suspicion of the rococo.
-
-“My dear!” came Marjorie’s crescendo.
-
-Again they looked at each other, again their laughter snarled and
-crackled not unpleasantly.
-
-At one o’clock luncheon was announced. Ten minutes later a well-bathed
-and carefully re-clothed Marjorie and a Blanche to match entered an
-enormous dining-room, which, in spite of its profusion of servants in
-livery, had the air of a crypt.
-
-“Good morning, father. Very pleasant to see you down.”
-
-Each word of Blanche was charmingly punctuated by a little pause, which
-might have been taken for filial regard by those who heard it. But the
-rather acid-looking gentleman, who sat at the head of the table, with a
-face like a cameo a little out of drawing, and a bowl of arrowroot in
-front of him, paid such slight attention to Blanche that she might not
-have spoken at all.
-
-“Good morning, Aunt Charlotte,” said Marjorie coolly, taking up her
-own cue. She surveyed the other occupants of the table with a quietly
-ironical eye. And then as she seated herself at her leisure, as far
-as she could get from the object of her remarks, she proceeded in the
-peculiar but remarkably agreeable voice which she had in common with
-her father and sisters: “Odd we should run into you coming out of the
-Park.”
-
-“Why odd?” said Aunt Charlotte, an elderly, large-featured blonde,
-whose theory of life was as far as possible not to cherish illusions on
-any subject. “I always go in at twelve, you always come out at twelve.
-Nothing odd about it. Thank you!”
-
-“Thank you,” meant, “Yes, I will take claret.” It also meant, “Get
-on with your luncheon, Marjorie, and don’t be absurd. Life is too
-complicated nowadays for such small talk as yours to interest an
-intelligent person.”
-
-Aunt Charlotte, if not consciously rude, was by nature exceedingly
-dominant. For twenty-five years, in one way or another, Bridport House
-had known her yoke. She was the Duke’s only surviving sister, and she
-lived in Hill Street, among the dowagers. Her status was _nil_, but
-her love of power was so great that she had gained an uncomfortable
-ascendancy in the family councils. While free to admire Aunt
-Charlotte’s wisdom, which was supposed to be boundless, the Dinneford
-ladies dislike her in the marrow of their bones. But Fate had played
-against them. Their father had been left a widower with a young family,
-and from the hour of his loss his sister had taken upon herself to
-mother it. She had done so to her own satisfaction, but the objects of
-her regard bore her no gratitude. From Sarah, who was thirty-nine, to
-Marjorie, who was twenty-eight, they were ever ready to try a fall with
-Aunt Charlotte.
-
-As for their father, he had an active dislike of her. He had cause, no
-doubt. More than once he had tried to break the spell of her dominion,
-but somehow it had always proved too strong for him. It was not that
-he was a weak man altogether, but there is a type born to female
-tyranny, an affair of the stars, of human destiny. Charlotte despised
-her brother. In her view he was a lath painted to look like iron, but
-insight into character was not her strength. She owed her position in
-the family to dynamic power, to force of will; but in her own mind it
-was always ascribed to the fact that she acted invariably from the
-highest motives.
-
-“Muriel not here,” said the conversational Marjorie, looking across the
-table to Sarah.
-
-“Gone to the East End, I believe, to one of her committees.”
-
-It would have been nearer the truth for the eldest flower, who was
-dealing with a recalcitrant fragment of lobster in a masterful manner,
-to have said that Muriel had gone to luncheon at Hayes with the
-Penarths. But Sarah, who did not approve of Muriel, and still less
-of the Penarths, was content with a general statement whose flagrant
-inaccuracy somehow crystallized her attitude towards them both. Muriel
-had become frankly impossible. The higher expediency could no longer
-take her seriously.
-
-But there are degrees of wisdom, even among the elect. Sarah’s place
-was assured at Minerva’s Court, but Marjorie and Blanche were wiser
-perhaps in matters equine than in other things. Where angels feared to
-tread Blanche, at any rate, for reasons of her own, had sometimes been
-known to butt in. A classical instance was about to be furnished.
-
-“Do tell me.” Blanche suddenly looked Sarah straight in the eyes. “Has
-Sir Dugald been to see father?”
-
-There was a long moment’s pause in which Sarah maintained a
-stranglehold upon the lobster, while Lady Wargrave and the Duke, who
-knew they were being “ragged” by a past mistress in the art, glared
-daggers down the table.
-
-“I believe so,” said Sarah in an exceedingly dry voice, followed by a
-hardly perceptible glance at the servants.
-
-
-III
-
-Over the coffee cups, in the solemn privacy of the blue drawing-room,
-the Dinneford ladies grew a little less laconic. They were in a perfect
-hurricane of great events. Even they, who seldom use two words if one
-would suffice, had to make some concession to the pressure of history.
-
-“His mother, I understand,” said Aunt Charlotte, seating herself
-massively in the center of her floridly Victorian picture, “kept the
-village shop at Ardnaleuchan.”
-
-“Then I’ve bought bull’s-eye peppermints of her,” said Sarah, with a
-touch of acid humor which somehow became her quite well.
-
-“But it’s so serious”--Lady Wargrave stirred her coffee. “Still he’s
-been given the Home Office--so she thinks she moves with the times, no
-doubt.”
-
-“_Has_ been given the Home Office?” said Blanche, suddenly achieving an
-air of intelligence.
-
-“The papers say so,” said Sarah dryly. “But I don’t think that excuses
-him.”
-
-“Or Muriel,” interpolated Aunt Charlotte with venom. “What did your
-father say to the man?”
-
-“He was deplorably rude, I believe--even for father. He said the man
-had the hide of a rhinoceros, so obviously he had tested it.”
-
-“All very amazing. It is charity to assume that Muriel is out of her
-mind.”
-
-“One can’t be sure,” said Sarah weightily. “She says he has such a good
-head that one day he _must_ be Prime Minister. After all, she will be a
-Prime Minister’s wife!”
-
-“But a Radical Prime Minister’s wife!”
-
-“He may rat,” said Sarah, with judicious optimism.
-
-“He may,” said Lady Wargrave, looking down her long nose. “But there
-never was a matter in which I felt less hopeful. What does your father
-think?”
-
-“The man’s a red rag. Don’t you remember the shameful way he attacked
-poor father on the Land Question two years ago? What was it he called
-him in the House of Commons?”
-
-“‘The Great Panjandrum, with little round button on top,’” quoted the
-solemn Marjorie, whose chief social asset was an amazing memory.
-
-“And after that he dares to come here!” Aunt Charlotte quivered
-majestically. “Didn’t your father kick him downstairs?”
-
-“I think he would have done--but for his infirmity,” said Sarah
-judicially.
-
-“I had forgotten his gout, poor man. At least, I hope he ordered the
-servants to throw the creature into the street.”
-
-“One hardly does that, does one?--with his Majesty’s Secretaries of
-State,” said Blanche, whose sleepy voice had an odd precision which
-made each word bite like an acid.
-
-Aunt Charlotte hooded her eyes like a cobra to look at Blanche. But she
-didn’t say anything. Only experts could handle Blanche, and even these
-must abide the whim of the goddess opportunity.
-
-“After all, why fuss?” continued Blanche with a muted laugh which had
-the power of annoying all the other ladies extremely. “If one has to
-marry one might as well marry a Prime Minister.”
-
-This was such a sublime expression of the obvious, that even Lady
-Wargrave, who contested everything on principle, was dumb before it.
-Blanche was therefore able to retire in perfect order to the comatose,
-her natural state. But in the next moment she reëmerged, so that a
-little private thunderbolt she had been diligently nursing through
-the whole luncheon might shake the rather strained peace of the blue
-drawing-room. She was quite sure that it would be a pleasure to launch
-it when the moment came. A sudden pause in the great topic of Muriel’s
-_affaire_ told her it had now arrived.
-
-“We saw Jack riding with that girl.” So sleepy was the voice of Blanche
-as it made this announcement that it seemed a wonder she could keep
-awake.
-
-“What girl?” Aunt Charlotte walked straight into Blanche’s little trap.
-
-“Oh, you _didn’t_ know.” Blanche suppressed a yawn. “It’s a rather long
-story.”
-
-Still it had to be told. And Blanche, just able to keep awake, told
-it circumstantially. The Tenderfoot--the heir’s own name for himself,
-which Blanche made a point of using in conversation with Aunt Charlotte
-because that lady considered it vulgar--had been seen at the Savoy with
-a girl, he had been seen in the Park with a girl, he had been seen
-motoring with a girl; in fact, he had been going about with a girl for
-several weeks.
-
-“And you never told _me_,” said Lady Wargrave with the air of a tragedy
-queen. She looked from Blanche to Sarah, from Sarah to Marjorie. A
-light of sour sarcasm in the eye of the eldest flower was all the
-comfort she took from the survey.
-
-“Who is the girl? Tell me.”
-
-Blanche inclined to think an actress. But she was not sure.
-
-“Inquiries will have to be made at once.” Already Aunt Charlotte was a
-caldron of energy. “Steps will have to be taken. It is the first I have
-heard of it. But I feel I ought to have been told sooner.”
-
-Blanche fearlessly asked why.
-
-“Why!” Aunt Charlotte gave a little snort. At such a moment mere words
-were futile. Then she said, “I shall go at once to your father.”
-
-“But what can _he_ do?”
-
-“Do?” Aunt Charlotte gave a second little snort. Mere words again
-revealed their limitations.
-
-“Yes?” Blanche placidly pursued the Socratic method, to the increasing
-fury of Aunt Charlotte.
-
-“He can tell him what he thinks of him and threaten to cut off
-supplies.”
-
-“Much he’ll care for that!” The cynicism of Blanche revolted Aunt
-Charlotte.
-
-That lady, whose forte, after all, was plain common sense, knew that
-Blanche was right. But in spite of that knowledge, the resolute energy
-which made her so much disliked impelled her to go at once to lay the
-matter before the head of the house.
-
-Lady Wargrave found her brother in the smaller library, long dedicated
-by custom to his sole use. It was one of the less pretentious and
-therefore least uncomfortable rooms in a house altogether too large to
-be decently habitable.
-
-For many years the Duke had been at the mercy of a painful malady which
-had taken all the pleasure out of his life. He was nearly seventy now,
-a man strikingly handsome in spite of a sufferer’s mouth and eyes
-weary with pain and cynicism. When his sister entered the room she
-found him deployed on an invalid chair, the _Quarterly Review_ on a
-book-rest in front of him, and a wineglass containing medicine at his
-elbow. And to Lady Wargrave’s clear annoyance, a tall, gray-haired,
-rather austere-looking, but decidedly handsome woman, stood by the Adam
-chimney-piece, a bottle in one hand, a teaspoon in the other.
-
-“Perhaps you will be kind enough to leave us, Mrs. Sanderson,” said
-Lady Wargrave, in a tone which sounded needlessly elaborate.
-
-Harriet Sanderson, without so much as a temporary relaxation of muscle
-of her strong face, withdrew at once very silently from the room. The
-bottle and the teaspoon went with her.
-
-As soon as the door had closed Lady Wargrave said, “Johnnie, once more
-I feel bound to protest against the presence of the housekeeper in the
-library. If the state of your health really calls for such attention I
-will engage a trained nurse.”
-
-The Duke took up the _Quarterly Review_ with an air of stolid
-indifference.
-
-“I’ll get one at once,” she persisted. “There’s a capable person who
-nursed Mary Devizes.”
-
-The Duke seemed unwilling to discuss the question, but at last,
-yielding to pressure, he said in a tone of dry exasperation:
-
-“Mrs. Sanderson is quite capable of looking after me. She understands
-my ways, I understand hers.”
-
-“No one doubts her competence.” The rejoinder was tart and hostile.
-“But that is hardly the point. The library is not the place for the
-housekeeper.”
-
-“I choose to have her here. In any case it is entirely my affair.”
-
-“People talk.”
-
-“Let ’em.”
-
-“It’s an old quarrel, my friend.” Growing asperity was in the voice of
-Charlotte. “You know my views on the subject of Mrs. Sanderson. We none
-of us like the woman. Considering the position she holds she has always
-taken far too much upon herself.”
-
-The Duke shook his head. “I must be the judge of that,” he said.
-
-“But surely it is a matter for the women of your family.”
-
-“With all submission, it’s a matter for me. I find the present
-arrangement entirely satisfactory, and I don’t recognize the right of
-anyone to interfere.”
-
-The Duke’s tone grated like a file upon his sister’s ear. This was an
-ancient quarrel that in one form or another had been going on for very
-many years. The housekeeper at Buntisford and more recently at Bridport
-House had been a thorn in the flesh of Charlotte almost from the day
-her sister-in-law died, but the Duke had always been Mrs. Sanderson’s
-champion. Time and again her overthrow had been decided upon by the
-ladies of the Family, but up till now the perverse determination of his
-Grace had proved too much for them and all their careful schemes.
-
-They had reached the usual impasse. Therefore, for the time being,
-Charlotte had once more to swallow her feelings. Besides, other matters
-were in the air, matters of an interest more vital if of a nature less
-permanent.
-
-As a preliminary it was necessary to glance at Muriel and her vagaries,
-before coming to grips with the even more momentous affair which had
-just been brought to Lady Wargrave’s notice. In answer to his sister’s,
-“What have you said to Maclean?” the Duke, who had swallowed most of
-the formulas and had digested them pretty thoroughly, expressed himself
-characteristically.
-
-“I told him that before I could even begin to consider the question he
-would have to rat.”
-
-“Was that wise?” said Charlotte, frowning. “Why commit oneself to the
-possibility of having to take the man seriously?”
-
-Her brother laughed. “He’s a very sharp fellow. A long Scotch head,
-abominably full of brains. If we could get him on our side perhaps he
-might pull us together.”
-
-“You know, of course, that his mother kept the village shop at
-Ardnaleuchan?”
-
-“So he tells me.”
-
-“Do you like the prospect of such a son-in-law?”
-
-“Frankly, Charlotte, I don’t. A tiresome business at the best of it.
-But there it is.”
-
-“Ought one to treat it so coolly?”
-
-His Grace laid the _Quarterly Review_ on the book-rest and plucked a
-little peevishly at the tuft of hair on his chin.
-
-“The times are changing, you see. We are on the eve of strange things.
-Still, I took the liberty of telling him that as long as he remained a
-Radical and went up and down the country blackguarding me and mine, I
-should refuse to know him.”
-
-“And what said our fine gentleman?”
-
-“He was amused. Whether he takes the hint remains to be seen. In any
-event it commits us to nothing.”
-
-Charlotte shook a dubious head. “You’re shaping for a compromise, my
-friend. And in my view this is not a case for one.”
-
-“If she is set on marrying the brute what’s going to stop her?”
-
-The question was meant for a poser and a poser it proved. Somehow
-it left no ground for argument. Therefore, without further preface
-or apology, Lady Wargrave turned to a matter of even more vital
-consequence.
-
-
-IV
-
-By an odd chain of events, Jack Dinneford was heir apparent to the
-dukedom of Bridport. In the course of a brief twelve months two
-intervening lives had petered out. One had been Lyme, the Duke’s only
-surviving son, who at the age of thirty-five had been killed in a
-shooting accident--a younger son, never a good life, had died some
-years earlier--the other had been the Duke’s younger brother, who six
-months ago had died without male issue. The succession in consequence
-would now have to pass to an obscure and rather neglected branch of the
-family, represented by a young man of twenty-four, the son of a Norfolk
-parson.
-
-Jack’s father, at the time of his death, had held a family living. A
-retiring, scholarly man, he had never courted the favors of the great,
-and the great, little suspecting that their vicarious splendors might
-one day be his, had paid him little attention. Blessed with progeny of
-the usual clerical abundance and without means apart from his stipend,
-the incumbent of Wickley-on-the-Wold had been hard set to educate his
-children in a manner becoming their august lineage. Even Jack, the
-eldest of five, had to be content with four years at one of the smaller
-public schools. It was true that afterwards he had the option of Oxford
-or Sandhurst, but by the time the young man had reached the age of
-nineteen he had somehow acquired an independence of character which did
-not take kindly to either.
-
-One fine day, with a spare suit of clothes and a hundred pounds or so
-in his pocket, he set out in the most casual way to see the world, and
-to make his fortune. He went to Liverpool, shipped before the mast as
-an ordinary seaman for the sake of the experience, and made the voyage
-round the Horn to San Francisco. For the next two years he prospected
-up and down the Americas earning a living, picking up ideas, and
-enlarging his outlook by association with all sorts and conditions of
-men, and finally invested all the capital he could scrape together in a
-business in Vancouver.
-
-After eighteen months of the new life came the news of his father’s
-death. The brothers and sisters it seemed were rather better provided
-for than there had been reason to expect. At any rate, Mabel and Iris
-would have a roof over their heads, Bill had passed into Sandhurst, and
-Frank was at Cambridge. Therefore Jack, little guessing what Fate had
-in store, decided to stay as he was, in the hope that in a few years
-he would have made his pile. He had a taste for hard work, and the new
-land offered opportunities denied by the old.
-
-Some months later he received an urgent summons to return home. He had
-suddenly and unexpectedly become next of kin to the Duke of Bridport.
-The news was little to the young man’s taste. He was very loth to
-give up a growing business for a life of parasitic idleness under the
-ægis of the titular great. But the circumstances seemed to make it
-imperative. The powers that were had not the slightest doubt that it
-was his bounden duty to go into training at once. He must fit himself
-for the dizzy eminence to which it had pleased Providence to call him.
-
-Sadly enough the tiro sold out, returned to England, and in due course
-reported himself at Bridport House. It was the first time he had been
-there. He was such a distant kinsman that he had never taken the ducal
-connection seriously.
-
-The family’s reception of the Tenderfoot--his own humorous name for
-himself--amused him considerably, yet at the same time it filled him
-with a subtle annoyance. Five fruitful years out West had made him an
-iconoclast. He saw with awakened eyes the arid and sterile pomposities
-which were doing their best to put the old land out of the race.
-Bridport House was going to spell boredom and worse for Jack Dinneford.
-
-Still the Duke, as became a man of the world, soon got to the root of
-the trouble, and having the welfare of a time-honored institution at
-heart, was at pains to deal with the novice tactfully. All the same, he
-was far from being pleased by the tricks of Providence. But he made the
-young man an allowance of two thousand a year, and exhorted him not to
-get into mischief; and the Dinneford ladies, who were prepared to be
-kind to the Tenderfoot and to be more amused by his “originality” than
-they confessed to each other, chose some rooms for him in Arlington
-Street, looked after his general welfare, and began to make plans for
-the future of Bridport House. Aunt Charlotte took him at once under
-an ungracious wing, and found him a bear-leader in the person of her
-nephew Wrexham, a subaltern of the Pinks, a picturesque young man,
-reputed a paragon of all the Christian virtues, and a martyr to a sense
-of duty.
-
-From this model of discretion the tiro soon received a hint. Cousin
-Sarah owned to thirty-eight in the glare of Debrett, Cousin Muriel had
-other views apparently, but there remained Cousin Blanche and Cousin
-Marjorie--the heir could take his choice, but the ukase had gone forth
-that one of them it must be.
-
-The Tenderfoot did not feel in a marrying mood just then, but he had
-chivalry enough not to say so to his mentor, who as the messenger of
-Eros began to disclose quite a pretty turn of humor. It was not seemly
-to offer advice in such a delicate matter, but Blanche was a nailer to
-hounds, although she never kept awake after dinner, while Marjorie’s
-sphere was church decoration in times of festival, in the course of
-which she generally had an _affaire_ with a curate.
-
-Face to face with a problem which in one way or another was kept ever
-before his eyes, the poor Tenderfoot seemed to feel that if wive he
-must in the charmèd circle, and the relentless Wrexham assured him that
-it was a solemn duty, perhaps there was most to be said for Cousin
-Marjorie. She was not supremely attractive it was true. The Dinneford
-girls, one and all, were famous up and down the island for a resolute
-absence of charm. And the Dinneford frontispiece, imposing enough in
-the male, when rendered in terms of the female somehow seemed to lack
-poetry. Still Cousin Marjorie was not yet thirty and her general health
-was excellent.
-
-The heir had now been settled in Arlington Street six months. And with
-nothing in the world to do but learn to live a life which threatened
-to bore him exceedingly, time began to hang upon his hands. Moreover,
-the prospect of having presently to lead Cousin Marjorie to the altar
-merely increased a sense of malaise. Here was an arbitrary deepening of
-the tones of a picture which heaven knew was dark enough already. For
-a modern and virile young man, life at Bridport House would only be
-tolerable under very happy conditions. To be yoked, willy-nilly, to one
-of its native denizens for the rest of one’s days, seemed a hardship
-almost too great to be borne.
-
-While the Tenderfoot was in this frame of mind, which inclined him to
-temporize, he decided to put off the dark hour as long as he could. And
-then suddenly, while still besieged by doubt, the hypnotic Princess
-Bedalia swam into his ken.
-
-
-V
-
-“It was bound to happen,” said Lady Wargrave. “That young man has far
-too much time on his hands. A thousand pities he didn’t go into the
-army.”
-
-“Too old, too old.” Her brother frowned portentously. “This promises to
-be a very tiresome business. Charlotte, I must really ask you to lose
-no time in seeing that the fellow marries.”
-
-It was now Charlotte’s turn to frown. And this she did as a prelude to
-a frankness which verged upon the brutal.
-
-“All very well, my friend, but perhaps you’ll tell me how it’s to be
-done. Neither Marjorie nor Blanche has the least power of attraction.
-They’re hopeless. And please remember this young man has been five
-years in America.”
-
-“I would to God he had stayed there!”
-
-The futile outburst of his Grace set Charlotte glowering like a sibyl.
-She was constrained to own that it was all intensely annoying. He was a
-common young man. He had none of the Dinneford feeling about things.
-
-“Quite so, Charlotte.” The ducal irritation was growing steadily. “But
-don’t rub it in. That won’t help us. Let us think constructively. You
-see the trouble is that this fellow has a rather democratic outlook.”
-
-“Then I’m afraid there’s no remedy,” said Charlotte, “unless the girls
-have the brains to help us, which, of course, they haven’t.”
-
-His Grace became more thunderous. “Let us hope he’ll have the good
-feeling to try to look at things as we do,” he said after a rather arid
-pause.
-
-“I’m not sure that we’ve a right to expect it,” was the frank rejoinder.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“His branch of the family has no particular cause to be grateful to us.”
-
-“Our father gave his father a living, didn’t he?” said the Duke sharply.
-
-“Yes, but nothing else--unless it was a day’s shooting now and again,
-which he didn’t accept.”
-
-“I don’t see what else he could have given him.”
-
-“An eye ought to have been kept on this young man.”
-
-“You can depend upon it, Charlotte, many things would have been ordered
-differently had there been reason to suppose that this confounded
-fellow would be next in here. As it is we have to make the best of a
-sorry business.”
-
-“Sorry enough,” Charlotte admitted. “There I am with you. But I’ll have
-inquiries made about this chorus girl. And in the meantime, Johnnie,
-perhaps you will speak to him firmly and quietly without losing your
-temper.”
-
-“And my last word to you, Charlotte,” countered his Grace, “is to see
-that he loses no time in marrying.”
-
-“Easy, my friend, to issue a ukase.” And the redoubtable Charlotte
-smiled grimly.
-
-
-VI
-
-Soon after four the same afternoon Jack returned to Broad Place in
-the garb of civilization. He was in great heart. Milly had some
-good-natured chaff to offer as to Mary’s need of sticking plaster. But
-the young man turned this persiflage aside with such a serious air that
-the quick-witted Milly knew it for an omen. Having learned the set of
-the wind she soon found a pretext for leaving them together.
-
-Milly’s sense of a coming event, which her sudden flight from the room
-had seemed to make the more inevitable, was shared by Mary. Somehow she
-felt that the moment of moments had come. This thing had to be. But as
-a hand brown and virile quietly took hers in a strong grip, she began
-almost bitterly to deplore the whole business. And yet, when all was
-said, she was absolutely thrilled. He was so truly a man that a girl,
-no matter what her talent and quality, could hardly refrain from pride
-in his homage.
-
-There was no beating about the bush.
-
-“Will you marry me?” he said.
-
-She grew crimson. How she had dreaded that long foreseen question!
-Days ago common sense and worldly prudence had coldly informed her
-that there could only be one possible answer. The case of Milly
-herself had furnished a sinister parallel. And the sensitive, perhaps
-over-sensitive pride of one who had begun at the bottom of the ladder,
-revolted from all the ensuing complications. Such a situation seemed
-now to involve her in mysteries far down within, at the very core of
-being--mysteries she had hardly been aware of until that moment.
-
-Again the question. She looked away, quite unable just then to meet his
-eyes. Her will was strong, her determination clear, but in spite of
-herself a deadly feeling crept upon her that she was a bird in a snare.
-Certain imponderables were in the room. The life forces were calling to
-each other; there was a curious magnetism in the very air they breathed.
-
-She had meant and intended “No,” but every instant made that little
-word more difficult to utter. A dominant nature had stolen the keys of
-her heart before she knew it. And as she fought against the inevitable,
-a subtle trick of the ape on the chain in the human breast, weighed
-the scales unfairly. Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie were flung
-oddly, irrelevantly, fantastically, upon the curtain of her mind. The
-challenge of their ironical eyes was like a knife in the flesh. And
-then that private, particular devil, of whose existence, until that
-moment, she had been unaware, suddenly forced her to take up the gage
-those eyes had flung.
-
-
-VII
-
-“Do tell me!” cried Milly the breathless.
-
-The sight of a lone, troubled Mary in the little sitting-room, the look
-on her face as she twisted a handkerchief into knots and coils had been
-too much for Milly. She was a downright person and the silence of Mary
-was so trying to a forthcoming nature that the query at the tip of
-Milly’s tongue seemed likely to burn a hole in it.
-
-“Has he--have you--did he----?” The demand was indelicate, but it
-sprang from the depths as Milly measured them. Suddenly she saw tears.
-
-“I am so glad, I am so _very_ glad!”
-
-Mary smiled, but the look in her eyes had the power to startle the
-affectionate Milly.
-
-“He is the luckiest man I know, but he is such a dear that he deserves
-to be.” It was a peculiarity of Mary’s that she didn’t like kissing,
-but Milly in a burst of loyal affection was guilty of a sudden swoop
-upon her friend.
-
-“Oh, don’t,” said Mary, in a voice from which all the accustomed gayety
-was gone.
-
-Milly gazed in consternation.
-
-“You--you have not refused him?”
-
-“No.” And then there came a sudden flame. “I’m a selfish, egotistical
-wretch.”
-
-“As long as you have not refused him,” said Milly, breathing again.
-“All the same, I call you a very odd girl.”
-
-But Mary was troubled, Milly perplexed.
-
-“You ought to be the happiest creature alive. What’s the matter?”
-
-“I’m thinking of his friends.”
-
-“If they choose to be stupid, it’s their own lookout.”
-
-“It mayn’t be stupidity,” said Mary, giving her handkerchief a bite. “I
-know nothing about him, except----”
-
-“Except?”
-
-“That he’s above me socially.”
-
-“I wouldn’t worry about that if I were you,” said Milly robustly. “If
-they like to be snobs it’s their own funeral.”
-
-But Mary, having burned her boats, was afflicted now by Cousin Blanche
-and Cousin Marjorie. They were looking down upon her from their tall
-horses. It was not that she feared them in the least, but she knew that
-lurking somewhere in an oddly constituted mind was a certain awe of the
-things for which they stood.
-
-“I can’t explain my feelings,” said Mary. “I only know they are
-horribly real. I feel there’s a gulf between Jack and me--and a word
-won’t bridge it.” And her voice trailed off miserably.
-
-“That’s weak,” said Milly severely. “I know what you mean, but you
-exaggerate the difference absurdly. Sonny is miles above me socially,
-but I’ll make him as good a wife as any of his own push, see if I
-don’t--if he gives me the chance! And in some ways I can make him a
-better.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Because I began right down there.” Milly pointed to the carpet. “I
-know the value of things, I shall be able to see that no one takes
-advantage of him, whereas a girl who has been spoon-fed all her life
-couldn’t do that.”
-
-The honest Mary had to allow that there was something to be said for
-the point of view, yet she would not admit that it covered all the
-facts of the case.
-
-“Please don’t suppose my ideas have anything to do with you and Lord
-Wrexham.” Her gravity made Milly feel quite annoyed. “I am merely
-thinking of myself. And there’s something in me, for which I can’t
-account, which says that it may be wrong, it may be wickedly wrong, for
-me to marry Jack.”
-
-“It certainly will be if that’s how you look at it,” said Milly
-scornfully. “Why not make the most of your luck? I’m sure it’s right.
-After all Providence knows better than anybody. And Jack knows he’s got
-to be a duke.”
-
-“Got to be what?” Mary jumped out of her chair.
-
-“You didn’t know?”
-
-“Of course, I didn’t.” She was simply aghast. In a state of excitement
-which quite baffled Milly, she paced the room.
-
-“You _odd_ creature!” The mantle of the arch dissembler had now
-descended upon Milly.
-
-Truth to tell, she and her mother had had a shrewd suspicion of Mary’s
-ignorance. They had learned from Wrexham that Jack Dinneford, owing to
-a series of deaths in a great family, had quite unexpectedly become
-the next-of-kin to the Duke of Bridport. Such a prospect was so little
-to the young man’s taste that as far as he could he always made a
-point of keeping the skeleton out of sight. Rightly or wrongly he had
-not said a word to Mary on the subject, and she with a pride a little
-overstrained, no doubt, had allowed herself no curiosity in regard
-to his worldly status. For whatever it might be it was obviously far
-removed from that of a girl of no family who had to get her own living
-as well as she could.
-
-The news was stunning. As Mary walked about the room the look on her
-face was almost tragic.
-
-“I think you ought to have told me,” she said at last.
-
-“We thought you knew,” was Milly’s reply. This was a deliberate story.
-Mrs. Wren and herself in discussing the romantic news had concluded the
-exact opposite. But out of a true regard for Mary’s welfare, as they
-conceived it, they had decided to let her find out for herself. She was
-such an odd girl in certain ways that mother and daughter felt that the
-real truth about Jack Dinneford might easily prove his overthrow. Thus
-with a chaste conscience Milly now lied royally.
-
-Mary, alas! was so resentful of the _coup_ of fortune and her friends,
-that for a moment she was tempted to fix a quarrel on Milly. But
-Milly’s cunning was too much for her. She stuck to the simple statement
-that she thought she knew. There was no gainsaying it. And if blame
-there was in the matter it surely lay at the door of her own proud self.
-
-Mary was still in the throes of an unwelcome discovery when Mrs.
-Wren came into the room. The appearance of that lady seemed to add
-fuel to the flame. Her felicitations, a little overwhelming in their
-exuberance, were in nowise damped by the girl’s dejection. To Mrs.
-Wren such an attitude of mind was not merely unreasonable, it was
-unchristian. To call in question the highest gifts of Providence
-betrayed a kink in a charming character.
-
-“Fancy, my dear--a duchess. You’ll be next in rank to royalty.”
-
-It was so hard for the victim to smother the tempest within that for
-the moment she dare not trust herself to speak.
-
-“You’re very naughty,” said Mrs. Wren. “Why, you ought to offer up a
-prayer. You’ve had success too easily, the road has been too smooth.
-If you’d had a smaller talent and you’d had an awful struggle to get
-there, you’d know better than to crab your luck.”
-
-A strong will now came to Mary’s aid. And the calm force of her
-answer, when at last she was able to make it, astonished Milly and her
-mother. “That’s one side of the case, Mrs. Wren,” she said in a new
-tone. “But there’s another, you know.”
-
-“There is only one side for you, my dear,” said the older woman
-stoutly. “Take your chances while you may--that’s my advice. Your luck
-may turn. You’ll not always be what you are now. Suppose you have a bad
-illness?”
-
-“I’m thinking of his side of the case.” The tone verged upon sternness.
-
-“You have quite enough to do to think of your own. Don’t throw chances
-away. I have had forty years’ experience of a very hard profession,
-and even you top sawyers are on very thin ice. And remember, the cards
-never forgive. Girls who have a lone hand to play, mustn’t hold their
-heads too high. If they do they’ll live to regret it. And you mustn’t
-think these swells can’t box their own corner. They’ve nothing to learn
-in looking after Number One. A girl of your sort is quite equal to any
-of these drawing-room noodles and Mr. Dinneford knows that better than
-I do.”
-
-“But that’s impossible. I can never be as they are.”
-
-“You needn’t let that worry you. A lot of stuck-up dunces that all the
-world kow-tows to!”
-
-“It isn’t that I think they are nicer or cleverer or wiser than other
-people. But they are born to certain things, they have been bred to
-them for generations, and it surely stands to reason that they are
-better at their own game than a mere outsider can hope to be.”
-
-“Fiddle-de-dee!” said Mrs. Wren. “I hope you are not such a goose as
-to take swelldom at its own valuation. It’s all a bluff, my dear.
-Your humble servant, Jane Wren, could have been as good a duchess as
-the best of ’em if she had been given the chance. I don’t want to be
-fulsome, my dear, but I’ll back a girl of your brains against Lady
-Agatha Fitzboodle or any other titled snob.”
-
-“But I don’t want to be pitted against anybody!”
-
-“That’s nonsense.” Mrs. Wren shook a worldly-wise head. “As for being
-an outsider, a girl can’t be more than a lady just as a man can’t be
-more than a gentleman. And if you are a lady and have always gone
-straight you needn’t fear comparison with the highest in the land.”
-
-Mary shook a head of sadness and perplexity.
-
-“Somehow it doesn’t seem right to mix things in that way,” she said.
-
-“It’s the only way that keeps ’em going,” said Mrs. Wren scornfully.
-“And well they know it. At least nature knows it. Look at Wrexham! Do
-you mean to say that his inbred strain wouldn’t be improved by Milly?
-And it’s the same with you and Mr. Dinneford. It’s Nature at the back
-of it all. It’s the call of the blood. If these old families keep on
-intermarrying long enough dry rot sets in.”
-
-Mary stood a picture of woe.
-
-“You odd creature!” said Mrs. Wren. “I’ve never met a girl with such
-ideas as yours. I really believe you are quite as narrow and as
-prejudiced as Lady Agatha Fitzboodle. To hear you talk one would think
-you believed rank to be a really important matter.”
-
-Incredulous eyes were opened upon the voluble dame.
-
-“Of course it is.” But the girl’s solemnity was a little too much.
-
-“My dear!” A gust of ribald laughter overwhelmed her. “Hasn’t it ever
-struck you that the so-called aristocracy racket is all a bluff?”
-
-“Surely, it can’t be.” The tone was genuine dismay.
-
-“Every word of it, my dear. There’s only one thing behind it and that’s
-money. If Wrexham ever sticks a coronet on the head of my Milly and
-robes her in ermine she’ll be the equal of any in the land, just as old
-Bill Brown who was in the last birthday honors is as good a peer as the
-best of ’em now that his soap business has brought him into Park Lane.
-I knew Bill when he hadn’t a bob. It’s just a matter of L.S.D. As for
-the frills, they are all my eye and Elizabeth Martin. When my Milly
-gets among them, it won’t take her a week to learn all their tricks.
-They are just so many performing dogs.”
-
-“You don’t understand, you don’t understand!” The tone was tragic.
-
-
-VIII
-
-A night’s reflection convinced the girl that there was only one thing
-to be done. The engagement must end. But as she soon found, it was
-easier to make the resolve than to carry it out. To begin with, it
-was terribly irksome, in present circumstances, to give effect to her
-decision and to back it with reasons.
-
-Her début in the Row had been so successful that a ride had been
-arranged for the next morning. But it was spoiled completely by
-the specter now haunting her. In what terms could she tell him
-that she had changed her mind? How could she defend a proceeding so
-unwarrantable?
-
-It was not until later in the day, when they took a stroll under the
-trees in the Park, that she forced herself to grasp the nettle boldly.
-
-Jack, as she had foreseen, was immeasurably astonished. He called, at
-once, for her reasons. And they were terribly difficult to put into
-words. At last she was driven back upon the cardinal fact that he had
-concealed his true position.
-
-He repudiated the charge indignantly. In the first place, he had taken
-it for granted that she knew his position, in the second, he always
-made a point of leaving it as much as possible outside his calculations.
-
-“But isn’t that just what one oughtn’t to do?” she said, as they took
-possession of a couple of vacant chairs.
-
-“To me the whole thing’s absurd,” was the rejoinder. “It’s only by the
-merest fluke that I have to succeed to the title, and I find it quite
-impossible to feel about things as Bridport House does. The whole
-business is a great bore, and if a way out could be found I’d much
-rather stay as I am.”
-
-“But isn’t that just a wee bit selfish, my dear--if you don’t think me
-a prig?”
-
-“If you are quite out of sympathy with an antediluvian system, if you
-disbelieve in it, if you hate it in the marrow of your bones, where’s
-the virtue in sacrificing yourself in order to maintain it?”
-
-“Noblesse oblige!”
-
-“Yes, but does it? A dukedom, in my view, is just an outworn
-convention, a survival of a darker age.”
-
-“It stands for something.”
-
-“What does it stand for?--that’s the point. There’s no damned merit
-about it, you know. Any fool can be a duke, and they mostly are.”
-
-Mary, if a little amused, was more than a little shocked.
-
-“I’m sure it’s not right to think that,” she declared stoutly. “I would
-say myself, although one oughtn’t to have a say on the subject, that
-it’s the duty of your sort of people to keep things going.”
-
-“They are not my sort of people. I was pitchforked among them. And if
-you don’t believe in them and the things it is their duty to keep going
-what becomes of your theory, Miss Scrupulous?”
-
-“But that’s Socialism,” said Mary with solemn eyes.
-
-“No, it’s the common sense of the matter. All this centralization of
-power in the hands of a few hard-shells like my Uncle Albert--he’s
-not my uncle really--is very bad for the State. He owns one-fifth of
-Scotland, and the only things he ever really takes seriously are his
-meals and his health.”
-
-“He stands for something all the same.”
-
-The young man laughed outright.
-
-“I know I’m a prig.” The blushing candor disarmed him. “But if one has
-a great bump of reverence I suppose one can’t help exaggerating one’s
-feelings a little.”
-
-“I suppose not,” laughed the young man. And then there was a pause. “By
-jove,” he said at the end of it, “you’d be the last word in duchesses.”
-
-“You won’t get Bridport House to think so.”
-
-“So much the worse for Bridport House. Of course, I admit it has
-other views for me. But the trouble is, as always in these close
-corporations, they haven’t the art of seeing things as they are.”
-
-Mary shook a troubled head, but the argument seemed to find its way
-home.
-
-“The truth of the matter is,” he suddenly declared, “you are afraid of
-Bridport House.”
-
-Without shame she confessed that Bridport House was bound to be very
-hostile, and was there not every reason for such an attitude? Jack,
-however, would not yield an inch upon that count, or on any other if it
-came to that. He was a primitive creature in whom the call of the blood
-was paramount. Moreover, he was a very tenacious fellow. And these
-arguments of hers, strongly urged and boldly stated, did not affect his
-point of view. The ban of Fortune was purely artificial, it could not
-be defended. She was fain, therefore, to carry the war to the enemy’s
-country. But if she gently hinted a change of egotism he countered it
-astutely with the subtler one of sentimentalism. Each confessed the
-other partially right, but so far from clearing the air it seemed to
-make the whole matter more complex. The upshot was that he called upon
-her to find a valid reason, otherwise he refused point-blank to give
-her up.
-
-“Just think,” he said, tracing her name on the gravel with a
-walking-stick, “how hollow the whole business is. How many of Uncle
-Albert’s ‘push’ have married American wives without a question? And why
-do they, when they wouldn’t think of giving English girls of the same
-class an equal chance? In the first place, for the sake of the dollars,
-in the second, because it is so easy for them to shed their relations
-and forget their origin.”
-
-But so wide was the gulf between their points of view that mere
-argument could not hope to bridge it. If she was in grim earnest, so
-was he; moreover she had entered into a compact he was determined she
-should fulfill. Before consenting to release her she would have to show
-very good cause at any rate.
-
-Suddenly, in the give-and-take of conflict, Laxton came into her mind.
-The memory of Beaconsfield Villas, the whimsical creatures of another
-orbit, and the childhood which now seemed ages away, fired her with a
-new idea. She would take him to see the humble people among whom she
-had been brought up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-ALARUMS AND EXCURSIONS
-
-
-I
-
-THE flight of time had affected Beaconsfield Villas surprisingly
-little. Laxton itself had deferred to Anno Domini in many subtle
-ways; it had its electric trams and motor-buses, and the suburb had
-doubled in size, but no epoch-making changes were visible in the front
-sitting-room of Number Five. In that homely interior the cosmic march
-and profluence was simply revealed by a gramophone, the gift of Mary,
-on the top of the sewing machine in the corner, and by the accession to
-the walls of lithograph portraits of the son and grandson of the august
-lady who still held pride of place over the chimney-piece.
-
-The afternoon was stifling even for South London in the middle of
-June. And Joseph Kelly, who had attained the rank of sergeant in the
-Metropolitan Police Force, not having to go on duty until six o’clock
-that evening, was seated coatless and solemn, spectacles on nose,
-smoking a well-colored clay and reading the _Daily Mail_. At the level
-of his eyes, in portentous type was, “Laxton Bye-Election. A Sharp
-Contest. New Home Secretary’s Chances.” Joe was a shade stouter than
-of yore, his face was even redder, a thinning thatch had turned gray,
-but in all essentials the man himself was still the genial cockney of
-one-and-twenty years ago.
-
-The outer door of the sitting-room, which was next the street, was wide
-open to invite the air. But ever and again there rose such a fierce
-medley of noises from a mysterious cause a little distance off, that
-at last Joe got up from his chair, and waddling across the room in a
-pair of worn list slippers, banged the door against the sounds from the
-street which had the power to annoy him considerably.
-
-Hardly had Joe shuffled back to his chair and his newspaper when the
-door was flung open again and an excited urchin thrust a tousled head
-into the room.
-
-“‘Vote for Maclean an’ a free breakfast-table’!”
-
-The law in the person of Sergeant Kelly rose from its chair
-majestically.
-
-“If you ain’t off--my word!”
-
-Headlong flight of the urchin. Joe closed the door with violence and
-sat down again. But the incident had unsettled him. He seemed unable
-to fix his mind on the newspaper. And the noises in the street waxed
-ever louder. Now they took the form of cheers and counter cheers, now
-of hoots, cat-calls and shouts of derision. At last the tumult rose to
-such a pitch that it drew Eliza from an inner room.
-
-The years had changed her rather more than her husband. But she was
-still the active, capable, bustling housewife, with a keen eye for the
-world and all that was passing in it.
-
-“They are making noise enough to wake the dead.” Eliza looked eagerly
-through the window.
-
-“I wish that durned Scotchman hadn’t set his committee-room plumb
-oppersite Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas,” was Joe’s sour comment.
-
-At that moment the all-embracing eye of a relentless housewife swooped
-down upon a card lying innocently on the linoleum. It had been flung
-there by the recent visitor. Eliza picked it up and read:
- ___________________________
- | |
- | Vote for Maclean, thus: |
- | |
- | MACLEAN X |
- | WHITLEY. |
- |___________________________|
-
-On the back of the card was a portrait of Sir Dugald Maclean, M.P.
-
-Eliza gazed at it in astonishment mingled with awe.
-
-“I am bound to say he is a better-favored jockey than when he came
-a-courting our Harriet. Look, Joe!”
-
-With scornful vehemence, Joe declined the invitation.
-
-Eliza was sternly advised to tear up the card, but instead she chose to
-set it on the chimney-piece. The rash act was too much for her lord.
-Once more he rose from his chair, tore the card into little pieces and
-flung them into a grate artistically decorated with colored paper.
-
-“You are jealous!” said Eliza, laughing.
-
-“Of the likes of him! Holy smoke! But if you think we are going to have
-such trash in the same room as the Marquis, you make an error.”
-
-The words had hardly been uttered when shouts yet more piercing came
-from the street. Eliza made a hasty return to the window.
-
-“Come and look, Joe!” she cried breathlessly. “Here he is with his top
-hat and eyeglass. He’s that dossy you wouldn’t know him. He’s dressed
-up like a tailor’s dummy.”
-
-But Joe declined to budge.
-
-“It fairly makes me sick to think of the feller,” he said.
-
-A little later, when the tumult in the street had died down a bit, Joe
-settled himself in his chair for an afternoon nap. Eliza, duly noting
-the symptoms, retired on tiptoe to another room, closing the door after
-her gently. But today, alas, the skyey influences were adverse. Joe had
-barely entered oblivion when a smart tap at the street door shattered
-this precarious peace. With a grudge against society he rose once more,
-shambled across the room and flung open the door, half expecting to
-find that the urchin had returned to torment him. A dramatic surprise
-was in store. On the threshold was a creature so stylishly trim that
-even the blasé eye of the Metropolitan Force was sensibly thrilled in
-beholding her. “A bit of class” without a doubt, although adorned by
-the colors of the People’s Candidate, and surprisingly cool in sheer
-defiance of the thermometer.
-
-“Good afternoon!” The tone of half-confidential intimacy was quite
-irresistible. “May I have a little talk with you?”
-
-“Certainly, miss.” The unconscious gallantry of an impressionable
-policeman was more than equal to the occasion. “Step inside and make
-yourself at home.”
-
-When Joe came to review the incident afterwards, it seemed very
-surprising that he should have yielded so easily to the impact of
-this elegant miss. For instinctively he knew her business. Moreover,
-the last thing he desired at that moment was to be troubled by her
-or by it. But he had been taken by surprise, and in all circumstances
-he would have needed ample notice to deny a lady. He had a great but
-impersonal regard for a lady, as some people have for a Rembrandt or
-a Corot or a Jan van Steen. And although the fact was not important,
-perhaps his sense of humor was a little touched by such a young woman
-taking the trouble to come and talk to such a man as himself.
-
-“I am here,” said the voice of the dove, as soon as its owner had
-subsided gracefully upon a chair covered with horsehair, “to ask your
-vote and interest for Sir Dugald Maclean, the People’s Candidate.”
-
-The prophetic soul of Joe had told him that already. But again the
-sense of humor, the fatal gift, may have intervened. Had the elegant
-miss had any _nous_, she would have known that a sergeant of the X
-Division has not a vote to bestow. In justice to the fair democrat, Joe
-might have reflected that in the absence of his tunic there was nothing
-to show his status. However, he didn’t trouble to do that. It was
-enough for him that she was on a fool’s errand. But Joe was a man of
-the world as well as a connoisseur of the human female. A picturesque
-personality intrigued him. Moreover, it was working for a cause that
-Joe despised from the depths of his soul. So much was she “the real
-thing” that she had even turned on a melodious lisp for his benefit;
-yet he had no particular wish, even under these flattering auspices, to
-discuss the people and their champion. He had quite made up his mind
-about both. But, the Machiavellian thought occurred to him, here was a
-dangerous implement in the hands of the foe, therefore it would be the
-part of wisdom to waste a little of her time.
-
-“‘Government of the people, by the people, for the people,’” lisped the
-siren, “that, of course, as you may know, is what Sir Dugald stands
-for.”
-
-“Does he!” reflected Joe. With a roguish smile he looked the speaker
-over from her expensive top to her equally expensive toe.
-
-“You _do_ believe in the people?” said the siren with a rather dubious
-air.
-
-“Since you ask the question, miss,” said Joe, “I am bound to say I
-don’t, and never have done.”
-
-“Not believe in the _people!_” It didn’t seem possible.
-
-“If you’d seen as much of the people as I have, miss,” said Joe grimly,
-“I’m thinking you’d not be quite so set up with ’em.”
-
-The tone of conviction disconcerted the fair canvasser. Somehow she
-had not expected it. In the course of her present ministrations it was
-the first time she had met that point of view. Laxton’s working-class,
-which for several days had been honored by her delicate flatteries,
-had shown such a robust faith in itself and had purred so responsively
-to her blandishments that she now took for granted that in all
-circumstances it would fully share her own enthusiasm for it. But this
-rubicund, coatless Briton, with eyes of half truculent humor, was a
-little beyond her. Gloves were needed to handle him; otherwise fingers
-of such flowerlike delicacy stood a chance of being bruised.
-
-“May one ask what you have against them?” lisped the people’s champion,
-opening large round eyes.
-
-“Nothing particular, miss,” said Joe urbanely. “But you ask me whether
-I believe in ’em and I say I don’t. Mind you, the people are all right
-in their place. I’ve not a word to say against ’em personally. Of a
-Monday morning at Vine Street, when the Court has been swep’ an’ dusted
-and his Worship has returned from his Sunday in the country, we always
-try to make ’em welcome. ‘Let ’em all come,’ that’s the motto of the
-Metropolitan Force. But as for _believing_ in ’em, that’s another
-story.”
-
-This was rather baffling for the people’s champion. She was at a loss.
-But her faith was sublime. This odd, crass, heavy-witted plebeian who
-denied his kind was a sore problem even for the bringer of the light.
-Still, she stuck to her guns gallantly.
-
-“‘Government of the people, by the people, for the people.’” Lisping
-the battle cry of Demos she returned stoutly to the charge. Sacred
-formulas flowed from her lips in a stream of charming pellucidity.
-
-“Ah, you don’t know ’em, miss,” ejaculated Joe, at intervals.
-
-It was a pretty joust; vicarious enthusiasm on the one side, first-hand
-experience on the other. But Joe was a rock. The fair canvasser took
-forth every weapon of an elegantly-furnished armory, yet without avail.
-
-“I don’t hold with the people, miss, not in no shape nor form.”
-
-The tone was so final that at last a sense of defeat came upon this
-Amazon. She was still seated, however, without having quite made up her
-mind to the inevitable, on her grand chair in the front sitting-room
-of Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas, when Fate intervened in quite a
-remarkable way.
-
-All of a sudden, there appeared on the threshold of the open door a
-figure tall, fine and unheralded. It was that of Harriet Sanderson.
-
-“Anybody at home?” she inquired gayly.
-
-The unexpected visitor was looking very handsome and distinguished in a
-well-cut black coat and skirt, and a large hat too plain for fashion,
-but very far from _démodé_. She came into the room with that almost
-proprietary air she was never without in her intercourse with her own
-people. But it was about to suffer an eclipse.
-
-Harriet just had time to greet her brother-in-law with a happy mingling
-of the _bon camarade_ and the woman of the world, her fixed attitude
-towards such an Original, whom somehow she could not help liking and
-respecting, when her eyes met suddenly those of the fair canvasser.
-
-For a moment an intense surprise forbade either to speak. But the
-people’s champion was the first to overcome the shock.
-
-“Mrs. Sanderson!” she exclaimed.
-
-The change in Harriet was immediate and dramatic.
-
-“Lady Muriel!” A slight flush of a fine face accompanied the tone of
-awe.
-
-The visitor rose. And in the act of so doing an accession of
-great ladyhood, almost entirely absent a few minutes ago, seemed
-automatically to enter her manner.
-
-“What a small world it is!” she laughed. “Fancy meeting you here!”
-
-By now the iron will of the secretly annoyed and oddly discomposed
-Harriet was able to reassert itself.
-
-“It is a small world, my lady.” The tone was a very delicate mingling
-of aloofness and respect.
-
-Brief explanations followed. These quickly culminated in the
-presentation of Joe, who then became the most embarrassed of the three.
-Unawares and in his shirt sleeves, he had been entertaining an angel.
-And to one of Conservative views, with a profound reverence for law,
-order and all established things, this seemed to verge upon indecency.
-A mere “one of Scotchie’s lady canvassers” had been magically
-transformed, in the twinkling of an eye, into Lady Muriel Dinneford,
-the third daughter of one whom Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas, always
-alluded to as “his Grace.”
-
-
-II
-
-It was the work of a few tactful minutes for Lady Muriel to effect a
-discreet retirement from the scene. Yet so deeply had she been engaged
-by Joe’s contumacy, and at the back of a mind which was making the most
-heroic efforts to be “broad” was such a sense of amusement, that she
-declared her intention of returning anon with the People’s Candidate,
-if he could possibly spare a few minutes from his multifarious duties,
-in order that the _coup de grâce_ might be given to Mr. Kelly’s
-dangerous heresies.
-
-The withdrawal of the distinguished visitor across the street to the
-Candidate’s committee room left a void which for a few tense moments
-only wonder could fill.
-
-It was Joe who broke the silence which, like a pall, had suddenly
-descended upon the front parlor of Number Five.
-
-“If that don’t beat Banagher,” he said. “Fancy one of the Fam’ly taking
-the trouble to come a canvassin’ for Scotchie!”
-
-Keen humor and acute annoyance contended now in the eloquent face of
-Harriet.
-
-“Pray, why shouldn’t she canvass for Sir Dugald Maclean”--the level
-voice was pitched in a very quiet key--“if she really believes in his
-principles?”
-
-“How can she believe in ’em, gal?”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“How can a blue blood believe in that sort of a feller?”
-
-“Sir Dugald is a remarkably clever man. One of the cleverest men in
-England, some people think.”
-
-“That’s nothing to do with the matter. It’s character that counts.”
-
-“There’s nothing against his character, I believe. At any rate, Lady
-Muriel is going to marry him.”
-
-The state of Joe’s feelings forbade an immediate reply. And when reply
-he did, it was in a tone of scorn. Said he: “‘Government of the people,
-by the people, for the people!’ Harriet, for a dead beat fool give me a
-blue blood aristocrat.”
-
-“Joe,” came the answer, with a gleam of humor and malice, “I really
-think you should learn to speak of our governing class a little more
-respectfully.”
-
-This was rather hard. She ought to have realized that it was because
-Joe respected them so much that he now desired to chasten them.
-
-“Scotchie of all people!” he muttered.
-
-“There’s no accounting for taste, you know.” There was a sudden flash
-of a very handsome pair of eyes.
-
-“O’ course there ain’t,” said Joe, sorrowfully malicious. “You may have
-forgot there was a time when Scotchie came a-courtin’ you.”
-
-“Do you suppose I am ever likely to forget it!” said Harriet, with a
-cool cynicism which took the simple Joseph completely out of his depth.
-
-“Well, it’s a queer world, I must say.”
-
-“It is,” his sister-in-law agreed.
-
-At that moment, Eliza came into the room. The visit of Harriet was
-so unexpected as to take her by surprise. But the cause of it was
-soon disclosed. Harriet was troubled about Mary. Ever since the girl,
-against the wishes and advice of her friends, had taken what they
-felt to be a fatal step, there had been a gradual drifting apart.
-Harriet had kept in touch with her as well as she could, but she had
-not been able to stifle her own private fears. The peril of such a
-career, even when crowned by success, was in her opinion, difficult to
-exaggerate. She disapproved of the friendship with the Wrens, and had
-strongly opposed Mary’s living with them. But as the girl rose in her
-profession, Harriet’s hold upon her grew still less. And now at second
-and third hand had come news which had greatly upset her.
-
-With the tact for which she was famous, Harriet did not speak of
-this in the presence of Joe. She accompanied Eliza to the privacy of
-the best bedroom, ostensibly to “take off her things,” but really to
-discuss a matter which for the past week had filled her with misgiving.
-
-In the meantime, Joe in the parlor set himself doggedly to compass the
-nap that so far had been denied him. In spite of the noises in the
-street and romantic appearance of a real live member of the Family in
-his humble abode, he had just begun to doze when the ban of Fate fell
-once more upon him.
-
-From the strange welter in the amazing world outside there now emerged
-a large open motor. And royally it drew up before the magic door of
-Number Five. Two persons were seated in the car. One was no less than
-Princess Bedalia. The other was the humblest and yet the boldest of her
-adorers.
-
-
-III
-
-The idea itself had been Mary’s that they should use a fine afternoon
-in motoring into Laxton, in order to see her parents. Behind this
-simple plan was fell design. A week had passed since that conversation
-under the trees in the Park in which she had sought in vain for her
-release. But so shallow had her reasoning appeared that Jack declined
-to take it seriously. He had her promise, and he felt he had every
-right to hold her to it. Unless she could show a real cause for
-revoking it, he was fully determined not to give her up.
-
-In desperation, therefore, she had hit on the expedient, a poor and
-vain one, no doubt, of taking him to see those humble people whom she
-called father and mother. In the course of her twenty odd years up and
-down the world she had had intimations from various side winds and
-divers little birds that she was an adopted child. Her real parentage
-and the circumstances of her birth were an impenetrable mystery and
-must always be so, no doubt, but her feeling for the Kellys was one of
-true affection and perfect loyalty. Not by word or deed had she hinted
-at the possession of knowledge which had come to her from other sources.
-
-In the circumstances of the case she now allowed herself to imagine
-that a visit to her home people in their native habit as they dwelt
-might help to cure Jack of his infatuation. An insight into things and
-men told her that Beaconsfield Villas must be whole worlds away from
-any sphere in which he had moved hitherto. Nor would he be likely to
-suspect, as she was shrewdly aware, that a creature so sophisticated
-as herself had risen from such humble beginnings. She had a ferocious
-pride of her own, but it was not of the kind that meanly denies its
-origin.
-
-“Father,” was her gay greeting to the astonished and still coatless
-Joe, “I’ve brought somebody to see you.”
-
-Jack, wearing a dustcoat and other appurtenances of the chauffeur’s
-craft, had followed upon the heels of Princess Bedalia into the front
-parlor of Number Five. In response to the young man’s bow, Kelly
-offered a rather dubious hand. As became a symbol of law and order
-and a member of the straitest sect of the Pharisees, he didn’t feel
-inclined to encourage Mary in gallivanting up and down the land. Nor
-did he feel inclined to give countenance to any promiscuous young man
-she might bring to the house.
-
-“Mr. Dinneford--my father, Police-Sergeant Kelly.” It was a
-delightfully formal introduction, but rather wickedly contrived.
-
-Jack was so taken aback that he felt as if a feather might have downed
-him. But even to the lynx eyes of Mary, which were covertly upon him,
-not a trace of his feelings was visible. He merely bowed a second time,
-perhaps a little more gravely than the first.
-
-“Pleased to meet you, sir,” said Sergeant Kelly, in a voice which
-showed pretty clearly that he was overstating the truth.
-
-Mary could not repress the rogue’s laugh that sprang to her lips.
-
-“Where’s my old mumsie?” she gayly demanded, partly in the hope of
-concealing her wicked merriment.
-
-“Upstairs with your Aunty Harriet.”
-
-“Aunt Harriet here!” The tone was full of surprise. And then the
-charming voice took a turn affectionately non-committal. “What luck! It
-seems an age since I saw her.”
-
-In spite of himself, Joe could not help being a little in awe of the
-girl. She was so remarkably striking that every time he saw her it
-became harder to keep up the pretense of blood relationship. She had
-developed into the finest young woman he had ever met. Her official
-father was very proud of her, the affection she inspired in him was
-true and real, but at the moment he was more than a little embarrassed
-by the impact of an immensely distinguished personality.
-
-However, in spite of such beauty and charm, he was determined to do his
-duty by her; as became a father and a man he felt bound to admonish her.
-
-“Since you took up with those people, none of us have been seeing much
-of you,” he forced himself to say, in his most magisterial manner.
-
-“Old story!”
-
-“It’s true and you know it.” Joe declined on principle to be softened
-by her blandishments.
-
-“Wicked old story!” She took him by the shoulders and shook him; and
-then she sighed as a mother might have done, and gazed into his solemn
-face. “Father,” she said, “you are an old and great dear.”
-
-“Get along with you!” said Joe sternly, but in spite of himself he
-couldn’t help laughing.
-
-“I’ll leave you and Mr. Dinneford to have a little crack while I take
-this to my mumsie.” Brandishing an important-looking milliner’s box,
-she left the room in a laughing search of Eliza.
-
-As soon as Jack found himself alone with Mary’s father a period of
-constraint ensued. It would have been wrong to deny that his reception
-had been the reverse of cordial. The sensitiveness of a lover, in duty
-bound to walk delicately, made no secret of that. Moreover, he was
-still so astonished at Mary’s paternity that he felt quite at a loss.
-Nature had played an amazing trick. Somehow this serio-comic London
-copper in half-mufti, was going to make it very difficult to exercise
-the deference due to a prospective father-in-law.
-
-An acute silence was terminated by Joe’s “Won’t you sit down, sir?”
-
-Jack sat down; and then Mary’s father, torn between stern disapproval
-and the humane feelings of a host, invited the young man solemnly to a
-glass of beer.
-
-“Thank you very much,” said Jack, with admirable gravity.
-
-Murmuring “excuse me a minute,” Joe went to draw the beer. Left alone
-the young man tried to arrange his thoughts; also he took further
-stock of his surroundings. He had yet to overcome a powerful feeling
-of surprise. It was hard to believe that Princess Bedalia, in the view
-of her _fiancé_, the very last word in modern young women, should have
-sprung from such a _milieu_ as Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas. It was
-a facer. Yet somehow the chasm between Mary and her male parent seemed
-almost to enhance her value. She was so superb an original that she
-defied the laws of nature.
-
-The young man was engulfed in an odd train of speculation when Mary’s
-father returned with the beer. He poured out two glasses, gave one to
-the visitor, took one himself, and after a solemn “Good health, sir!”
-solemnly drank it.
-
-Jack returned the “Good health!” and followed the rest of the ritual.
-And then feeling rather more his own man, he made an effort to come to
-business. But it was only possible to do that by means of a directness
-verging upon the indelicate.
-
-“Sergeant Kelly,” he said, “have you any objection to my marrying Mary?”
-
-No doubt the form of the question was a little unwise. At least it
-exposed the young man to the prompt rejoinder:
-
-“I know nothing whatever about you, sir.”
-
-“My name is Dinneford”--he could not refrain from laughing a little at
-the portentous gravity of a prospective father-in-law. “And I think I
-can claim that I have always passed as respectable.”
-
-“Glad to hear it, sir,” said Joe, the light of a respectful humor
-breaking upon him. And then measuring the young man with the eye of
-professional experience. “May I ask your occupation?”
-
-“No occupation.”
-
-“I don’t like the sound o’ that.” Sergeant Kelly sagely shook his head.
-
-“Perhaps it isn’t quite so bad as it sounds,” said the young man. “At
-present, you see, I am a kind of understudy to a sort of uncle I have.
-I am in training as you might say, so that one day I may follow in his
-footsteps.”
-
-“An actor,” said the dubious Joe. He didn’t mind actors personally, but
-impersonally he didn’t quite hold with the stage.
-
-“Not exactly,” said the young man coolly, but with a smile. “And yet he
-is in his way. In fact, you might call him a prince of comedians.”
-
-“I’m sorry, sir.” Sergeant Kelly measured each word carefully. “But I’m
-afraid that’s only a very little in his favor.”
-
-“I’m sorry, too,” said Jack. “My uncle is a duke, and the deuce of it
-is, I have to succeed him.”
-
-“A duke!” Sergeant Kelly’s tone of rather pained surprise made it
-clear that such a romantic circumstance greatly altered the aspect of
-the case. It also implied that he was far from approving an ill-timed
-jest on a sacred subject. His brow knitted to a heavy frown. “Well,
-sir, I can only say that if such is the case you have no right to come
-a-courting our Mary.”
-
-“For why not, Sergeant Kelly?”
-
-“You know why not, sir, as well as I do. She’s a fine gal, although
-I say it who ought not, but that will not put her right with your
-friends. They will expect you to take a wife of your own sort.”
-
-“But that’s rather my look-out, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes, sir, it is,” said Joe, with the air of a warrior, “but as you
-have asked me, there’s my opinion. The aristocracy’s the aristocracy,
-the middle-class is the middle-class, and the lower orders are the
-lower orders--there they are and you can’t alter ’em. At least, that’s
-my view of the matter.”
-
-Jack forced a wry smile. Mary was a chip of the old block. Such an
-uncompromising statement seemed at any rate to explain the force of her
-conviction upon this vexed subject.
-
-“Excuse the freedom, sir,” said the solemn Joe, “but you young nobs
-who keep on marrying out of your class are undermining the British
-Constitution. What’s to become of law and order if you go on mixing
-things up in the way you are doing?”
-
-The young man proceeded to do battle with the Philistine. But the
-weapons in his armory were none of the brightest with which to meet the
-crushing onset of the foe.
-
-“It’s no use, sir. As I say, the aristocracy’s the aristocracy, the
-middle-class is the middle-class, and the lower orders are the lower
-orders--there they are and you can’t alter ’em. You don’t suppose I’ve
-reggerlated the traffic at Hyde Park Corner all these years not to know
-_that_.”
-
-In the presence of such a conviction, the best of Jack’s arguments
-seemed vain, futile and shallow. Fate had charged Joseph Kelly with the
-solemn duty of maintaining the fabric of society, and in his purview,
-no argument however cunning, could set that fact aside.
-
-
-IV
-
-While these two were still at grips, each meeting the arguments of the
-other with a sense of growing impatience, the cause of the trouble
-intervened. Mary came into the room, leading her mother by the hand.
-With the face of a sphinx followed Harriet.
-
-The blushing Eliza was adorned with a fine coat which had come in the
-milliner’s box. Mary had laughingly insisted on her mother appearing in
-it, in spite of Eliza’s firm conviction that “it was much too grand.”
-
-“My word, mother!” roared Joe, at the sight of her splendor. “I’m
-thinking I’ll have to keep an eye on _you_.”
-
-The visitor was promptly introduced, first to the wearer of the coat,
-who offered a shy and embarrassed hand, and then to Aunt Harriet, who
-stood mute and pale in the background.
-
-“Why--why, Mrs. Sanderson,” said the young man, “fancy meeting you
-here!”
-
-“You have met before?” said Mary, innocently.
-
-“We meet very often.”
-
-“Really?”
-
-“Why, yes. Mrs. Sanderson is Uncle Albert’s right hand at Bridport
-House.”
-
-A pin might have been heard to fall in the silence that followed. The
-blood fled from Mary’s cheeks; they grew as pale as those of her aunt.
-Even the knowledge that had recently come to her had not connected Jack
-with Bridport House. No attempt had been made to realize exactly who
-and what he was. It had been enough that he belonged to a world beyond
-her own. And now as this new and astonishing fact presented itself she
-saw the strongest possible justification for the attitude she had taken
-up.
-
-As for Harriet, stern and unbending in the background, she was like an
-Antigone who abides the decree. Her fears were realized. The worst had
-happened. Fate had played such a subtle and unworthy trick that the
-instinct uppermost was to resent it bitterly.
-
-The feelings of the girl were very similar. But her strength of
-character and the independence of her position enabled her to
-take charge of a situation delicate and embarrassing. In a rather
-high-pitched voice, she began to talk generalities in order to
-bridge if possible the arid pauses which were always threatening to
-submerge the conversation. But at the back of her mind was a growing
-sense that secret forces are always at work in this strange world we
-inhabit--forces which have a peculiar malice of their own.
-
-And yet, hopeless as the position had suddenly become for these five
-people, the fates had one more barb in their quiver. And it was of so
-odd a kind that it was as if the stars in their courses were bent upon
-seeing what mischief they could contrive in this particular matter. A
-sudden sharp rap from the knocker of the front door fell into the midst
-of the growing embarrassment. Joe, welcoming this diversion as relief
-to a tension that was almost intolerable, went at once to attend the
-cause of it.
-
-“As I’m a living man,” came a lusty voice from the threshold, “if it
-isn’t old Joe Kelly.”
-
-The People’s Candidate, rosetted, dauntless and triumphant, accompanied
-by the lady of his choice, stepped heroically into the small room.
-Twenty-three years had wrought a very remarkable change in a very
-remarkable man. In that time Dugald Maclean had bent all the powers of
-his genius to a task that Miss Harriet Sanderson had discreetly imposed
-upon the author of “Urban Love, a Trilogy.” And now he came in, every
-inch a victor, he had not looked to find his monitress. But there she
-was, pale, grim, yet somehow oddly distinguished in the background of a
-room curiously familiar. It was to her that his eyes leapt.
-
-“Why, Miss Sanderson!” he said, with a conqueror’s laugh, in which
-there was no trace of the tongue-tied youth of three and twenty years
-ago. Offering a conqueror’s hand, he went forward to greet her.
-
-Harriet yielded hers with a vivid blush. And as she did so, she was
-suddenly aware of two swordlike orbs piercing her right through.
-
-“I didn’t know Mrs. Sanderson was a friend of yours,” said the honeyed
-voice of Lady Muriel.
-
-“A very old friend,” said Sir Dugald gayly.
-
-At that moment, however, it was necessary for Lady Muriel to curb her
-curiosity. Since her exit from that room half-an-hour ago other people
-had gathered in it. She had hardly spoken when her astonished eyes
-fell upon Cousin Jack. Their recognition of each other was mutually
-incredulous. Yet there was really no reason why it should have been. It
-was known to the young man that Muriel had been refused permission to
-marry a politician already on the high road to place and power, and it
-was known to her that Jack had been going about with an actress.
-
-“A family party,” said Jack, as their eyes met. “Let me introduce Miss
-Lawrence--Lady Muriel Dinneford.”
-
-An exchange of aloof bows followed. And then, although very careful to
-seem to do nothing of the kind, each measured the other with an eye
-as hard and bright as a diamond. To neither was the result of this
-scrutiny exactly pleasant. It came upon Cousin Muriel with a little
-shock of surprise that “the Chorus Girl” should look just as she did,
-and that she knew how to bear herself in a way that did not yield an
-inch to the enemy, yet at the same time scrupulously refrained from
-offering battle. Here was beauty of a very compelling kind, and in
-the hostile view of its present beholder something more valuable. The
-distinguished air, the look of breeding, went some way to excuse a
-deplorable infatuation. But as far as “the Chorus Girl” herself was
-concerned, a little over-sensitive as circumstances may have made her
-on the score of her own dignity, it was far from pleasant to detect
-in this authentic member of the family that power of conveying subtle
-insult, without speech or look, which belonged to the two others,
-presumably her sisters, whom she had met in the Park.
-
-Somehow the girl felt a keen rage within. It may have been the world
-of unconscious arrogance behind that aloof nod, it may have been the
-implicit challenge in the lidded glance down the long straight nose.
-But whatever the cause, Mary suddenly felt a surge of resentment in her
-very bones.
-
-In the meantime, the People’s Candidate was playing his part to
-perfection. The flight of time had wrought wonders in this champion of
-Demos. He was no longer tongue-tied and awkward; even the roll of his
-“r’s” was so diminished that Ardnaleuchan would hardly have known its
-child. Everything was in perfect harmony. After a few brief passages
-with Harriet, audaciously humorous, in which homage was paid to old
-times, he turned with a sportsman’s eye to exchange a ready quip with
-Joe and Eliza.
-
-Joe, in his heart, was scandalized. A Tory to the bone, in his view
-the social hierarchy was part of the cosmic order. It was unchanging,
-immutable. “Scotchie” was a charlatan, tongue in cheek; a mountebank
-of a fellow whom it was amazing that honest men, let alone high-born
-women, could not see through. Joe was determined to have no truck
-with him, but the People’s Candidate with a bonhomie which the former
-colleague of the X Division was inclined to regard as mere brazenness,
-seemed quite determined not to take rebuffs from an old friend.
-
-“You haven’t a vote, Joe, I know,” said Maclean, “but you are a man of
-influence here and I want you to speak for me with your pals.”
-
-Joe shook a solemn head.
-
-“I don’t believe in your principles,” said he.
-
-The voice, a growl of indignation, struck the ear of Lady Muriel a
-veritable blow. In spite of “the breadth” she was trying so hard to
-cultivate, the laws of her being demanded that these humble people
-should grovel. They were of another caste, another clay; somehow Joe’s
-blunt skepticism gave her a sense of personal affront.
-
-“You have not a vote, Mr. Kelly,” she interposed, in a sharp tone.
-“Pray, why didn’t you tell me? A canvasser’s time is valuable.”
-
-“Your ladyship never asked the question.”
-
-“But you knew, surely, my object in coming?”
-
-“I did,” said Joe coolly, with a slightly humorous air. “And I thought
-your ladyship so dangerous that the best thing I could do was to get
-you barking up the wrong tree.”
-
-The answer delighted Maclean. He threw up his head and laughed like
-a school boy. But in the midst of a mirth that his fiancée was quite
-incapable of sharing with him, Jack and Mary rose to go. They had been
-waiting to seize the first chance which offered in order to escape from
-a decidedly irksome family party.
-
-
-V
-
-As Mary and Jack took leave, the penetrating eye of the new Home
-Secretary regarded them. The two men had not met before, but they
-were known to each other by hearsay. Jack had heard little good of
-Maclean--Sir Dugald had heard even less good of Jack. A light of
-amused malice sprang to their eyes in the moment of recognition. But
-from those of the Scotsman it quickly passed. For almost at once his
-attention was caught by the affectionate intimacy of the good-bys
-bestowed upon Joe, Eliza, and Harriet by a girl of quite remarkable
-interest.
-
-Was it possible? The live thought flashed through Sir Dugald’s mind.
-In an instant it had leapt to the November evening of the year 1890.
-Immense quantities of water had flowed under the bridge since that far
-distant hour. And if this vivid, unforgettable girl was the creature he
-now suspected that she must be, here was one example the more of the
-romance of time, nature and circumstance.
-
-As soon as Mary and Jack were away on what they called a joy-ride to
-Richmond, all Sir Dugald’s doubts in the matter were laid at rest.
-At once there followed a few brief, but pitiless and bitter passages
-between Harriet Sanderson and Lady Muriel.
-
-“Tell me, Mrs. Sanderson,” said the younger woman in a tone of ice, “is
-Miss Lawrence a connection of yours?”
-
-“My niece, my lady,” said Harriet, an odd tremor in her voice.
-
-“A daughter, I presume, of your sister and her husband?”
-
-“That is so, my lady.” Harriet’s tone was slowly deepening to that of
-her questioner.
-
-“Of course, the matter will have to be mentioned at once to my father.
-And I’m afraid the consequences cannot fail to be serious. You must
-feel that it is very wrong to have connived at such a state of things.”
-
-Harriet’s reply, brief but considered, made with a sudden flush of
-color and a lighted eye, was a cold denial. It was a short but painful
-scene, and its three witnesses would gladly have been spared it. Lady
-Muriel had lost a little of her poise. In spite of her “breadth” she
-was simply horrified by her discovery. She could not believe that
-Harriet spoke the truth. And the cunning, the duplicity, the chicane of
-a retainer who had held a privileged position for so many years filled
-her with an inward fury that was almost beyond control.
-
-“One could not have believed it to be possible,” she said, in a voice
-that trembled ominously. And having discharged that Parthian bolt, she
-withdrew with the People’s Candidate in order to canvass the next house
-in the street.
-
-
-VI
-
-Such a departure left consternation in its train. After a moment of
-complete silence, Eliza burst into a sudden flood of tears, Joe put on
-his tunic with the air of a tragedian, but Harriet remained immovable
-as a statue.
-
-“This comes of the stage,” wailed poor Eliza.
-
-Joe felt the times themselves were to blame, at any rate they were
-sadly out of joint.
-
-“I don’t know what things are coming to,” he said, flinging his
-slippers into a corner and putting on his boots. “Things are all upside
-down these days and no mistake.”
-
-Harriet blamed no one. She merely stood white and shaken, a picture of
-tragic unhappiness.
-
-“Gal,” said Joe, turning to her a Job’s comforter, “one thing is sure.
-You are going to lose your place.”
-
-Harriet bit her lip, coldly disdaining a reply.
-
-“As sure as eggs that’ll be the upshot,” proceeded Joe. “I’m sorry I
-let that jockey go without giving him a bit of my mind.”
-
-“He is not to blame,” said Harriet tensely.
-
-“Who is, then?”
-
-“You and me, Joe,” sobbed Eliza, “for letting her go on the stage.”
-
-“There was no stopping her--you know that well enough. As soon as she
-took up her dancing we lost all control of her. But we’ve got to be
-pretty sensible now. A nice tangle things are in, and they’ll take a
-bit of straightening out.”
-
-Harriet shook a mournful head.
-
-“What can people like ourselves possibly do?” she asked.
-
-“I’ve a great mind,” said Joe, “to step as far as Bridport House and
-have a few words with his Grace.”
-
-“That’s merely preposterous,” said Harriet decisively.
-
-“The matter must be brought to his notice at once, any way,” said Joe
-doggedly.
-
-“You can count upon that,” said Harriet grimly.
-
-“But it’ll be one side only. And there’s the other, my gal.”
-
-“What other?” Harriet asked with a drawn smile.
-
-“Her side. She is not going to be made a fool of by anyone if I can
-help it.”
-
-Said Harriet very gravely: “Joe, I sincerely hope you will not meddle
-in this. I am quite sure that any interference of ours will be most
-unwise.”
-
-But Joe shook the head of a warrior.
-
-“There you’re wrong. This is our affair and we’ve got to see it
-through.”
-
-“Far better let the matter alone.”
-
-“When we adopted that girl,” said Joe, “we took a great responsibility
-on ourselves, and we’ve got to live up to it. In my opinion that young
-man means no good.”
-
-“You have no right to say that,” said Harriet quickly.
-
-“I’ve a right to say what I think. And you know as well as I do that
-the likes o’ him don’t condescend to the likes o’ her with any good
-intention.”
-
-Harriet flushed darkly.
-
-“I am quite sure that Mr. Dinneford would always behave like a
-gentleman,” she said sternly.
-
-“That is more than you know.”
-
-“You seem to forget that he is one of the Family.”
-
-Joe laughed rather sardonically. “I don’t blame you for being so set up
-with your precious Family,” he said. “It is only right that you should
-be--but I know what I know. Human nature’s human nature.”
-
-Harriet shook her head. Not for a moment could she accept this point of
-view. Moreover, she strongly urged that there must not be interference
-of any kind with Bridport House.
-
-“That’s as may be,” said Joe stoutly. “But you can take your oath that
-I mean to see justice done in the matter.”
-
-“You talk as if she was your own daughter,” said Harriet, who was
-growing deeply annoyed.
-
-“Ever since I gave her my name and my roof, I have looked on her as a
-gal of my own.”
-
-“Yes, that we have,” chimed Eliza tearfully. “And I am sure that Joe is
-right to take the matter up.”
-
-Again Harriet dissented. In her view, and she did not hesitate to
-express it forcibly, it would be sheer folly for people like themselves
-to meddle in such a delicate affair.
-
-“It seems to me,” said Eliza bitterly, “that rather than go against
-Bridport House, you would ruin the girl.”
-
-The words struck home. Eliza had long looked up to her younger sister.
-The position she held was one of honor, but Harriet’s exaggerated
-concern for an imposing machine of which she was no more than a very
-humble cog, somehow aroused Eliza’s deepest feelings.
-
-“It is a very wicked thing to say.” And in the eyes of Harriet was an
-odd look.
-
-“You set these grandees above everything in the world,” Eliza taunted.
-“Like the Dad, you simply worship them.”
-
-A deadly pallor overspread Harriet’s face. Her eyes grew grim with pain
-and anger. But a powerful nature, schooled to self-discipline, fought
-for control and was able to gain it.
-
-“It’s a futile discussion,” she said suddenly, in a changed tone. And
-then she added with an earnestness strangely touching. “Joe, I implore
-you not to take any step in the matter without first consulting me.”
-
-The solemn words seemed to gain finality from the fact that Harriet
-Sanderson then walked abruptly out of the house.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT
-
-
-I
-
-THE Duke, in his morning-room, was reading a letter which had just come
-to him by post. As he folded it neatly and returned it to an envelope
-which bore the stamp of the south-eastern postal district, the light of
-humor played over an expressive face. And when, after much reflection,
-he took the letter again from its envelope and solemnly re-read it, the
-look deepened to the verge of the saturnine.
-
-Still pondering what he plainly considered to be a priceless document,
-a succession of odd grimaces caused him to purse his lips and to frown
-perplexedly. At last he dropped his glasses and broke into a guffaw.
-
-Lying back in his invalid’s chair, still in the throes of an infrequent
-laughter, he was presently brought back to the plane of gravity by the
-unexpected arrival of Lady Wargrave upon the scene.
-
-She entered the room with a gladiatorial air.
-
-The face of his Grace underwent a sudden change at the sight of this
-unwelcome visitor.
-
-Charlotte seated herself ponderously. And then having allowed a
-moment’s pause for dramatic effect, she said, marking her brother with
-an intent eye, “The plot thickens.”
-
-“Plot?” he said, warily.
-
-“Do you wish me to believe that you have not heard the latest
-development?”
-
-“Why speak in riddles, Charlotte?” He was trying to suppress a growing
-irritability.
-
-Charlotte smiled frostily. “One should make allowances, no doubt, for
-natural simplicity. But even to the aloofness of philosophers there’s a
-limit, my friend. You must know that there is only one subject in all
-our minds just now.”
-
-The Duke, a concentrated gaze upon Charlotte, did not allow himself
-to admit anything of the kind. For one thing they were lifelong
-adversaries. Charlotte was a meddlesome woman, an intriguer and a
-busybody in the sacred name of Family. They had tried many a fall with
-each other in the past, and although Providence in making Albert John
-the head of the house had given him an unfair advantage, he was often
-hard set by Charlotte’s malice and persistency.
-
-“Have you spoken to that young wretch?” Charlotte lost no time in
-coming boldly to the horses.
-
-“I have not,” was the sour reply.
-
-“Is it quite wise, do you think, to let the grass grow under your
-feet?--particularly having regard to the fact that the person happens
-to be a niece of Mrs. Sanderson’s.” This was a very shrewd blow, whose
-manner of delivery had been most carefully considered beforehand.
-Indeed, so neatly was it planted now that his Grace got the shock of
-his life. The surprise was so painfully sharp that he found it hard to
-meet the foe without flinching. He had to make a great effort to hold
-himself in hand. And Charlotte, a cold eye upon him, followed up in an
-extremely businesslike manner. She had a very strong hand to play and a
-true warrior, if ever there was one, she was set on wringing out of it
-the last ounce of advantage. There had come to her at last, after many
-a year of watching and waiting, an opportunity beyond her hopes and her
-prayers.
-
-“Last evening poor Sarah came to me in great distress,” proceeded
-Charlotte. “Muriel, it appears, had been electioneering in the
-constituency of a certain person, and in the course of her wanderings
-up and down the suburbs, she found herself quite by chance at the house
-of Mrs. Sanderson’s brother-in-law.”
-
-By this time his Grace had sufficiently recovered from the blow that
-had been dealt him to ask how Muriel had contrived to make that
-particular discovery.
-
-It seemed that she had found Mrs. Sanderson there.
-
-“The long arm of coincidence,” opined his Grace with a wry smile. He
-opined further that the whole thing began to sound uncommonly like a
-novel.
-
-“Sober reality, I assure you, Johnnie. And sober reality can beat
-any novel in the power of the human mind to invent, that’s why it’s
-so stupid to write them. Muriel entered the house by chance, Mrs.
-Sanderson came there, and presently, if you please, Master Jack arrived
-by motor with the young person. By the way, Muriel says she is very
-good looking.”
-
-“Quite a family party.” His Grace achieved a light tone with
-difficulty. “But I incline to think, Charlotte, you a little overstate
-the facts.”
-
-“It is the story Muriel told Sarah.”
-
-“Well, I am very unwilling to believe that Mrs. Sanderson knew what was
-going on.”
-
-“Pray, why not?” He was raked by a goshawk’s eye.
-
-“She would have told me.”
-
-Somehow those lame, impotent words revealed a man badly hit. Charlotte
-saw that at once, and forthwith proceeded to turn the fact to pitiless
-advantage. A gust of coarse laughter swept the room.
-
-“Johnnie, it’s the first time I’ve read you a fool. Simple Simon! Do
-you think a woman who has learned to play her cards like that is the
-one to give away her hand?”
-
-This was a second blow planted neatly on the vizor of his Grace. In
-spite of his armor of cynicism he could be seen to wince a little. And
-the silence which followed enabled the implacable foe to perceive that
-he was shaken worse than it seemed reasonable to expect him to be.
-
-“Perhaps you’ll now permit her to be sent away. A sordid intriguer. She
-must go at once.”
-
-In the trying moment which followed, the Duke, badly hipped, fought
-valiantly to pull himself together. But somehow he only just managed to
-do so.
-
-“You make a mistake, Charlotte,” he said, with an effort that clearly
-hurt him. “She is not that kind of person. You always have made that
-mistake. She is a superior woman in every way. At least, I have always
-found her so. I can’t imagine such a woman intriguing for anybody.”
-
-“Shows how little you know ’em, Johnnie.” Another Gargantuan gust swept
-the room. “Every woman intrigues unless she’s a born fool, and this
-housekeeper nurse of yours is very far from being that--believe me.”
-
-For a brief, but uncomfortable moment the Duke thought the matter over
-with an air of curious perplexity. Then he said abruptly and with
-defiance:
-
-“I must have further information.”
-
-“Sarah has the details. It would be well, no doubt, to have her views
-on the matter.”
-
-Whereupon Charlotte rose massively, crossed to the bell and rang it in
-order that a much tormented male should enjoy this further privilege.
-
-
-II
-
-The eldest daughter of the house, when she came on the scene, found the
-atmosphere decidedly electric. Her father was glaring with very ominous
-eyes; while it was clear from the look on the face of Aunt Charlotte
-that she was under the impression that she had downed him at last. No
-doubt she had, but if those eyes meant anything there was still a lot
-of fight in the stricken warrior.
-
-Sarah herself was a long, thin, flat-chested person. Totally devoid of
-imagination, her horizon was so limited that outside the Family nothing
-or nobody mattered. And yet she was not in the least domesticated. In
-fact, she was not in the least anything. She was nobly and consistently
-null, without opinions or ideas, without humor, charm or amenity. Her
-mental outlook had somehow thrown back to the 1840’s, yet with all
-her limitations, apart from which very little remained of her, she
-was a thoroughly sound, exceedingly honest Christian gentlewoman of
-thirty-eight.
-
-Sarah, it seemed, having heard Muriel’s story, had taken counsel of the
-dowager. And at once realizing the extreme gravity of the whole affair,
-both ladies determined to make the most of a long-sought opportunity to
-give the housekeeper her quietus. Sarah herself, who was inclined to be
-embittered and vindictive on this particular point, fell in only too
-readily with Aunt Charlotte’s desire to take full advantage of such a
-golden chance. Called upon now to divulge all that she knew, the eldest
-daughter re-told Muriel’s remarkable story of her meeting with Mrs.
-Sanderson, Jack and the girl, in the course of political endeavors at
-Laxton. The story, amazing as it was, was undoubtedly authentic.
-
-“Of course, father,” was Sarah’s conclusion, very pointedly expressed,
-“she will simply _have_ to go. And the sooner the better, as no doubt
-you agree.”
-
-To Sarah’s deep annoyance, however, her sire seemed very far from
-agreeing.
-
-“There is no direct evidence of collusion,” he said. “And knowing
-Mrs. Sanderson to be an old and tried servant, who has always had our
-welfare at heart, I am very unwilling to place such a construction upon
-what may be no more than a rather odd coincidence.”
-
-Sarah was too deeply angry to reply. But she looked on grimly while the
-ruthless Charlotte showly marshaled her forces. The quarrel was a very
-pretty one. Yet the Duke, now his back was to the wall, was able to
-take excellent care of himself. Moreover, he flatly declined to hear a
-worthy woman traduced until she had had a chance of meeting charges so
-recklessly, and as it seemed, malevolently brought against her.
-
-“From the way in which you speak of her,” said the incensed Charlotte,
-“you appear to regard her as a person of importance.”
-
-“Charlotte, I regard her as thoroughly honest, trustworthy,
-competent--in fact a good woman in every way.”
-
-“You willfully blind yourself, Johnnie. This creature has thrown dust
-in your eyes. But it will be no more than you deserve if one day her
-niece is installed as mistress here. You will not live to see it, yet
-it would be no more than bare justice if you did.”
-
-“Pernicious nonsense,” rejoined his Grace. “Perhaps in the
-circumstances it would be well to hear what Mrs. Sanderson has to say
-for herself.”
-
-“She is bound to lie.”
-
-Somehow the precision of the language stung his Grace.
-
-“You are not entitled to say that,” he flashed.
-
-“It is the common sense of the situation and one has a perfect right to
-express it.”
-
-“Not here, Charlotte--not in this room before me. If I trust people
-implicitly--there are not many that I do--I trust them implicitly, and
-I can’t allow even _privileged_ people to speak of them in that way--at
-any rate, in my presence.”
-
-This explosion was so unlooked for that it took the ladies aback. In
-all the years they had fought him they had never seen him moved so
-deeply. A new Albert John had suddenly emerged. Never before had the
-head of the house allowed these enemies to catch a glimpse of such
-quixotic, such fantastic chivalry. Charlotte was sourly amused, Sarah,
-amazed; but both ladies were deeply angry.
-
-However, they had fully made up their minds that the housekeeper
-must go. Indeed, that had been already arranged at the after-dinner
-conference at Hill Street the previous evening. They were convinced
-that a woman whom they intensely disliked, whose peculiar position
-they greatly resented, was at last driven into a corner. The Duke’s
-indecently bold defense of her had taken them by surprise, but it
-only made them the more determined to push their present advantage
-ruthlessly home.
-
-
-III
-
-Suddenly Sarah rose and pressed the bell. She demanded of the servant
-who answered it that Mrs. Sanderson should appear.
-
-Harriet, already apprised of Lady Wargrave’s arrival, came at once. She
-was quite prepared for a painful scene. Only too well had she reason to
-know the state of feeling in regard to herself. She had always been so
-able and discreet that she had enforced the outward respect of those
-whom she served so loyally. But she well knew that she was not liked
-by the ladies of the house, and that the special position she had
-come to hold owing to the decline of the Duke’s health, was a _casus
-belli_ between him and the members of his family. She had long been
-aware that in the opinion of the Dinneford ladies it was no part of
-a housekeeper’s functions to act as a trained nurse to their invalid
-father.
-
-Harriet had a natural awe of Lady Wargrave, which she shared with all
-under that roof; for Lady Sarah she had the deep respect which she
-extended to every member of the august clan it had been her privilege
-to serve for so many years. In the devout eyes of Harriet Sanderson
-each unit of that clan was not as other men and women. In the matter of
-Bridport House and all that it stood for, she was more royalist than
-the king.
-
-From the dark hour, a week ago now, in which the news had come by
-a side wind, that the fates by a stroke of perverse cruelty, as it
-seemed, had thrown Mary across the path of Mr. Dinneford, she had
-hardly known how to lay her head on her pillow. To her mind the whole
-thing was simply calamitous. It had thrown her into a state of profound
-unhappiness. She now came into the room looking worn and ill, yet fully
-prepared for short shift to be meted out to her by those whom she found
-assembled there.
-
-The ladies looked for defiance, no doubt. And they may have looked for
-an undercurrent of malicious triumph. Yet if they expected either of
-these things their mistake was at once very clear. It was hard to find
-a trace of the successful intriguer in the haggard cheeks and somber
-eyes of the woman before them. But to minds such as theirs portents of
-this kind could not be expected to weigh in the scale against their
-preconceived ideas.
-
-It was left to Lady Wargrave to fix the charge. And this she did with a
-blunt precision which was itself a form of insult. The icy tones were
-scrupulously polite, nothing was said which one in her position was not
-entitled to say in such circumstances, yet the whole effect was so
-deadly in its venom as to be absolutely pitiless.
-
-At first Harriet was overwhelmed. The force of the attack was beyond
-anything she had looked for. Moreover, it seemed to fill the Duke, an
-unwilling auditor, with anger and pain. He moved uneasily in his chair,
-yet he was not able to check the cold torrent of quasi-insult by word
-of mouth, for none knew better than Lady Wargrave how to administer
-castigation without going outside the rules of the game.
-
-Even when the shock of the first blows was past, Harriet could find
-no means of defending herself. She was a very proud woman. Her
-blamelessness in what she could only regard as a very odious matter was
-so clear to her own mind that it did not seem to call for re-statement.
-She, too, said nothing. But a hot flush came upon the thin cheek.
-
-Lady Wargrave grew more and more incensed by a silence, the cause of
-which she completely mistook.
-
-“You have been nearly thirty years here, Mrs. Sanderson, and you have
-been guilty of a wicked abuse of trust.”
-
-The painful pause which followed this final blow was broken at last by
-the Duke.
-
-“You must forgive me, Charlotte, if I say that the facts of the case as
-they have been presented, hardly justify such a statement.”
-
-The tone was honey. And it was in such ironical contrast to Charlotte’s
-own that nothing could have shown more clearly the wide gulf between
-their points of view or the envenomed strife of many years now coming
-to a head.
-
-“They prove the charge to the hilt.” The hawk’s eyes of Charlotte
-contracted ominously.
-
-“What charge?--if you don’t mind stating it explicitly.”
-
-“Mrs. Sanderson has used her position here to make her niece known to
-the future head of this house, she has connived at their intimacy, she
-appears to have fostered it in every way.”
-
-“I don’t think you are entitled to say that, Charlotte.” The Duke spoke
-slowly and pointedly, and then he turned to Harriet with an air of such
-delicate politeness that it added fuel to the flame which was withering
-her traducers. “If it is not asking too much, Mrs. Sanderson,” he said,
-with a smile of grave kindness, “I should personally be very grateful
-if you would be wicked enough to defend yourself. Let me say at once
-that I am far from accepting the construction Lady Wargrave has placed
-on the matter. But her zeal for a time-honored institution is so great
-that if her judgment is outrun, it seems only kind to forgive her.”
-
-Such oblique but resounding blows in the sconce of Charlotte filled her
-with a fury hard to hold in check.
-
-“What defense is possible?” Her voice was like a crane. “The facts are
-there to look at. Mrs. Sanderson’s niece has extracted a promise of
-marriage.”
-
-The Duke turned to Harriet rather anxiously.
-
-“I sincerely hope Lady Wargrave has been misinformed,” he said.
-
-Harriet flushed.
-
-“I only know”--speech for her had become almost intolerably
-difficult--“that Mr. Dinneford has asked my brother-in-law’s consent to
-his marrying her.”
-
-The Duke may have been deeply annoyed, but not a line of his face
-betrayed him.
-
-“Who is your brother-in-law, Mrs. Sanderson?”
-
-Harriet told him.
-
-“A very honest man”--the Duke checked a laugh--“I have been honored by
-a letter from him this morning.”
-
-Even the lacerated Harriet could not forbear to smile.
-
-“I am sure,” said she, “he will not let Mary marry Mr. Dinneford if he
-can help it.”
-
-“Why not?” sharply interposed Lady Wargrave.
-
-“Why not, Charlotte?” Her brother took upon himself to answer the
-question. “Because Sergeant Kelly is a very sensible and enlightened
-man who evidently tries to see things in their right relation.”
-
-“Fiddle-de-dee!” said Charlotte, with the bluntness for which she was
-famous. “Depend upon it, he knows as well as anybody on which side his
-bread is buttered.”
-
-Her brother shook his head. “I think,” he said, “if you had had the
-privilege of reading Sergeant Kelly’s letter you would be agreeably
-surprised. At any rate, he seems quite to share your view of the
-sacredness of the social fabric.”
-
-“Let us look at the facts,” said Charlotte. “This marriage has to be
-prevented at all costs. And I hope it is not too much to ask Mrs.
-Sanderson that she will give us any assistance which may lie in her
-power.”
-
-The look upon Lady Wargrave’s face, as she made the request, clearly
-implied that help from such a quarter must, in the nature of things, be
-negligible. But in spite of the covert insult in the tone and manner
-of the dowager, Harriet replied very simply that there was nothing she
-would leave undone to prevent such a catastrophe.
-
-“I am quite sure, Mrs. Sanderson, we can count upon that,” said the
-Duke, in a tone which softened considerably the humiliating silence
-with which the promise had been received.
-
-“To begin with,” said the Duke, turning to Harriet, “I shall ask
-your brother-in-law to come and see me. Evidently he is one of these
-sensible, straightforward men who can be trusted to take a large view
-of things.”
-
-The face of Lady Wargrave expressed less optimism.
-
-“There is one question I would like to put to Mrs. Sanderson,” she
-suddenly interposed. It seemed that she had reserved for a final attack
-the weapon on which she counted most. “Be good enough to tell me this.”
-The ruthless eye was fixed on Harriet. “How long, Mrs. Sanderson, have
-you known of Mr. Dinneford’s intimacy with your niece?”
-
-There was a slight but painful pause, and it was broken by a rather
-faltering reply.
-
-“It is just a week since I first heard of it, my lady.”
-
-“Just a week! And in the whole of that time you have not thought well
-to mention the matter?”
-
-The tone cut like a knife. And the stab it dealt was so deep that
-Harriet was unable to answer the question which propelled it.
-
-“_Why didn’t_ you mention it, Mrs. Sanderson?”
-
-The blood fled suddenly from Harriet’s cheek. She grew nervous and
-confused.
-
-“Please answer the question.” There was now a ring of triumph in the
-pitiless tone.
-
-“I wished to spare his Grace unpleasantness,” stammered Harriet.
-
-“Very thoughtful of you, Mrs. Sanderson,” said Lady Wargrave,
-bitingly. “No doubt his Grace appreciates your regard for his feelings.
-But even if that was the motive, surely it was your duty to report the
-matter to Lady Sarah as soon as it came to your knowledge.”
-
-The hesitation of Harriet grew exceedingly painful to witness.
-
-“Yes,” she said at last. Tears suddenly sprang to her eyes. “I begin to
-see now that it _was_ my duty. I wish very much that I _had_ mentioned
-the matter to Lady Sarah.”
-
-Both ladies were so fully set on the overthrow of this serpent that the
-air of touching, exquisite simpleness went for nothing. But in any case
-they would have been too obtuse to notice it.
-
-“We all wish that.” Lady Wargrave pursued her advantage pitilessly.
-“And I am sure I speak for his Grace as well as for the rest of us.”
-She trained a look of malicious triumph upon the perplexed and frowning
-face of her brother.
-
-As became a consummate tactician who now had the affair well in hand,
-Charlotte gave the Duke a moment to intervene if he felt inclined to
-do so. But she well knew, a kind of instinct told her, that the attack
-had succeeded completely. The housekeeper made such a feeble attempt
-to parry it, that for the time being her champion was dumb. Nor was
-this surprising. In the opinion of both ladies the sinister charge of
-collusion had now been proved to the hilt.
-
-Lady Wargrave having given her brother due opportunity for a further
-defense of Mrs. Sanderson, which he had quite failed to grasp,
-proceeded coldly and at leisure to administer the _coup de grâce_.
-
-“I am afraid, Mrs. Sanderson,” she said, “that in these circumstances
-only one course is open to you now.”
-
-She was too adroit, however, to state exactly what that course was. She
-was content merely to suggest it. But Harriet did not need to be told
-what the particular alternative was that her ladyship had in mind.
-
-“You wish me to resign my position,” she said, in a low calm voice. She
-turned with tears in her eyes to the eldest daughter of the house. “I
-beg leave to give a month’s notice from today, my lady. If you would
-like me to go sooner, I will do so at any time you wish.”
-
-The words and manner showed a consideration wholly lacking in the
-measure meted out to herself. There was so little of pride or of
-wounded dignity that the tears were running in a stream down the pale
-cheeks. Uppermost in Harriet Sanderson was still a feeling of profound
-veneration for those to whom she had dedicated the best years of her
-life.
-
-
-IV
-
-The ladies of the Family had won the day. Mrs. Sanderson was going.
-It was an occasion for rejoicing. She had intrigued disgracefully;
-moreover, it had long felt that this clever, unscrupulous, plausible
-woman had gained a dangerous ascendancy over the head of the house. But
-Aunt Charlotte, it seemed, with the tactical skill for which she was
-famous, had driven her into a corner and had forced her to surrender.
-
-In the opinion of Sarah, Mrs. Sanderson had behaved very well. It was,
-of course, impossible to trust that sort of person; but to give the
-woman her due, she had appeared to feel her position acutely; she had
-promised, moreover, to undo as far as in her lay the mischief she had
-caused. The ladies saw no inconsistency in that. They had formed a low
-opinion of Mrs. Sanderson--for what reason they didn’t quite know--but
-now that she had received her _congée_ and they were to have their own
-way at last there would be no harm in taking up a magnanimous attitude
-towards her.
-
-As far as it went this was well enough, but a serious and solemn task
-had been imposed upon various people by the circumstances of the case.
-It now seemed of vital importance to those concerned that Jack should
-become engaged to Marjorie without further delay. With that end in
-view the ladies of the Family were now working like beavers. But all
-they had done so far had not been enough. In vain had the lure been
-laid in sight of the bird. In vain had they used the arts and the
-subtleties of their sex. For several weeks now Jack and Marjorie had
-been thrown together on every conceivable pretext, yet the only result
-had been that the future head of Bridport House had re-affirmed a fixed
-intention of taking a wife from the stage.
-
-Three days after Lady Wargrave had gained her signal triumph over Mrs.
-Sanderson, the Duke was at home to an odd visitor. In obedience to
-the written request of his Grace’s private secretary, Sergeant Kelly
-presented himself about noon at Bridport House.
-
-Fortunately, Joe had been able to arrange for a day off for the
-purpose. Thus the dignity of man, also the dignity of the Metropolitan
-Force, were upheld by impressive mufti. He had discarded uniform for
-his best Sunday cutaway, old and rather shining it was true, but black
-and braided, with every crease removed by Eliza’s iron; a pair of light
-gray trousers, superbly checked; a white choker tie and a horse-shoe
-pin; while to crown all, a massive gold albert, a recent gift from
-Mary, was slung across a noble expanse of broadcloth waistcoat.
-
-“Good morning, Sergeant Kelly,” said a musical voice, as soon as the
-visitor was announced. The Duke in the depths of his invalid chair
-looked at him from under the brows of a satyr. “Excuse my rising. I’m a
-bit below the weather, as you see.”
-
-Joe, secretly prepared for anything in the matter of his reception,
-was impressed most favorably by such a greeting. Somehow the note of
-cordiality was so exactly that of one man of the world to another,
-that Joe was conscious of a subtle feeling of flattery. He was invited
-to sit, and he sat on the extreme verge of a Sheraton masterpiece,
-pensively twisting between his hands a brand-new bowler hat purchased
-that morning en route to Bridport House.
-
-“Sergeant Kelly,” said the Duke, speaking with a directness that Joe
-admired, “I liked your letter. It was that of a sensible man.”
-
-“Good of your Grace to say so,” said Joe, a nice mingling of dignity
-and deference.
-
-“I agree with you that the matter is extremely vexatious.”
-
-Joe took a long breath. “It’s haggeravating, sir,” said he.
-
-“Quite so,” said his Grace, with a whimsical smile. “But as a matter of
-curiosity, may I ask what had led you to that conclusion?”
-
-“Just this, sir.” Joe laid the new bowler hat on the carpet, squared
-his shoulders and fixed the Duke with his eye. “The aristocracy’s
-the aristocracy, the middle-class is the middle-class, and the lower
-h’orders are the lower h’orders--there they are and you can’t alter
-’em. Leastways that was the opinion of the Marquis.”
-
-“I’m not sure that I know your friend,” said the Duke with charming
-urbanity, “but I’m convinced his views are sound. If I read your letter
-aright, you are as much opposed to the suggested alliance between your
-daughter and my kinsman as I am myself.”
-
-“That is so, your Grace. It simply won’t do.”
-
-“I quite agree,” said the Duke, “but from your point of view--why won’t
-it? I ask merely for information.”
-
-“Why won’t it, sir?” said Joe, surprisedly. “Don’t I say the
-aristocracy’s the aristocracy?”
-
-“In other words you disapprove of them on principle?”
-
-“No, sir, it’s because I respect ’em so highly,” said Joe, with a
-simple largeness that bore no trace of the sycophant. “I’ve not
-reggerlated the traffic at Hyde Park Corner all these years without
-learning that it won’t do to keep on mixing things up in the way we’re
-doing at present. Things are in a state of flux, as you might say.”
-
-“Profoundly true,” said the Duke, with a fine appearance of gravity.
-“And I have asked you to come here, Sergeant Kelly, to advise me in
-a very delicate matter. In the first place, I assume that you have
-withheld your consent to this ridiculous marriage.”
-
-“That is so, your Grace. But the young parties are that headstrong
-they may not respect their elders. I told the young gentleman what my
-feeling was, and I told the girl, but I’m sorry to say they laughed at
-me. Yes, sir, society is in a state of flux and no mistake.”
-
-“Well, Sergeant Kelly, what’s to be done?”
-
-“I should like your Grace to speak a word to the parties. Seemingly
-they take no notice of me. But perhaps they might of you, sir.”
-
-The Duke smiled and shook his head.
-
-“Well, sir, they only laugh at me,” said Joe. “But with you it would be
-different.” And then with admirable directness: “Why not see the girl
-and give her your views in the matter? She’s very sensible and she’s
-been well brought up.”
-
-The Duke looked at his visitor steadily. If his Grace was in search of
-_arrière pensée_, he failed to find a sign of it in that transparently
-honest countenance.
-
-“A bold suggestion,” he said, with a smile. “But I don’t know that I
-have any particular aptitude for handling headstrong young women.”
-
-Joe promptly rebutted the ducal modesty. “Your words would carry
-weight, sir. She’s a girl who knows what’s what, I give you my word.”
-
-The Duke could hardly keep from laughing outright at the sublime
-seriousness of this old bobby. But at the same time curiosity stirred
-him. What sort of a girl was this who owned such a genial grotesque
-of a father? It would impinge on the domain of comic opera to instal
-such a being as the future châtelaine of Bridport House. Still, as his
-visitor shrewdly said, society was in a state of flux.
-
-“My own belief is,” said Joe, “that she’s the best girl in England, and
-if your Grace would set your point of view before her as you have set
-it before me, I’m thinking she’d do her best to help us.”
-
-The Duke was impressed by such candor, such openness, such simplicity.
-After all, there was just a chance that things might take a more
-hopeful turn.
-
-“She’s not one to go where she’s not wanted, sir,” said Joe. “And my
-belief is that if you have a little talk with her and let her know how
-you feel about it, you may be spared a deal o’ trouble.”
-
-“You really think that?” said the Duke with a sigh of relief.
-
-“I do, sir. Leastways, if you ain’t, Joseph Kelly will be disappointed.”
-
-Such disinterestedness was not exactly flattering, yet the Duke was
-touched by it. Indeed, Sergeant Kelly’s sturdy common sense was so
-reassuring that he was invited to have a cigar. At the request of his
-host, he pressed the bell, one long and one short, and in the process
-of time a servant appeared with a box of Coronas. Joe chose one, smelt
-it, placed it to his ear and then put it sedately in his pocket.
-
-“I’ll not smoke it now, sir,” he said urbanely. “I’ll keep it until I
-can really enjoy it.”
-
-He was graciously invited to take several. With an air of polite
-deprecation he helped himself to three more. Then he realized that the
-time had come to withdraw.
-
-The parting was one of mutual esteem. If the girl would consent to pay
-a visit to Bridport House, the Duke would see her gladly. But again his
-Grace affirmed that he was not an optimist. Society _was_ in a state
-of flux, he quite agreed, democracy was knocking at the gate and none
-knew the next turn in the game. Still the Duke was not unmindful of
-Sergeant Kelly’s remarkable disinterestedness, and took a cordial leave
-of him, fully prepared to follow his advice in this affair of thorns.
-
-As soon as the door had closed upon the dignified form of Sergeant
-Kelly, the Duke lay back in his chair fighting a storm of laughter.
-Cursed with a sense of humor, at all times a great handicap for such a
-one as himself, its expression had seldom been less opportune or more
-uncomfortable. For there was really nothing to laugh at in a matter of
-this kind. The thing was too grimly serious.
-
-Still, for the moment, this amateur of the human comedy was the victim
-of a divided mind. He wanted to laugh until he ached over this solemn
-policeman upholding the fabric of society.
-
-“By gad, he’s right,” Albert John ruminated, as he dipped gout-ridden
-fingers in his ravished cigar box. “Things _are_ in a state of flux.”
-He cut off the end of a cigar. “My own view is that this monstrous
-bluff which these poor fools have allowed some of us to put up since
-the Conquest, more or less, will mighty soon be about our ears.
-However,”--Albert John placed the cigar between his lips--“it hardly
-does to say so.”
-
-For a time this was the sum of his reflections. Then he pressed the
-bell at his elbow and the servant reappeared.
-
-“Ask Mr. Twalmley to be good enough to telephone to Mr. Dinneford. I
-wish to see him at once.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-A TRAGIC COIL
-
-
-I
-
-MARY, breakfasting late and at leisure, before her ride at eleven, had
-propped the _Morning Post_ against the coffee-pot. Milly was arranging
-roses in a blue bowl.
-
-“I’m miserable!” Mary suddenly proclaimed. She had let her eyes stray
-to the column devoted to marriage and the giving in marriage, and at
-last she had flung the paper away from her.
-
-“Get on with your breakfast,” said the practical Milly. “I’ve really no
-patience with you.”
-
-Mary rose from the table with big trouble in her face.
-
-“You’re a gaby,” said Milly, scornfully. “If everybody was like you
-there’d be no carrying on the world at all. You’re absurd. Mother is
-quite annoyed with you, and so am I.”
-
-“I’m simply wretched.” The tone was very far from that of the fine
-resolute creature whom Milly adored.
-
-The truth was Mary had been following a policy of drift and it was
-beginning to tell upon her. Nearly a week had gone since the visit to
-Laxton had disclosed a state of things which had trebly confounded
-confusion. Besides, that ill-timed pilgrimage had given duty a sharper
-point, a keener edge, but as yet she had not gathered the force of will
-to meet the hard logic of the matter squarely.
-
-In spite of a growing resolve to make an end of a situation that all
-at once had become intolerable, she had weakly consented to ride
-that morning with Jack as usual. So far he had proved the stronger,
-no doubt because two factors of supreme importance were on his side.
-One was the promise into which very incautiously she had let herself
-be lured, to which he had ruthlessly held her, the other the simple
-fact that she was deeply in love with him. It had been very perilous
-to temporize, yet having been weak enough to do so, each passing day
-tightened her bonds. The little scheme had failed. Laxton had caused
-not the slightest change in his attitude; he was not the kind of man
-to be influenced by things of that kind; only a simpleton like herself
-would expect him to be! No, the plain truth was he was set more than
-ever on not giving her up, and it was going to be a desperate business
-to compel him. To make matters worse his attraction for her was great.
-There was a force, a quality about him which she didn’t know how to
-resist. When they were apart she made resolves which when they were
-together she found herself unable to keep. The truth was, the cry of
-nature was too strong.
-
-Milly looked up from her roses to study a picture of distraction.
-
-“You odd creature.” A toss of a sagacious head.
-
-The charge was admitted frankly, freely, and fully.
-
-“I don’t understand you in the least.” A wrinkling of a pert nose.
-
-“I don’t understand myself.”
-
-Milly looked at her wonderingly. “I really don’t. You are quite beyond
-me. If you were actually afraid of these people, which I don’t for a
-moment think you are, one might begin to see what’s at the back of your
-absurd mind.”
-
-“Why don’t you think I’m afraid of them?” Mary in spite of herself was
-a little amused by the downrightness.
-
-The question brought her right up against an eye of very honest
-admiration.
-
-“Because, Miss Lawrence, it simply isn’t in you to be afraid of
-anybody.”
-
-Princess Bedalia shook a rueful head. “You say that because you don’t
-know all. I’m in a mortal funk of Bridport House.”
-
-“That I won’t believe,” said the robust Milly. “And if a fit of
-high-falutin’ sentiment, for which you’ll get not an ounce of credit,
-causes you to throw away your happiness, and turn your life into a
-sob-story, neither my mother nor I will ever forgive you, so there!”
-
-“You seem to forget that I am the housekeeper’s niece.”
-
-“As though it mattered.” The pert nose twitched furiously. “As though
-it matters a row of little apples. You are yourself--your big and
-splendid self. Any man is lucky to get you.”
-
-But the large, long-lashed eyes were full of pain. “We look at things
-so differently. I can’t explain what I mean or what I feel, but I want
-to see the whole thing, if I can, as others see it.”
-
-“We are the others--mother and I,” said Milly, stoutly. “But as we
-are not titled snobs with Bridport House stamped on our notepaper, I
-suppose we don’t count.”
-
-“That’s not fair.” A curious look came into Mary’s face, which Milly
-had noticed before and, for a reason she couldn’t explain, somehow
-resented. “They have their point of view and it’s right that they
-should have. Without it they wouldn’t be what they are, would they?”
-
-“You speak as if they were better than other people.”
-
-“Why, of course.”
-
-“I shall begin to think you are as bad as they are,” Milly burst out
-impatiently. “You are the oddest creature. I can understand your not
-going where you are not wanted, but that’s no reason why you should
-fight for the other side.”
-
-“I want them to have fair play.”
-
-“It’s more than they mean you to have, any way.”
-
-“One oughtn’t to say that.” The tone had a quaint sternness, charming
-to the ear, yet with a great power of affront for the soul of Milly.
-
-“Miss Lawrence,” said that democrat, “you annoy me. If you go on like
-this before mother she’ll shake you. The trouble with you”--a rather
-fierce recourse to a cigarette--“is that you are a bit of a prig. You
-must admit that you are a bit of a prig, aren’t you now?”
-
-“More than a bit of one,” sighed Mary. And then the light of humor
-broke over her perplexity. In the eyes of Milly this was her great
-saving clause; and in spite of an ever-deepening annoyance with
-her friend for the hay she was making of such amazingly brilliant
-prospects, she could not help laughing at the comic look of her now.
-
-“You are much too clever to take things so seriously,” said Milly. “You
-are not the least bit of a prig in anything else, and that’s why you
-made me so angry. Be sensible and follow your luck. Jack should know
-far better than you. Besides, if you didn’t mean to keep your word, why
-did you give it?”
-
-This was a facer, as the candid Milly intended it to be.
-
-“Because I was a fool.” At the moment that seemed the only possible
-answer.
-
-
-II
-
-The argument had not gone farther when a rather strident “coo-ee”
-ascending from the pavement below found its way through the open window.
-
-“Diana, you are wanted.” The impulsive Milly ran on to the little
-balcony to wave a hand of welcome to a young man in the street.
-
-It was the intention, however, of the young man in the street, as soon
-as he could find someone to look after his horses, to come up and have
-a talk with Mary. To the quick-witted person to whom he made known
-that resolve, he seemed much graver than usual. It hardly required any
-special clairvoyance on the part of Milly to realize that something was
-in the wind.
-
-Three minutes later, Jack had found his way up and Milly had effaced
-herself discreetly. This morning that warrior was not quite the
-serenely humorous self whom his friends found so engaging. Recent
-events had annoyed him, disquieted him, upset him generally, and the
-previous afternoon they had culminated in a long and unsatisfactory
-interview at Bridport House.
-
-Those skilled in the signs might have told, from the young man’s
-manner, that he had cast himself for a big thinking part. This morning
-he was “all out” for diplomacy. He would like Mary to know that
-his back was to the wall, and that he must be able to count on her
-implicitly in the stern fight ahead; but the crux of the problem was,
-and for that reason he felt such a great need of cunning, if he let
-her know the full force and depth of the opposition the effect upon
-her might be the reverse of what he intended. Even apart from the stab
-to her pride, she was quite likely to make it a pretext for further
-quixotism. Therefore, Mr. John Dinneford had decided to walk very
-delicately indeed this morning.
-
-His Grace, it appeared, had asked to see the lady in the case. Jack,
-however, scenting peril in the request, had by no means consented
-lightly to that. Diplomacy, assuming a very large D, had promptly
-assured him that his kinsman and fiancée were far too much birds of a
-feather; their method of looking at large issues was ominously alike.
-Mary had developed what Jack called “the Aunt Sanderson viewpoint” to
-an alarming degree. Aunt Sanderson, no doubt, had acquired it in the
-first place from the fountain head; its authenticity therefore made it
-the more perilous.
-
-“Uncle Albert sends his compliments and hopes you’ll be kind enough
-to go and see him.” The statement was made so casually that it was
-felt to be a masterpiece of the non-committal. He would defy anyone to
-tell from his tone how he had fought the old wretch, how he had tried
-to outwit him, how he had done his damnedest to short-circuit a most
-mischievous resolve.
-
-“Now.” The diplomatist took her boldly by a very fine pair of
-shoulders, and so made a violent end of the pause which had followed
-the important announcement. “Whatever you do, be careful not to give
-away the whole position. There’s a cunning old fox to deal with, and if
-he finds the weak spot, we’re done.”
-
-“You mean he thinks as I do?”
-
-“I don’t say he does exactly, but, of course, he may. When you come to
-Bridport House, you are up against all sorts of crassness.”
-
-“Or common sense, whichever you choose to call it,” said the troubled
-Mary.
-
-“Don’t you go playing for them.” He shook the fine shoulders in a
-masterful colonial manner. “If you do, I’ll never forgive you. Bridport
-House can be trusted to take very good care of itself. We’ve got to
-keep our own end going. If we have really made up our minds to get
-married, no one has a right to prevent us, and it’s up to you to let
-his Grace know that.”
-
-Again came the look of trouble. “But suppose I don’t happen to think
-so?”
-
-“I think so for you. In fact, I think it so strongly that I intend to
-answer for both.”
-
-She could not help secretly admiring this cool audacity. At any rate,
-it was the speech of a man who knew his own mind, and in spite of
-herself it pleased her.
-
-“Now, remember.” Once more the over-bold wooer resorted to physical
-violence: “You simply can’t afford to enjoy the luxury of your fine
-feelings in this scene of the comedy. As I say, he’s a cunning old fox
-and he’ll play on them for all he’s worth.”
-
-“But why should he?”
-
-“Because he knows you are Mrs. Sanderson’s niece.”
-
-“In his opinion that would make one the less likely to have them,
-wouldn’t it?” She tried very hard to keep so much as a suspicion of
-bitterness out of her tone, yet somehow it seemed almost impossible to
-do that.
-
-“He’s not exactly a fool. Nobody knows better than he that your Aunt
-Sanderson is more royalist than the king. And my view is that he and
-she have laid their heads together in order to work upon your scruples.”
-
-“Pray, why shouldn’t they? Isn’t it right that they should?”
-
-“There you go!” he said sternly. “Now, look here.” In the intensity of
-the moment his face was almost touching hers. “I’m next in at Bridport
-House, so this is my own private funeral. But I just want to say this.
-A man can’t go knocking about the world in the way I have done without
-getting through to certain things. And as soon as that happens one no
-longer sees Bridport House at the angle at which it sees itself. White
-marble and precedence were all very well in the days of Queen Victoria,
-but they won’t build airships, you know.”
-
-“I never heard of a duchess building airships.”
-
-“It’s the duke who is going to do the building. The particular hobo
-I’m figuring on has got to take a hand in all sorts of stunts at this
-moment of the world’s progress which will make his distinguished
-forbears turn in their graves, no doubt. It seems to me he’s got to do
-a single on the big time, as they say in vaudeville, and the finest
-girl in the western hemisphere must keep him up to his job.”
-
-“‘Some’ talk,” said Mary, with a smile rather drawn and constrained.
-
-“You see”--the force of his candor amused her considerably--“I’ve
-drawn a big prize in the lottery, and if I let myself be robbed of it
-by other people’s tomfool tricks, I’m a guy, a dead-beat, an out and
-out dud.”
-
-“But don’t you see,” she urged, laughing a little, although suffering
-bitterly, “how cruel it would be for them, poor souls? We _must_ think
-of them a little.”
-
-“Why should they come in at all?”
-
-“I really think they ought, poor dears. After all, they stand for
-something.” She recalled their former talk on this vexed subject.
-
-“What do they stand for?--that’s the point. They are an inbred lot, a
-mass of conceit and silly prejudice. I’m sorry to give them away like
-this, but, after all, they are only very distant relations to whom I
-owe nothing, and they have a trick of annoying me unspeakably.”
-
-“I won’t have you say such things.” The stern line of a truly adorable
-mouth was a delight, a challenge. “You are one of them, whether you
-want to be or whether you don’t, and it’s your duty to stand by them.
-_Noblesse oblige_, you know.”
-
-“And that means a scrupulous respect for the feelings of other people,
-if it means anything. No, let us see things as they are and come down
-to bedrock.” And as the Tenderfoot spoke after this manner, he took a
-hand of hers in each of his in a fashion at once whimsical, delicate,
-and loverlike. Somehow he had the power to put an enchantment upon her.
-“You’ve got to marry me whatever happens.”
-
-“Oh, don’t ask me to do that.” Black trouble was now in her eyes.
-“Don’t ask me to go where I’m not wanted.”
-
-“Certainly you shan’t. We can do without Bridport House, and if they
-can do without us, by all means let ’em.”
-
-“But they are in a cleft stick, aren’t they? If you insist, they will
-simply have to climb down, and that’s why it would be cruel to make
-them. Don’t be too hard upon them--_please_!” A sudden change of voice,
-rich and surprising, held him like magic. “Somehow they don’t quite
-seem to deserve it. They have their points. And they are really rather
-big and fine if you see them as I do.”
-
-“They are crass, conceited, narrow, ossified. They think the world was
-made for ’em, instead of thinking they were made for the world. It’s
-time they had a lesson. And you and I have got to teach ’em.” He took
-her wrists and drew her to him. “We’ve got to larn ’em to be toads--you
-and me.”
-
-“On these grounds you command me!” The flash of glorious eyes was a
-direct challenge.
-
-“No, on these--you darling.” And he took her in his arms and held her
-in a grip of iron.
-
-
-III
-
-“Please, please!”
-
-Reluctantly he let her go--provisionally and on sufferance.
-
-But there was something in her face that looked like fear. The
-observant lover saw it at once, and the invincible lover tried to
-dispel it.
-
-“Why take it tragically?” he said. “It’s a thing to laugh at, really.”
-
-She shook a solemn head. “We _must_ think of them--you must at any
-rate. You are all they have, and you are bound to play for them as
-well as you know how--aren’t you, my dear?” The soft fall of her voice
-laid a siren’s spell upon him. His eyes glowed as he looked at her.
-
-“No, I don’t see it in that way,” he said. “Somehow I can’t. It’s my
-colonial outlook, I daresay--anyhow there it is--simply us two. The
-bedrock of the matter is you and me? And when you get down to that,
-other people don’t come in, do they?”
-
-Again she shook a head rather woeful in its defiance. “Poor Aunt
-Harriet came to me yesterday. I wish you could have seen her. This
-means the end of the world for her. She almost went down on her knees
-to implore me not to marry you.”
-
-The Tenderfoot snorted with impatience. “That’s where this old
-one-horse island gets me all the time. Things are all wrong here.
-They’re positively medieval.”
-
-“You forget”--the tone of the voice was stern dissent--“she’s been
-thirty years a servant in the Family.”
-
-“That should make her all the prouder to see her niece married to the
-head of it.” He was determined to stand his ground.
-
-“Yes, but she understands what it means to them. She has thought
-herself into their skins; she lives and moves and has her being in
-Bridport House. Dear soul, it makes me weep to think of her! She almost
-forced me to give you up.”
-
-“You can’t do that, not on grounds of that kind.”
-
-“Why can’t I?”
-
-“Because I won’t let you.” She was bound to admire this masculine
-decision. “Your Aunt Sanderson is a woman of fine character and Uncle
-Albert has a great regard for her, but why let ourselves be sidetracked
-by prejudice? You see this is the call of the blood, and--under
-Providence!--it means the grafting of a very valuable new strain upon
-a pretty effete one. I mean no disrespect to Bridport House, but look
-what the system of intermarriage has done for it. From all one hears
-poor Lyme was better out of the world than in it. And that parcel of
-stupid women! And, of course, I should never have been here at all if
-another couple of consumptive cousins hadn’t suddenly decided to hand
-in their checks. So much for the feudal system, so much for inbreeding
-and marrying to order. No, it won’t do!”
-
-In spite of her own deep conviction, she could not hope to shake such
-force and such sincerity. She was bound to admit the strength of his
-case. But the power of his argument left her in a miserable dilemma,
-from which there seemed but one means of escape. There must be no
-half-measures.
-
-“Let us be wise and make an end now,” she said very softly.
-
-“It’s not playing fair if you do,” was the ruthless answer. “Besides,
-as I say, Uncle Albert wants to see you.”
-
-“I am quite sure it would be far better to end it all now.”
-
-“You must go and see Uncle Albert before we decide upon anything,” he
-said determinedly.
-
-“I don’t mind doing that, if really he wishes it.” There was a queer
-little note of reverence in her tone, which the Tenderfoot, having
-intelligently anticipated, was inclined to resent as soon as he heard
-it. “I don’t know why he should trouble himself with me, but I’ll go
-as he asks me to. But whatever happens we can’t possibly get married,
-unless----”
-
-“Unless what?” he demanded sternly.
-
-“Unless the head of the house gives a full and free consent, and of
-course he’ll never do that.”
-
-“It remains to be seen, doesn’t it?”
-
-“Oh, no, it’s all so clear. Poor Aunt Harriet has made me realize that.
-I never saw anyone so upset as she was yesterday; she nearly broke
-down, poor dear. She has made me see that there is so much at stake for
-them all, that it simply becomes one’s duty not to go on.”
-
-“Rubbish! Rubbish! Rubbish!” The Tenderfoot suddenly became
-tempestuous. “Mere parochialism, I assure you. I’ve been back six
-months, and every day it strikes me more and more what a lot we’ve
-got to learn. Our so-called social fabric is mainly bunkum. Half the
-prejudice in these islands is a mere cloak for damnable incompetence.
-Forgive my saying just what is in my mind, but this flunkeyism of
-ours--try to keep the daggers out of your eyes, my charmer!--fairly
-gets one all the time. In one form or another one’s always up against
-it.”
-
-“It isn’t flunkeyism at all.” The air of outrage was nothing less than
-adorable.
-
-“Let me finish----”
-
-“Under protest!” Her face was aglow with the light of battle.
-
-“It’s perfectly absurd to take a mere pompous stunt like Bridport House
-at its own valuation.”
-
-“I won’t have you vulgar--I won’t allow you to be vulgar!”
-
-“Be it so, Miss Prim--but I don’t apologize. One’s uncles, cousins,
-aunts, they are all alike, whether they are yours or mine. They
-simply grovel before material greatness--the greatness that comes of
-money--that begins and ends with money.”
-
-“Don’t be rude, sir!” The stamp of a particularly smart riding boot,
-and a flash of angry eyes were as barbs to this fiat.
-
-“They are all so set on things that don’t matter a bit, that they lose
-sight altogether of the one thing that is really important.”
-
-“Pray, what is that?” The eyes held now a lurking, troubled smile; for
-him at that moment, their fascination verged upon the tragic.
-
-Suddenly both the slender wrists were seized by this forcible thinker.
-“Why the time spirit, you charmer. And that just asks one simple
-question. Do you love me--or do you not?”
-
-
-IV
-
-She tried to keep her eyes from his.
-
-“You can’t hide the truth,” he cried triumphantly. “And if you think
-I’m going to lose you for the sake of some stupid piece of prejudice
-you don’t know what it means to live five years in God’s own country.”
-
-She seemed to shrink into herself. “Don’t you see the impossibility of
-the whole thing?” she gasped.
-
-“Frankly, I don’t, or I wouldn’t be such a cad as to badger you. If
-you marry me an effete strain is going to be your debtor. Just look
-at them--poor devils! Look at the two who died untimely. That’s the
-feudal system of marriage working to a logical conclusion. And if
-I put it squarely to my kinsman, Albert John, who is by no means a
-fool, he’d be the first to admit it. No, it doesn’t matter what your
-arguments are, if you override the call of the blood sooner or later
-there’s bound to be big trouble.”
-
-The conviction of the tone, the urgency of the manner were indeed
-hard to meet. From the only point of view that really mattered it was
-impossible to gainsay him, and she was far too intelligent to try.
-Suddenly she broke away from him and in a wretched state of indecision
-and unhappiness flung herself into a chair.
-
-“The whole thing’s as clear as daylight.” Pitilessly he followed up the
-advantage he had won. “There’s really no need to state it. And once
-more, to come down to bedrock, far better to make an end of Bridport
-House and all that it stands for--just what it does stand for I have
-not been able to make out--than that it should perpetuate a race of
-inbred incompetents who are merely a fixed charge on the community.”
-
-“Oh, you don’t see--you don’t see!” The words were rather feeble, and
-rather wild, but just then they were all she could offer. Yet in spite
-of herself, and in spite of the half-promise the intensely unhappy Aunt
-Harriet had wrung from her on the previous afternoon, the clear-cut
-determination of this young man, his force and his breadth, his
-absolute conviction were beginning to tell heavily.
-
-“You are going to Bridport House to have a word with my kinsman. And if
-you’re true blue--and I know you are that--you will make him see honest
-daylight. And it ought to be easy, because he has only to look at
-you--the finest thing up to now that has found its way on to this old
-planet, in order to realize that he’s right up against it.”
-
-He knew his own mind and she didn’t know hers. Such a man was terribly
-hard to resist.
-
-“He says any morning at twelve. I suggest tomorrow.”
-
-“You insist?” She was struggling helplessly in meshes of her own
-weaving.
-
-“I insist. And my last word is that if you let the old beast down us,
-as of course he’ll try to do, I go back to B. C. and remain a single
-man to the end of my days. And I’m not out for that, as long as there
-is half a chance of something better. So that’s that.” In the style
-of the great lover he laid a hand on each shoulder, looked into the
-troubled eyes and kissed her. “And now, if you please, we will witch
-the world with noble horsemanship.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-A BUSY MORNING
-
-
-I
-
-THE next morning was a busy one for his Grace, and it also marked a
-tide in the affairs of Bridport House. Soon after ten the ball opened
-with the inauspicious arrival of Lady Wargrave. The head of the Family
-had just unfolded his newspaper and put on his spectacles when her
-ladyship was announced.
-
-As the redoubtable Charlotte entered the room, the hard glitter of her
-eyes and the forward thrust of a dominant chin were ominous indeed.
-Bitter experience made her brother only too keenly alive to these
-portents.
-
-Without any beating about the bush she came at once to the point.
-
-“What’s this I hear, Johnnie? Sarah tells me you have revoked that
-woman’s notice.”
-
-“Woman!” temporized his Grace. “What woman?” The tone was velvet.
-
-She glowered at him.
-
-“There’s only one woman in this household, my friend.”
-
-The Duke laid down his _Times_ with an air of extremely well assumed
-indifference. Were the parish pump and the minor domesticities all she
-could find to interest her, while all sorts of Radical infamies played
-Old Harry with the British Constitution?
-
-Lady Wargrave, however, was well inured to this familiar gambit.
-
-“Come, Johnnie,” she said tartly, “don’t waste time. The matter’s too
-serious. Sarah says you have asked Mrs. Sanderson to stay on.”
-
-“Yes, I have asked her to be good enough to reconsider her decision,”
-said his Grace in the slightly forensic manner of the gilded chamber.
-
-“On what grounds, may one ask?”
-
-“I merely put it to her”--he now began to choose each word with a
-precision that made his sister writhe--“that she was indispensable to
-the general comfort and well-being of a man as old and gout-ridden as
-myself.”
-
-“Did you, indeed!”
-
-It was a facer. And yet it might have been foreseen. Perhaps the
-ladies had been a little too elated by their _coup de main_; or, had
-they assumed too confidently that at last they had made an end of a
-shameless intriguer?
-
-Yes, a facer. Charlotte could have slain her brother. He had given away
-the whole position. It was the act of a traitor. In a voice shaken with
-anger she proceeded in no measured terms to tell him what she thought
-of him.
-
-His Grace bore the tirade calmly and with fortitude. He had an instinct
-for justice--long a source of inconvenience to its possessor!--which
-now insisted that there was something to be said for the enemy point of
-view. Still he might not have borne its presentment so patiently had
-Charlotte not shown her usual cunning. “She did not speak for herself,”
-she was careful to assure him, “but for the sake of the Family as a
-whole.” The presence of this woman at Bridport House could no longer be
-tolerated.
-
-To this the Duke said little, but he committed himself to the statement
-that Mrs. Sanderson was much maligned and that they all owed a great
-deal to her devotion.
-
-This was too much for Charlotte. She bubbled over. “You must be mad!”
-Her voice was like the croak of a raven.
-
-“Personally,” rejoined his mellifluous Grace, “I am particularly
-grateful that she has consented to stay on.”
-
-“You’re mad, my friend.”
-
-“So are we all.” His Grace folded the _Times_ imperturbably.
-
-Lady Wargrave was defeated. She abruptly decided to drop the subject.
-However, she did not quit the room until one last bolt had been winged
-at her adversary, yet in order to propel it she had to impose an iron
-restraint on her feelings.
-
-“Before I go”--she turned as she got to the door--“there’s something
-else I should like to say. Jack’s mother is in town and is staying with
-me. Like all the Parington’s she has plenty of sense. She will welcome
-the Marjorie arrangement--thinks it quite providential--has told her
-son so--and she looks to you as the head of the Family to see that it
-doesn’t miscarry.”
-
-Her brother’s ugly mouth and explosive eyes were not lost upon
-Charlotte, but before he could reply she had made a strategic
-retirement. Did these futile women expect him to play the matrimonial
-agent? The mere suggestion was infuriating, yet well he knew the
-extreme urgency of the matter. The whole situation called for great
-delicacy. A combination of subtle finesse and iron will was needed if
-the institution to which he pinned his faith was not to be shaken to
-its foundations.
-
-
-II
-
-Lady Wargrave had gone but a few minutes when Jack arrived at Bridport
-House. He had to inform his kinsman that Mary Lawrence would appear at
-twelve o’clock.
-
-The Duke was in a vile temper. Charlotte had fretted it already;
-moreover, the disease from which he suffered had undermined it long
-ago; and at the best of times the mere sight of this young Colonial,
-with his wild ideas, was about as much as he could bear. However, he
-was too astute a man and far too well found in the ways of his world
-not to be able to mask his feelings on an occasion of this magnitude.
-The fellow was a perpetual source of worry and annoyance, yet so much
-was at stake that the Duke, in order to deal with him, summoned all the
-bonhomie of a prospective father-in-law. If anything could have bridged
-the gulf such tones of honey must surely have done so.
-
-Jack, however, was in no mood to accept soft speeches, no matter how
-flattering to the self-esteem of a raw Colonial! He was determined to
-put all to the touch. These people must learn the limit of their power.
-And as it was the Tenderfoot’s habit to leave nothing to chance he
-began with the bold but simple declaration that nothing would induce
-him to give up the finest girl in the country. And he hoped when Mary
-appeared at twelve o’clock his kinsman would bear in mind that very
-important fact.
-
-Months ago his Grace had begun to despair of the rôle of the modern
-Chesterfield. Even since the young ass had first reported himself at
-Bridport House, very sound advice, based on intimate knowledge and
-first-hand experience, had been lavished upon him. The best had been
-done to correct the republican ideas he had gathered in the western
-hemisphere. He lacked nothing in the way of counsel and precept. But
-the seed had fallen on unreceptive soil, nay, on ground singularly
-barren. From the first the novice had shown precious little inclination
-to heed the fount of wisdom.
-
-The Duke asked the young man to look at the matter in a common sense
-way. He would have an extraordinarily difficult place to fill;
-therefore, it was his clear duty to trust those who knew the ropes. The
-lady of his choice was a case for experts. Special qualities, inherited
-aptitudes were needed in the wife he married! Surely he must realize
-that?
-
-The Tenderfoot said bluntly that he did and that Mary Lawrence had them.
-
-His Grace managed to hold a growing impatience in check. But the answer
-of the novice had revealed such a confusion of ideas that it was hard
-to treat it seriously.
-
-“Unless a woman has been born to the thing and bred up in it, how can
-she hope to be equal to the task?”
-
-“Plenty of ’em are,” said the Tenderfoot. “Anyhow they seem to make a
-pretty good bluff at it.”
-
-His Grace shook a somber head.
-
-“You can’t deny that the Upper Crust is always being recruited from the
-people underneath.”
-
-“Immensely to the detriment of the Constitution,” said his Grace
-forensically.
-
-“It won’t be so in this case,” said the Tenderfoot. “Any family is
-devilish lucky that persuades Mary Lawrence to enter it. She’s a very
-exceptional girl. And when you see her, sir, I’m sure you’ll say so.”
-
-“A young woman of ability, no doubt.” The Duke was growing irritated
-beyond measure, yet he was determined to give no hint of his frame of
-mind. “These--these bohemians always are. But if you’ll allow me to say
-so, the mere fact that she is ready to undertake responsibilities of
-which she can know nothing proves the nature of her limitations.”
-
-The hit was so palpable that Jack felt bound to counter it as well as
-he could. But his eagerness to do so led him into a tragic blunder.
-“That’s where you do her an injustice,” he said, not giving himself
-time to weigh his words. “She didn’t know that she might have to be a
-duchess when she promised to marry me.”
-
-The folly of such a speech was apparent to the young man almost before
-it was uttered. A sudden heightening of a concentrated gaze made him
-curse his own damnable impetuosity. He saw at once that the admission
-would be used against him; moreover, an intense desire that Mary should
-have fair play led him into further pitfalls. “The odd thing is,” he
-said in his blunderer’s way, “that she happens to see things here at
-the angle at which you see them, sir. At least, I always tell her so.”
-
-His kinsman smiled. “That gives us hope at any rate.” And he even
-showed a glint of cheerfulness.
-
-The Tenderfoot had a desire to bite off his tongue. He felt himself
-floundering deeper and deeper into a morass. A sickening sensation
-crept upon him that he had put himself at the mercy of this crafty old
-Jesuit.
-
-“Now, sir, don’t go taking an unfair advantage of anything I may
-have told you.” The sheer impotence of such a speech served only to
-emphasize his tragic folly.
-
-By now there was a sinister light in the eyes of his Grace. The unlucky
-Tenderfoot could hardly stifle a groan of vexation. Only a born idiot
-would have taken pains to put such a weapon in the hands of the enemy!
-
-Overcome by a sudden hopeless anger the young man rose from his chair
-and fled the room. His course was not stayed until he had passed
-headlong down the white marble staircase and out of doors into a golden
-morning of July. For the next two hours he ranged the Park grass. It
-was the only means he had of working off an irritation and self-disgust
-that were almost unbearable.
-
-
-III
-
-Youth and inexperience might have put a weapon into the hand of his
-Grace, yet when the clock on the chimneypiece struck twelve he was in
-a very evil mood. The task before him was not at all to his taste; and
-the more he considered it the less he liked the part he had now to play.
-
-From various sources he had heard enough of the girl to stimulate his
-curiosity. Apart from a lover’s hyperbole, of which he took no account
-whatever, impartial observers, viewing her from afar, had commented
-upon her; moreover, there was the extremely piquant nature of her
-antecedents. She was a niece of the faithful Sanderson, she was also
-the daughter of a police constable.
-
-The Duke was apt to plume himself that his instinct for diplomacy
-amounted to second nature. But, he ruefully reflected, his powers in
-this direction were likely to be tested to the full. His task seemed
-to bristle with difficulties. Bridport House was no place for a young
-woman of this kind, but it was not going to be an easy matter to tell
-her that in just so many words. The best he had to hope for was that
-she would prove a person of common sense.
-
-When at five minutes past the hour Miss Lawrence was announced, for one
-reason or another, the Duke was in a state of inconvenient curiosity.
-And as if the mere circumstances of the case did not themselves
-suffice, a chain of odd and queer reflections chose to assail his mind
-at the very moment of her appearance.
-
-It was terribly inconvenient for his Grace to rise from his chair,
-mainly for the reason that one swollen, snowbooted foot reclined
-at ease on another. But with an effort that wrung him with pain he
-contrived to stand up.
-
-“Please don’t move,” said a voice deep, clear, and musical, while he
-was still in the act of rising. “Oh, don’t--please!”
-
-But without making any immediate reply the Duke poised himself as well
-as he could on one foot, more or less in the manner of an emu, and
-bowed rather grimly. The dignity of the whole proceeding was perhaps
-slightly over-emphasized, it was almost as if he intended to overawe
-his visitor with the note of the grand seigneur.
-
-Whether this was the case or not the bow was returned; and slight as it
-was, it had a dignity that matched his own. Also it was touched ever
-so gently with humor. A pair of gravely-searching eyes met the hooded,
-serious, half-ironical orbs of his Grace.
-
-“Nice of you to come and see an invalid,” he said slowly, very slowly,
-with a good deal of manner.
-
-“A great pleasure,” she smiled from the topmost inch of her remarkable
-height.
-
-While these brief, and on his part decidedly painful maneuvers had
-been going on, the man of the world had been busily seeking something
-of which so far he had not been able to find a trace. In manner and
-bearing there was not a flaw.
-
-Already the expert’s eye had been struck by a look of distinction
-that was extraordinary. She was undoubtedly handsome, nay, more than
-handsome; she had the subtle look of race which gives to beauty a
-_cachet_, a quality of permanence. Her height was beyond the common,
-but every line of the long, slim frame was a thing of elegance, of
-molded delicacy. She was perhaps a shade too thin, but it gave her an
-indefinable style which charmed, in spite of himself, this shrewd,
-instructed observer. Then her dress and her hat, her neat gloves and
-boots, although they were models of reticence, were all touched by a
-subtle air of fashion which seemed somehow to reflect their wearer.
-
-The “Chorus Girl” was in the nature of a surprise. The Duke indicated
-a chair, on the edge of which she perched, straight as a willow, her
-chin held steadily, her amused eyes veiled with a becoming gravity.
-As the Duke painfully reseated himself he felt a cool scrutiny upon
-him. And that very quality of coolness was a little provocative. In
-the circumstances of the case it had hardly a right to be there.
-To himself it was most proper, but in this young woman, a police
-constable’s daughter, who earned her living in the theater, a little
-embarrassment of some kind would have been an added grace. If anything
-however she had more composure than he; and in spite of the charm and
-the power of a personality that was vivid yet clear-cut, he could not
-help resenting the fact just a little.
-
-When at last he had slowly resettled himself on his two chairs he
-turned eyes of ironical power full upon her. Yes, she was amazingly
-handsome, and she reminded him strangely of a face he had seen. “I
-wonder if you know why I have asked you to be so kind as to come here,”
-were the first words he spoke. And he seemed to weigh each one very
-carefully before he uttered it.
-
-“I think I do, at least I think I may guess.” The note of absolute
-frankness was so much more than he had a right to look for that it
-pleased him more than it need have done.
-
-“Well?” he said, with a gentleness in his voice of which he was not
-aware.
-
-“I’m afraid I’ve been causing a lot of trouble.” The tone of regret
-was so perfectly sincere that it threw him off his guard. He had not
-expected this, nay, he had looked for something totally different. The
-girl was a lady, no matter what her private circumstances might be, and
-with a sudden deep annoyance he felt that it was going to be supremely
-difficult to say in just so many words what he had to say.
-
-To his relief, however, she seemed with the _flair_ of her sex at once
-to divine his difficulty. This splendid-looking old man, every inch
-of whom was grand seigneur, poor old snowboot included! was already
-asking mutely for her help in a situation that she knew he must
-dislike intensely. In his odd silence, in the defensive arrogance of
-his manner there was appeal to her own fineness. She could not help
-feeling an instinctive sympathy with this old grandee, who at the very
-outset was finding himself unequal to the task imposed upon him by the
-circumstances of the case.
-
-They entered on a long pause, and it was left to her to break it.
-
-“I didn’t know when I promised to marry Jack that he would be the next
-Duke of Bridport,” she said very slowly at last.
-
-The simple speech was intended to help him, a fact of which he was well
-aware. And with a sense of acute annoyance he felt a latent chivalry
-begin to stir him; it was a chord that she, of all people, had no right
-to touch.
-
-“Didn’t you?” he said; and in the grip of this new emotion it would
-have been not unpleasant to add “My dear.”
-
-“Of course I’m much to blame,” she went on, encouraged by his tone. “I
-realize that one ought to have made inquiries.”
-
-He was clearly puzzled. From under heavily knitted brows his keen eyes
-peered at her. “But why?” An instinct for fair play framed the question
-on her behalf.
-
-A note of pain entered the charming voice. “Oh, one ought,” she said.
-“It was one’s duty to know who and what he was and all about him.”
-
-“Forgive me if I don’t altogether agree.” In spite of himself he was
-being conquered by this largeness and magnanimity. So fully was he
-prepared for something else that he was now rather at a loss. “In any
-case,” he said, “the fault hardly seems to be yours.”
-
-“It is kind of you to say that.” A pair of wide eyes, long-lashed and
-luminous, which seemed oddly familiar, raked him with a wonderful
-candor. “But I seem to be giving enormous trouble to others--trouble it
-would have been easy to spare them.”
-
-Again his Grace dissented. Surprise was growing, along with that other,
-that even more inconvenient emotion which was now driving him hard.
-
-“Don’t overlook your own side of the case,” he was constrained to say.
-
-“Oh, yes, there’s that--but one doesn’t like to insist on it.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“The other is so much more important.”
-
-She felt his deep eyes searching hers, but except a little veiled
-amusement, they had nothing to conceal.
-
-“I am by no means sure that it is.” To his own clear annoyance, the
-fatal instinct for justice began to take a hand in his overthrow. “As
-the matter has been represented to me there is no doubt, if you took it
-to a court of law, that you would get substantial damages.”
-
-“As if one could!” She suddenly crimsoned.
-
-“If I have hurt you in any way, I beg your pardon,” he said at once
-with a simple humility for which she honored him. “After all, if you
-decide not to marry my relation you give up a position which most
-people allow to be exceptional.”
-
-“Yes--but if one has never aspired to it!”
-
-He grew more puzzled.
-
-“Can you afford to be so fastidious?--if you don’t think the question
-impertinent?”
-
-“I have my living to earn,” she said very simply, “but of course I
-don’t want that to enter into the case.”
-
-“Naturally. Of course. Let me put another question--if it is not
-impertinent?” The eyes of the Duke had now a grave amusement, but they
-had also something else. “I suppose you care a good deal for this young
-man?”
-
-She simply stared at him in a kind of bewilderment.
-
-Such an answer, unexpectedly swift, nobly complete, seemed to
-disconcert him a little.
-
-“And--and without a word you give him up for the sake of other people?”
-
-“Yes--if they insist upon it.”
-
-“If they insist upon it!” He shook his head at her in rather uneasy
-surprise.
-
-“I have told Jack that I cannot marry him unless he has your full
-consent.”
-
-Again the wide gray eyes looked out fearlessly upon the rather
-bewildered gentleman. They could hardly refrain from a smile at his
-growing perplexity. But there was something other than perplexity
-in his tone when at last he said, “You know of course that I cannot
-possibly give it.”
-
-“Of course not.”
-
-[Illustration: “You give up your young man--simply because of that?”]
-
-The unhesitating reply seemed to increase his surprise. This girl was
-taking him into deeper places than he had ever been in before. He
-shook his head at her in a whimsical fashion which she thought quite
-charming. “It hardly does, you know, to be too bright and good for
-human nature’s daily food,” he said with a softness in his deep voice,
-which was enchanting.
-
-“Oh, I’m very far from being that.” She smiled and shook her head. “I
-won’t own that I’m as bad as all that--at least I hope I’m not.”
-
-“But if you insist on being so uncommonly self-sacrificing, you’re in
-danger, aren’t you?”
-
-“One can’t call it self-sacrifice altogether.”
-
-“Afraid of being bored, eh?”
-
-“I could never be bored with Jack,” she said gravely. “But I don’t see
-why one should pat oneself on the back for trying to live up to one’s
-principles.”
-
-“Principles! May I ask what principles are involved in a case of this
-kind?”
-
-“‘Do unto others as you would be done by.’ It’s rather priggish, I
-admit, but it’s a splendid motto, if only one is equal to it. As a rule
-it is much too much for me, but in this case I want to do my best to
-live up to it.”
-
-“There you go again.” The old man shook an amused finger at her. “Why
-it’s altruism, there’s no other word for it.”
-
-“It’s common sense--if one is able to think through to it.”
-
-“And that is why,” he said, with almost the air of a father, “you give
-up your young man--simply because of that?”
-
-She nodded. But her smile was rather drawn.
-
-“Tell me, Miss Lawrence”--the curiosity of his Grace was mounting to a
-pitch that enabled him to match her frankness with his own--“why are
-you so sure that you will be unacceptable here?”
-
-“It stands to reason, I’m afraid. If I lived at Bridport House and the
-future head of the Family married the housekeeper’s niece, I should be
-bound to look on it as a perfectly hopeless arrangement.”
-
-He honored this candor. Choosing his words with great delicacy, he
-could but pay homage to such clear-sighted honesty. “I only hope you
-will not blame us too much,” he said finally, with an odd change of
-voice.
-
-“I don’t blame you at all. You are as you are. If I lived here I am
-sure those would be my feelings.”
-
-The old man was touched by this generosity. Lest he should overrate it,
-however, she added quickly with a flash of pride, “Besides, I should
-simply hate to go where I was not wanted.”
-
-Patrician to the bone, he admired that, too. Every inch of her rang
-true. Somehow it had become terribly difficult to treat her in the
-only way the circumstances permitted. But no matter what his private
-feelings, he must hold them in check.
-
-“Well, I think, Miss Lawrence,” he said, with a return to the dryness
-of the man of the world, “you ought to congratulate yourself that you
-don’t live here.” But suddenly his voice trailed off. “You would not
-be half so fine as you are”--after all, he couldn’t conceal that a
-deeply-stirred old man was speaking--“had you been born and bred in a
-hot-house.”
-
-She flushed at the unexpected words. Quite suddenly her eyes brimmed
-with tears.
-
-“If I have said anything that wounds I humbly apologize,” he said, with
-a gentleness that to her was adorable.
-
-“Oh, no! It is only that I had not expected to have such a compliment
-paid me.”
-
-“Well, it’s a sincere one.” As he looked at her strange thoughts came
-into his mind; his voice began to shake in a queer way. “And it is
-paid you by an old man who is not very wise and not very happy.” As
-he continued to look at her his voice underwent further surprising
-changes. “I wish we could have had you with us. There is not one of us
-here fit to tie your shoe-lace, my dear.”
-
-Such a speech gave pain rather than pleasure. She saw him a feudal
-chieftain, the head of a sacred order. Was it quite fit and proper that
-he should speak in that way to the humblest of his vassals? She would
-never be able to forget his words, but in that room, with the spirit of
-place enfolding her like some exquisite garment, she could almost have
-wished that they had not been uttered.
-
-Suddenly she rose to go. As he regarded her in all the salient
-perfection of mind and mansion, it seemed too bitterly ironical that
-he should bar the door against her. Why were they not on their knees
-thanking heaven for such a creature!
-
-“You must forgive us, even if Fate is not likely to,” he said, thinking
-aloud.
-
-“Please don’t let us look at it in that way,” was the quick rejoinder.
-“We all have our places in the world. And, after all, one ought to
-remember that it is very much easier to be Mary Lawrence than to be
-Duchess of Bridport.”
-
-The old man shook his head dolefully, and then, in spite of her earnest
-prayer that he should stay as he was, he rose with a great effort to
-say good-by. The deeply-lined face was a complex of many emotions as
-he did so.
-
-In the very act of taking leave, her eyes, magnetized by the room
-itself, strayed round it almost wistfully. Somehow it meant so much
-that they hardly knew how to tear themselves away. Involuntarily the
-Duke’s eyes followed hers to a masterpiece among masterpieces on
-the farther wall. He could trace all that was in her mind, and the
-knowledge seemed to increase his pain and his perplexity.
-
-“There’s something wonderful in this room,” she said, half to herself.
-“Something one can’t put into words. It’s like nothing else. I suppose
-it’s a kind of harmony.”
-
-The Duke didn’t speak, but slowly brought back his eyes to look at her.
-His favorite room held treasures of many kinds, yet as he well knew
-he was wantonly casting away a gem rarer than any in his collection.
-His eyes were upon a noble profile instinct with the dignity of an old
-race. Here was artistry surer, even more exquisite than Corot’s. He
-could not repress a sigh of vexation.
-
-Unwilling to part with her, he still detained her even when she had
-turned to go. “One moment, Miss Lawrence,” he said. “Do these things
-speak to you?” Near his elbow was a wonderful cabinet of Chinese
-lacquer which housed a collection of old French snuffboxes. He opened
-it for her inspection, and with a little air of connoisseurship she
-gazed at the rarities within.
-
-“They _are_ lovely,” she said eagerly.
-
-“Honor me by choosing one as a token of my gratitude.”
-
-She hesitated to take him at his word, but he was so much in earnest
-that it would have seemed unkind to refuse.
-
-“May I choose any one of them?”
-
-“Please. And I hope you will do me the honor of choosing the best.”
-
-Put on her mettle she brought instinct rather than knowledge to bear on
-a fine collection, and chose a charming Louis Quinze.
-
-“You have a _flair_,” said the Duke, laughing. “That is the one. I am
-so glad you found it. I should not like you to have less than the best.
-Good-by!” Again he took her hand and his voice had a father’s affection
-in it. Then he pressed the bell, opened the door, and ushered her into
-the care of a servant with an air of solicitude which she felt to be
-quite extraordinary. As he did so he apologized with a humility that
-seemed almost excessive for his inability to accompany her downstairs.
-
-
-IV
-
-As soon as the girl had gone, the Duke returned painfully to his
-chair. He was now the prey of very odd sensations, and they began to
-crystallize at once into emotion as deep as any he had ever felt.
-Something had happened at this interview which left him now with a
-feeling of numb surprise. The entrance of this girl into that room had
-brought something into his life, her going away had taken something
-out of it. Almost in the act of meeting a subtle bond had seemed to
-arise between them. It was as if each had a sixth sense in regard to
-the other. Their minds had marched so perfectly together that it was
-hard to realize that this was the first time they had met. This rare
-creature had touched cords which had long been forgotten, even had
-they been known to exist, in the slightly dehumanized thing he called
-himself.
-
-Shaken as he had never been in his life, his mind was held by the
-thought of her long after she had gone. Mystified, disconcerted,
-rather forlorn, a harrowing idea was beginning to torment him. At
-last he could bear it no longer. Rising from his chair with a stifled
-impatience, he made his way out of the room leaning heavily upon his
-stick. He went along the corridor as far as the head of the central
-staircase. Here he stood a long while in contemplation of a large,
-rather florid picture by Lawrence. The subject was a young woman of
-distinguished beauty, a portrait of his famous grandmother, the wife
-of Bridport’s second duke. Apart from her appearance, which had been
-greatly celebrated, she had had a reputation for wit and charm; her
-memoirs of the ’Thirties had long taken rank as a classic; and no
-annals of the time were complete without the mention of her name.
-
-The prey of some very unhappy thoughts, the Duke stood long immersed in
-the picture before him. The resemblance he sought to trace had grown so
-plain that it provoked a shiver. The line of the cheek, the shape of
-the eyes, the curve of the chin, the poise of the head on the long and
-slender throat were identical with the living replica he had just seen.
-
-At last he returned to his room and rang the bell. To the servant who
-answered it, he said: “Ask Mrs. Sanderson to come to me.”
-
-The summons was promptly obeyed. But as Harriet came into the room she
-bore a small tray containing a wine-glass, a teaspoon, and a bottle of
-medicine. At the sight of these the Duke made a grimace like a petulant
-child.
-
-“I am sure the new medicine does you a great deal of good.” The tone
-was quite maternal in its tenderness.
-
-“You think so?” The words were dubious; all the same her voice and look
-seemed to have an odd power of reassurance.
-
-“Oh, yes, I think there can be no doubt of it.” She measured the dose
-gravely.
-
-“Well, I take your word, I take your word.” And he drank the bitter
-draught.
-
-She put back the glass on the tray, but as she was about to leave the
-room she was abruptly detained. “Don’t go,” he said. “Sit and let us
-talk a little.”
-
-She sat down.
-
-“Did you know,” he said, and the unexpectedness of the words threw her
-off her guard, “that I have just had a visit from--from your niece?”
-
-“Mary!” She clutched her dress. “Mary--here!” A sudden tide of crimson
-flowed in the startled face. But the next instant it had grown white.
-“No, I didn’t know,” she said. And then, her soul in her eyes, she
-waited for his next words.
-
-There was one stifling moment of silence, then he said: “Of course you
-know what is in my mind?”
-
-She nodded, not trusting herself to speak.
-
-While he searched his memory silence came again, and now it had the
-power to hurt them both. “Haven’t you always led me to believe,” he
-said in a voice of curious intensity, “that she was a nurse in a
-hospital?”
-
-Harriet did not reply at once. But at last she said, “Yes, I have
-always wanted you to think so.”
-
-He looked at her white face, and suddenly checked the words that rose
-to his tongue. Whatever those may have been, there was an immense
-solicitude in his manner when he spoke again. “It is not for me,” he
-said, “to question anything you may have said, or anything you may have
-done.”
-
-“I did everything I could to carry out your wishes.” Her voice trembled
-painfully. “And I--I----”
-
-“And you didn’t like to tell me,” he said gently.
-
-“Yes. I couldn’t bear to tell you that she had insisted on choosing the
-life of all others you would have the least desired for her.”
-
-“Don’t think that I complain,” he said. “I know you must have had a
-good reason. You have always been very considerate. But it looks as if
-the stars in their courses have managed to play a scurvy trick.”
-
-“That they have!” Once more the swift color flowed over a fine face.
-
-Suddenly she pressed her fingers to her eyelids to repress the quick
-tears.
-
-“Never mind,” he said. “The gods have been a little too much for us,
-but things might have been worse.”
-
-Tearfully she agreed.
-
-“The other day when I talked with that excellent fellow, your
-brother-in-law, it didn’t occur to me who this girl really was. I don’t
-think I was ever told that she had been adopted by your family.”
-
-“No,” said Harriet, very simply.
-
-“Do your friends know the truth of the matter?”
-
-“I don’t think they have a suspicion--not of the real truth,” she said
-slowly.
-
-“Has anyone?”
-
-“Not a soul that I know of.”
-
-“The girl herself, is she also in ignorance?”
-
-“She knows, I believe, that she is only the adopted child of my sister
-and her husband, but I don’t think she has gone at all deeply into the
-matter.”
-
-“Tell me this”--the mere effort of speech seemed to cost him infinite
-pain--“do you think there is a means open to anyone of learning the
-truth at this time of day?”
-
-“My brother-in-law knew from the first that the child was mine, but I
-feel sure the real truth can never come out now.”
-
-Impassive as he was, a shade of evident relief came into his face.
-But the look of strain in his eyes deepened to actual pain as he
-said, “No doubt we ought to be glad that it is so. At the same time,
-I think you’ll agree, that we have a duty to face which may prove
-extraordinarily difficult.”
-
-Harriet did not speak, but suddenly she bent her head in a quivering
-assent.
-
-“You see,” he said slowly, “we can no longer burke the fact that
-something is due to the girl herself.”
-
-Harriet’s eyes suddenly filled with an intensity of suffering he could
-not bear to look at.
-
-“You know the position, of course?” he said gently, after a pause.
-
-“I know she has promised to marry Mr. Dinneford.”
-
-“But only if I give my consent.”
-
-“I am sure that is right.” A note of relief came into her tone. “She
-has done exactly as one could have wished.”
-
-“If one could only see the thing as clearly as you do!” he said with a
-reluctant shake of the head. “At any rate let us try to be as just as
-the circumstances will allow us to be.”
-
-“Can we hope to do justice and not hurt other people?”
-
-“I’m afraid that’s impossible, as things are. But for a moment let us
-try to consider the whole matter from her point of view. Perhaps you’ll
-allow me to say at once that the course you insisted on taking seems
-to have justified itself completely. She is a girl to be proud of; and
-she appears to be living a happy and useful life. One sees now how wise
-it was not to take half-measures. She has been allowed to fight her
-own battle with the gifts of the good God, and the result does your
-foresight the highest credit.”
-
-The judicial words, very simply uttered, brought a flood of color to
-the pale cheeks. But listening with bent head, she did not look up, nor
-did she say a word in reply.
-
-“The heroic method has proved to be the right one, but I think now
-we have to be careful not to take any unfair advantage of that fact.
-It’s a terribly difficult case, but as far as we can we ought not to
-overlook what is due to the girl herself.”
-
-“But the others!” said Harriet with fear in her eyes.
-
-“Yes, a terribly difficult situation.” The Duke sighed. “But for the
-moment let us try to see the matter simply as it affects her. She has
-been made to suffer a grievous injustice so that others might benefit.
-The question is, must she still be made to sacrifice herself?”
-
-Harriet had no answer to give. The long silence which followed was
-almost unendurable in its intensity.
-
-“Well?” he said at last, as he looked at her white face.
-
-She shook her head mutely, unable to speak, unable to meet his eyes.
-Tears crept again along her eyelids.
-
-“You wish me to decide?”
-
-“Yes,” she said at last.
-
-He looked at her now with the light of pity in his face. Not at
-once did he speak, and when he did it was with a clear, a too-clear
-perception of the impotence of his words.
-
-“The truth is,” he said, “the problem is beyond me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-AN INTERLUDE
-
-
-I
-
-As Mary made her way from Bridport House across the Park, in the
-direction of Broad Place and luncheon, it came suddenly upon her
-that she was in a state of the most abject misery she had ever been
-in. It was a gorgeous midday of July, but the world had ceased to be
-habitable. She had come up against a blank wall. At that moment there
-was nothing in life to make it worth while.
-
-In the ordeal she had just passed through a fierce pride had forbade
-her to show one glimpse of her real feelings. She had carried off the
-whole scene with almost an air of comedy, for she was determined that
-“those people” should not realize what wounds it was in their power to
-deal. But Dame Nature, now that she had the high-mettled creature to
-herself, was having something to say to her on the matter. A price was
-being exacted for these heroics and for this stoicism.
-
-The Duke had left an impression of fine chivalry on a perceptive mind,
-but in spite of that, now they were no longer face to face, her deepest
-feeling was an angry resentment. Life was not playing fair. In the
-course of a strenuous three and twenty years she had rubbed shoulders
-with all sorts of men and women, but in spite of an honest catholicity
-of outlook, she had come to the conclusion already that there was only
-one kind for which she had any real use. It was not a question of
-loaves and fishes, or a puerile snobbishness; it was simply that one
-of the deepest instincts she had, the sense of the artist, demanded a
-setting.
-
-Walking along, blind to everything but the misery of this reaction,
-she was suddenly brought up short, thrown as it were against the
-world in its concrete reality, by the knowledge that a pair of eyes
-was devouring her. Cutting across her path at an acute angle as he
-converged upon her from the direction of Kensington Gardens was a man
-wholly absorbed in the occupation of looking at her. With a start she
-awoke to the force of his gaze; her subconscious perception of it was
-so strong that it even aroused a tacit hostility.
-
-Who was this large, lean, top-hatted creature striding towards her in a
-pair of aggressively checked trousers? Where had she seen that freckled
-face, those bold eyes, those prognathous jaws? As he came on he caught
-her gaze and fixed it; but she dropped her eyes at once, adroitly
-giving him only the line of her cheek to look at. Whoever he was, he
-was not a gentleman!
-
-In the next moment, however, she had begun to realize that he was
-outside and beyond any trite symbol of that kind. He was less a man
-than a natural force; moreover, as soon as he had passed her, he
-stopped abruptly and turned round to follow her with his eyes. She did
-not need to turn round herself to verify her sense of the act, even had
-personal dignity not intervened to prevent her.
-
-She felt annoyed. Again she asked herself who he could be. When and
-where had she seen him? And then a light broke. It may have been the
-checked trousers, it may have been the prognathous jaws, but her mind
-was suddenly flung back upon that recent visit to Beaconsfield Villas,
-and a certain unforgettable scene. This slightly fantastic figure was
-no less a person than Lady Muriel’s fiancé, the new Home Secretary.
-
-
-II
-
-Crossing to Broad Place she could not check a laugh. Wounded, angry,
-humiliated by the pressure of a recent event, there still lurked in her
-a true appreciation of the human comedy. What a pill for Bridport House
-to have to swallow! It was poetic justice that the pride which strained
-at a gnat so harmless as herself should have to gulp a real live camel
-in the person of the Right Honorable Gentleman.
-
-But the laugh, after all, was hollow. Tears of vexation leaped to her
-eyes. And they owed more to the perception of her own inadequacy in
-this smarting hour than to the act of Fate. “Wretch that I am!” She was
-ready to chasten herself with scorpions as she crossed the familiar
-path into Albert Gate.
-
-Within a very few yards were the loyal, warm-hearted friends of her
-own orbit. And there, alas! was the rub. Her own orbit could not
-satisfy her now. She craved something that all their kindness, their
-cheerfulness, their frank affection could not give. “Just common or
-garden snobbishness, my dear, that’s the nature of your complaint,”
-whispered a monitor within. “You are no better than anyone else when
-you are invited to call on a duke in Mount Street.”
-
-That might be true, or it might not, but sore and rebellious as she
-was, she was strongly inclined to dispute the verdict. After all, her
-feeling went infinitely deeper. It was futile, however, to analyze it
-now. This was not the place nor was there present opportunity. She
-glanced at the watch on her wrist. It was one o’clock.
-
-The watch on her wrist was as hostile as everything else in her
-little world just now. Even one o’clock had a sharp sting of its own.
-“Don’t be late for lunch,” had been Milly’s parting words. “Charley
-Cheesewright is coming. And he’s dying to meet you.”
-
-She managed to navigate the vortex of Knightsbridge without knowing
-that she did so; and then, all at once, she realized that she was
-within twenty yards of Victoria Mansions, and that a rather overdressed
-young man was a few yards ahead.
-
-With a feeling akin to nausea she pulled up in time to watch this
-short, squat figure disappear within the precincts of Number Five. For
-a reason she couldn’t explain she was quite sure that this was none
-other than Mr. Charles Cheesewright. She didn’t know him; if a back
-view meant anything she had no wish to know him; certainly she had no
-desire to make his acquaintance going up in the lift.
-
-She hung back a discreet three minutes on the pavement of Broad Place
-before daring to enter the vestibule of Number Five, Victoria Mansions.
-By then the coast was clear; Mr. Charles Cheesewright, apparently, had
-gone up in the Otis elevator. And she stood on the mat, drawn and
-tense, a figure of tragedy, waiting for the Otis elevator to come down
-again.
-
-
-III
-
-At last the Otis elevator came down and she went up in it. And then
-confronted by the door of the flat, she peered through the glass panel
-to make sure that Mr. Charles Cheesewright was not standing the other
-side of it; then she opened it with a furtive key, slipped in, and
-stole past the half-open door of the tiny drawing-room through which
-came the penetrating accents of Mrs. Wren attuned to the reception of
-“company.”
-
-Once in her own room her first act was to look in the glass with a
-lurking sense of horror; the second was to decide, which she instantly
-did, that it would be quite impossible to meet Mr. Cheesewright, and
-that she didn’t need any luncheon.
-
-By the time she had taken off her hat and made herself a little more
-presentable, both these decisions had grown immutable. She could not
-meet Mr. Cheesewright, she did _not_ want any luncheon. All she needed
-was complete solitude, and perhaps a cigarette. But all too soon was
-she ravished of even these modest requirements. Milly burst suddenly
-into the room.
-
-“Twenty past one!” she cried reproachfully. “I didn’t hear you come in.
-We are waiting for you.”
-
-Mary saw that her plan must be given up. If she really meant to forgo a
-meal and the honor of Mr. Cheesewright’s acquaintance there would have
-to be a satisfactory explanation. But what explanation could she make?
-Certainly none that would conceal the truth. And at that moment she
-wished almost savagely for it to be concealed. Confronted by a choice
-of evils she made a dash at the less.
-
-“I’m so sorry. I’ll be with you in one minute.”
-
-Sheer pride forced her tone to a superhuman lightness, verging on
-gayety. But there was a formidable member of her sex to deal with. In
-spite of that heroic note, Milly was not to be taken in; she looked
-at the dissembler with eyes that saw a great deal too much. “I expect
-you’ve taken a pretty bad toss, my fine lady,” they seemed to say.
-
-“I’ll be with you in one minute,” repeated Mary, with burning cheeks
-and a beating heart. But Milly continued to stare. Suddenly she laid
-impulsive hands on her shoulders and gave her a kiss.
-
-Mary didn’t like kissing. Her friend’s proneness to the habit always
-irritated her secretly; this present indulgence in it brought Mary as
-near to active dislike as it would have been possible for her to get.
-
-Milly went back to the drawing-room seething with an excited curiosity.
-Before she could make up her mind to follow Mary stood a long moment in
-black despair; and then “biting on the bullet,” as the soldiers say,
-she went to join the others.
-
-“Naughty girl!” was the arch reception of Mrs. Wren. “I’m very cross.
-Didn’t you promise not to be late? But if you must call before lunch
-on dukes in Park Lane I suppose people like us will have to take the
-consequences.”
-
-Mary would gladly have given a year’s salary for the head of Mrs. Wren
-on a charger, but Milly intervened neatly with the presentation of Mr.
-Cheesewright, in itself a little masterpiece of quiet humor.
-
-Princess Bedalia’s reception of Mr. Charles Cheesewright was perhaps
-the severest test to which her sterling goodness had been exposed.
-Every nerve was on edge. She wanted to slay Mr. Cheesewright, braided
-coat, turquoise tie-pin, diamond sleeve links, immaculate coiffure and
-all. But for the sake of Milly she dragooned her feelings to the pitch
-of bowing quite charmingly.
-
-Luncheon, after all, was not so bad. Mrs. Wren was frankly at her worst
-and most tactless; her one idea was to impress the guest, to let him
-see that money was not everything, and that judged by her standards
-he was a most ordinary young man. For such a democrat her table talk
-was surprisingly full of Debrett. It was all very lacerating, but Mary
-continued to play up as well as she knew how. And by the time the meal
-was half over the reward of pure unselfishness came to her in the shape
-of a quite unexpected liking for Mr. Charles Cheesewright.
-
-By all the rules of the game, that is, if mere outward appearance went
-for anything, Mr. Cheesewright should have been insufferable. But at
-close quarters, with curried prawns and chablis before him, and a very
-fine girl opposite, he was nothing of the kind. Mrs. Wren had confided
-to Mary a week ago, “that she was afraid from what she had heard, that
-he was not out of the top drawer.” The statement had been provoked by
-an odious comparison with Wrexham, “who,” declared Milly in her most
-aboriginal manner, “had, as far as mother was concerned, simply queered
-the pitch for everybody.”
-
-Perhaps in the eyes of Mary it was Mr. Cheesewright’s supreme merit
-that, in spite of his clothes, he was modestly content to be his
-humble self. In every way he was a very middling young man. But he
-knew that he was and, in Mary’s opinion, that somehow saved him from
-being something worse. Mrs. Wren was far from agreeing. His face and
-form were plebeian, but there was no reason why he should take them
-lying down. He was Eton and Cambridge certainly--or was it Harrow and
-Oxford?--anyhow an adequate expression of a sound convention; and it
-was for that reason no doubt that all through a particularly trying
-meal he kept up his end bravely. In fact, he did so well that he earned
-the gratitude of the young woman opposite, although he was far from
-suspecting that he had done anything of the kind.
-
-She had begun by counting the minutes and in looking ahead to the
-time when she could retire with her wounds. But there was a peculiar
-virtue in the meal; at any rate it agreed so well with the natural
-constitution of Mr. Charles Cheesewright that he was able to relieve
-the tension of the little dining-room without knowing it. He wasn’t
-brilliant, certainly, but he talked plainly, sanely, modestly about the
-things that mattered; the Brodotsky Venus at the Portman Gallery, the
-miserable performance of Harrow, the new play at the Imperial, the sure
-defeat of America’s Big Four, Mr. Jarvey’s new novel, the prospect of
-the Kaiser lifting the pot at Cowes, and other matters of international
-importance, so that by the time coffee and crême-de-menthe had rounded
-up the meal, Mary was inclined to feel sorry that it was at an end.
-
-When a few minutes before three Mr. Cheesewright went his way--to have
-a net at Lord’s Cricket Ground--the famous Princess Bedalia felt a pang
-of regret. He had played a pretty good innings already, even if he
-didn’t seem to know it. And the honest shake of her hand did its best
-to tell him so.
-
-
-IV
-
-As soon as Mr. Cheesewright had gone, Mary prepared to go too. But
-before she could retire Milly and her mother were at her. Both had
-a pretty shrewd suspicion that she had been making a sorry mess of
-things at Bridport House. These ladies, however, were so cunning, that
-they did not show their hands at once. To begin with, they exchanged
-a glance full of meaning, and then as Mary got up and made for the
-door, Mrs. Wren commanded her to sit down again and tell them what she
-thought of Charley. That was guile. She didn’t in the least want to
-know what anyone thought of Charley; besides, it would have been quite
-possible for Mary to deliver her verdict even as she stood with the
-knob of the door in her hand.
-
-“I like him--_immensely_!” she said, returning to the sofa in deference
-to Mrs. Wren.
-
-Mother and daughter looked at her searchingly, with eyes that
-questioned.
-
-“I like him--immensely!” she repeated.
-
-“He’s not the kind of man,” said Mrs. Wren with an air of vexation, “I
-should have written home about when I was a girl.”
-
-“What’s wrong with him?” said Milly, bridling. “Why do you always crab
-him, mother?”
-
-“I--crab him!” Mrs. Wren’s air was the perfection of injured innocence.
-“Nothing of the kind. It isn’t his fault he’s not a blue blood--and
-if my lord of Wrexham’s form is anything to go by, he may be none the
-worse for that.”
-
-“Yes, of course, as far as you are concerned Wrexham’s the fly in the
-ointment,” said Milly with a sudden flutter of anger.
-
-Mary would have given much to escape, but to have fled with thunder and
-forked lightning in the air would have been an act of cowardice, not to
-say treachery.
-
-The truth was Mrs. Wren still had other views for Milly, but up till
-now Wrexham had disappointed her. Moreover, both these clear-headed and
-extremely practical ladies were inclined to think he would continue to
-do so. For one thing he was under the thumb of his family, who were as
-hostile as they could be; again Wrexham was a bit of a weakling who
-didn’t quite know his own mind. Certainly he had a regard for Milly,
-but whether it would enable him to wear a martyr’s crown was very
-doubtful. Milly, at any rate, had allowed a second Richmond to enter
-the field of her affections, in the shape of Mr. Charles Cheesewright,
-the sole inheritor of Cheesewright’s Mixture, a young man of obscure
-antecedents but of considerable wealth. So far Mr. Cheesewright had
-received small encouragement from Mrs. Wren, and Milly herself had been
-very guarded in her attitude; yet it was as plain as could be that
-one of the more expensive of the public schools and one of the older
-universities had made a little gentleman of Mr. Cheesewright. “But,”
-as Milly said, “the truth was Wrexham had simply queered the pitch for
-everybody.”
-
-Mary, as the friend of all parties, including Mr. Cheesewright, who had
-unexpectedly found favor in her sight, felt it to be her duty to stay
-in the room, so that, if possible, oil might be poured on the troubled
-waters. She had sense of acute discomfort, it was true; and it was
-not made less by the sure knowledge that the heavy weapons mother and
-daughter were using for the benefit of each other would soon be turned
-against herself.
-
-There was not long to wait for this prophecy to be fulfilled. As soon
-as the ladies had cut off her retreat, they dropped the academic
-subject of Mr. Cheesewright and bluntly demanded to know what was the
-matter. It was vain for Mary to try to parry this expected attack.
-Her friends, when their feelings were deeply stirred, indulged in a
-sledge-hammer style of warfare, against which any ordinary kind of
-defense was powerless.
-
-“Don’t tell me,” said Mrs. Wren, “that you have let them bully you into
-giving him up!”
-
-This was what Milly was wont to call her mother’s “old Sadler’s Wells
-touch” with a vengeance. The victim bit her lip sharply, but she
-could not prevent the color from rushing to her cheeks and giving her
-completely away.
-
-“Why, of course she has!” cried Milly, looking at her pitilessly. “I
-knew she would. I told you, my dear, she was set on doing something
-fantastic. And here have I been telling Charley that one day she would
-be a duchess.”
-
-“I call it soppy,” said Mrs. Wren.
-
-“Downright mental flabbiness,” cried Milly. “It’s the sort of thing a
-girl would do in the _Family Herald_.”
-
-Mary quailed before these taunts. Even if her friends had an
-unconventional way of expressing themselves, it did not blind her
-to the poignant nature of their emotions. In the tone of mother and
-daughter was a note which showed how deeply they were wounded by her
-moral weakness--they could consider it nothing else. And the bitterness
-of the attack was the measure of their devotion. Mrs. Wren could hardly
-restrain her tongue, Milly was at the verge of tears. Such a girl as
-Mary Lawrence had no right to wreck two lives for a mere whim.
-
-“You are nothing but a fool,” said Mrs. Wren. “You’ll never get such a
-chance again. I’d like to shake you.”
-
-Mary had no fight left in her. She sat on the sofa a picture of dismay.
-For the first time she saw mother and daughter as they really were, in
-all their native crudeness; yet when the worst was said of them they
-had a generosity of soul which made them suffer on her account; and
-that fact alone seemed to leave her at their mercy.
-
-“You’ve no right to let them ruin your life and his,” said Milly
-pitilessly.
-
-“One simply can’t go where one isn’t wanted,” said Mary at last with a
-face of ashes.
-
-Mrs. Wren took up the phrase, the first the girl had been able to
-utter in her own defense, and flung it back. “Not wanted forsooth!
-Who are they that they should pick and choose! A dead charge on the
-community--neither more nor less.”
-
-“No one can’t,” said Mary, tormentedly. “How could one!”
-
-“Rubbish!” said Mrs. Wren. “You can’t afford to be so proud. From the
-way you talk you might be the Queen of England.”
-
-The girl shook her head. “And it isn’t quite fair that they should have
-to put up with me.”
-
-Those unfortunate words were made to recoil upon her heavily. Both her
-assailants were frankly amazed that she should want to look at the
-matter from the enemy point of view. To such a mind as Mrs. Wren’s
-it could only mean that Bridport House had hypnotized her with the
-semblance of place and power.
-
-“I could shake you,” re-affirmed the good lady. “A girl as first-rate
-as you are has no right to be a snob.”
-
-Somehow that barb was horrible. Nothing wounds like the truth.
-
-Strong in the conviction that “she had got her” Mrs. Wren proceeded.
-“You set as high a value on these people as they set on themselves.
-It’s noodles like you who keep them up. What use are they anyway,
-except to play the fool with honest folk?”
-
-“Yes, that’s right,” said Milly with flashing eyes, as she took up the
-parable. “Wrexham’s one of the same push. His lot simply won’t look at
-me, yet I consider myself the equal of anyone. And I should make a very
-good countess.”
-
-Mary could only gasp. She was rather overcome by this naïveté.
-
-“So you would, my dear,” said Mrs. Wren. “And one of these days you
-will be a countess--if you don’t throw yourself away on Tom, Dick, and
-Harry in the meantime.”
-
-Mary was hard set not to break out in a hysterical laugh. She was in
-the depths if ever soul was, yet the sense of humor is immortal and
-survives every torment.
-
-Fate, however, had not yet given the last turn to the screw.
-
-
-V
-
-At this moment the neat parlormaid came into the room.
-
-“Mr. Dinneford!” she announced.
-
-Jack stood a moment on the threshold to gaze at the three occupants. He
-was rather like a sailor who fears foul weather and has not the courage
-to read the sky.
-
-“I’m glad you’ve come, young man,” said Mrs. Wren, getting up to
-receive him. And she added almost at once, for it was never her way to
-beat about the bush, “We are giving her the finest talking to she has
-ever had in her life.”
-
-Jack nearly groaned. The look of the three of them had told him already
-that she must have made a fearful hash of things.
-
-By now the Tenderfoot had risen very high in Mrs. Wren’s favor.
-To begin with he would one day be the indubitable sixth Duke of
-Bridport--a handicap, no doubt, in the sight of some types of democrat,
-but apparently not, in the eyes of Mrs. Wren, an insuperable barrier.
-Again, she was a pretty shrewd judge of a man, and this one had passed
-all his examinations so far with flying colors. He was absolutely
-straightforward, absolutely honorable; moreover, he knew his own
-mind--whereby he had a signal advantage over his stable companion, who,
-in spite of great merits, was lacking in character.
-
-“Yes, we are setting her to rights,” said Milly, wrinkling a nose
-of charming pugnacity. The face of the culprit was tense and rather
-piteous, but Jack’s glance at it was perfectly remorseless.
-
-“I knew she would,” he groaned.
-
-“Knew she would what?” demanded Mrs. Wren.
-
-“Let Uncle Albert down her,” was the prompt rejoinder.
-
-“That didn’t want much guessing,” said Milly bitterly.
-
-“Bridport-House-itis! That’s her trouble,” said Mrs. Wren. “And she
-seems to have quite a bad form of the disease. I can’t understand
-such a girl, I can’t really. To me she’s unnatural. If I found people
-‘coming the heavy’ over me, I should just set my back to the wall and
-say, ‘Very well, my fine friends, I’m now going to let you see that
-Jane Wren is every bit as good as you are.’”
-
-“So would any other reasonable being.” And that unpremeditated speech
-of the Tenderfoot’s would have made Mrs. Wren his friend for life, had
-she not become so already.
-
-“That’s what I call sensible,” said she. “And there’s only one thing
-for you to do now, young man, and that is to take her straight away and
-marry her.”
-
-At this point Mary got up from her sofa. But Mrs. Wren held one great
-advantage; she had her back to the door. “You don’t leave this room, my
-fine lady”--again “the old Sadler’s Wells touch,” and Jack and Milly
-could not deny that it was rather superb--“until you realize that we
-all think alike in this matter.”
-
-“Quite so,” said the Tenderfoot, immensely stimulated by this powerful
-backing. “Let us try to see the thing as it is. This isn’t a case for
-high falutin’ sentiment. Bridport House is steeped in crass idiocy;
-all the more reason, I say, that we give it no encouragement.”
-
-“Quite so,” chimed Mrs. Wren.
-
-“Quite so,” chimed Milly, who was irresistibly reminded of a recent
-command performance of “Money.”
-
-Mrs. Wren shook a histrionic finger at the luckless Mary, whose eyes
-were seeking rather wildly a means of escape. “Don’t speak! Don’t
-venture to say a word!” The victim had not shown the least disposition
-to do so. “You simply haven’t a leg to stand on, you know.”
-
-It was a shameful piece of bullying but the victim bore it stoically.
-And it did not go on for long. Neither Mrs. Wren nor Milly was exactly
-a fool. As soon as they saw that main force was not likely to help
-them, and that more harm than good might be done by it, they decided to
-leave the whole matter to Jack. They had expressed their own point of
-view very fully, they knew that he could be trusted to make the most of
-his case; besides, when all was said, he was the person best able to
-deal with an entirely vexatious affair.
-
-Of a sudden, the astute Milly flung a swift glance at her mother and
-got up from her chair. And without another word on the subject, this
-pair of conspirators dramatically withdrew.
-
-
-VI
-
-Such an exit from the scene was far more eloquent than words. And its
-immediate effect was to plunge Jack and Mary with a haste that was
-hardly decent, into what both felt was perilously like a final crisis.
-Its very nature was of a sort that a finer diplomacy would have been
-careful to avoid. But Jack, baffled and angry, was not in a mood to
-temporize; besides, that was never his way.
-
-The fine shades of emotion were not for him, but he had the perception
-to feel that if he remained five minutes longer in that little room
-the game might be lost irretrievably. In fact, it seemed to be lost
-already. The specter of defeat was hovering round him; nay, it was
-embodied in the very atmosphere he breathed.
-
-Knowing the moment to be full of peril, he determined to force himself
-to the greatest delicacy of which he was capable, for this might prove
-the final throw. The look in her eyes seemed to tell him that all was
-lost, but he would set the thought aside and act as if he were not
-aware of it.
-
-A long and very trying pause lent weight to this decision, and then
-at last he said in a tone altogether different from the one he had
-recently used, “Tell me, why are you so determined to keep a hardshell
-like Uncle Albert on his pedestal?”
-
-The form of the question provoked a wry little smile. “We poor females
-are by nature conservative.”
-
-“You are that,” he said. “Take you and me. We’ve both seen the world.
-And the world has changed me altogether, but I should say it hasn’t
-changed you at all.”
-
-“No; I don’t think it has,” she admitted ruefully, “in the things that
-are really important.”
-
-“Six years ago, before I went West, I saw Bridport House at pretty
-much the same angle you see it now. But I suppose if you get lumbering
-timber, or living by your wits, or looking for gold in the Yukon, it
-mighty soon comes home to you that it is only realities that count.
-And the cold truth is that Bridport House simply isn’t a reality at
-all.”
-
-“There I can’t agree with you,” she said with a simple valor he was
-bound to admire. “I haven’t seen the Yukon, but I’ve seen Bridport
-House and it’s intensely real to me. Somehow the place is quite
-wonderful. It works upon one like a charm.”
-
-“I was a fool to let you go there.”
-
-“But it only confirms my guesses.”
-
-“Why, you are as bad as your Aunt Sanderson,” he burst out. “And you
-haven’t her excuse. One can understand her point of view, although it’s
-very extreme, and absurdly overdone, but yours, if you’ll let me say
-so, is merely fanciful. Why you should be absolutely the last person in
-the world to be hypnotized by mere rank and pride of place.”
-
-“It isn’t that at all.”
-
-“What is it, then?”
-
-“It’s something I can’t explain, a kind of instinct, I suppose. Please
-don’t think I’m overawed by vain shows. But there is such a thing as
-tradition, at least there is to me, and every stick and stone of that
-house simply glows with it.”
-
-“Mere sentiment!”
-
-“Oh, yes--I know--but sentiment’s the thing that rules the world.”
-
-“Plain, practical common sense rules the world.”
-
-“I mean the only world worth living in.”
-
-He could do nothing with her, and the fact was now hurting him
-horribly. A man used to his own way, of clear vision, and strong
-will, he could not bear the thought of being sidetracked or thwarted.
-Besides, her reasoning was demonstrably false. He was growing bitterly
-annoyed but, after all, such a solicitude for others only added to her
-value. Moreover, here was a nature almost fantastically fine, and for
-decency’s sake he must constrain his egotism to respect her scruples.
-
-But the sense of defeat was hard to bear. Since that morning’s fatal
-visit to the Mecca of tradition her will had crystallized. There seemed
-little hope of shaking it now.
-
-“Let me ask one question,” he said tensely. “Do you still care for me?”
-
-Before she could answer the question her breath came quickly, her color
-mounted. And then she said in a low voice, “I do--I always shall.”
-
-It was no use telling her she was a fool. She was grotesquely in the
-wrong, even if she was sublimely in the right. He would like to have
-shaken her--and yet how dare he sully her with a point of view which
-was purely personal?
-
-“I expect that old barbarian is laughing finely in his sleeve,” he said
-with a sudden descent to another plane.
-
-“You don’t read him right.” A warm throb of feeling was in her voice.
-“He’s quite deep and true--and kind, so kind you would hardly believe.
-When I went there this morning I felt I was going to hate him, and yet
-I find I can’t.”
-
-“You are an idealist,” he said. “And you’ve tuned up that old cracked
-file to the pitch of your own sackbut and psaltery. He’s not fine in
-any way if you see him as I do--but I’m an earthworm, of course. He’s
-just a hardshell and an unbeliever, who runs tradition for all it’s
-worth, because that means loaves and fishes for him and his.”
-
-She countered this speech staunchly; it was not worthy of him. And
-yet the tone of reproof was so gentle that it gave him new courage.
-Besides, he was a born fighter and the mere thought of losing such a
-prize was more than he could bear.
-
-“You can’t go back on your word,” he burst out with sudden defiance.
-“You made a promise that you’re bound to keep.”
-
-The look in her eyes asked for pity. “Oh! I could never go there,” she
-shivered, “among all those hostile women.”
-
-“We will keep a thousand miles away from them.”
-
-“They have told me I’m not good enough.”
-
-“Like their damned impertinence!” He flushed with anger.
-
-“But I promised this morning that I wouldn’t.”
-
-“You first promised me that you would.”
-
-Again he had her cornered. It was almost the act of a cad to drive her
-so hard, but he was an elemental who had simply to obey the laws of his
-being. It seemed madness and damnation to let her go. And yet there
-were tears in her eyes which he dare not look at. If he saw them he was
-done.
-
-With a kind of savage joy he felt her weaken a little at the impact of
-his will. It was a piece of cruelty for which there was no help, a form
-of bullying he could not avoid.
-
-“The best thing we can do,” he said suddenly, “is to get married
-at once and then clear off to Canada. Then we shall be beyond the
-jurisdiction of Bridport House.”
-
-“That old man would never forgive me,” was the simple reply. “It would
-make the whole thing quite hopeless for everybody.”
-
-He checked the words at the tip of his tongue. She had no right to play
-for the other side, but there was something in her bearing which shamed
-him to silence. For the first time he was torn; this immolation of self
-might be a deeper wisdom; at least he felt thin and shallow in its
-presence.
-
-“Won’t you help me?” She laid a hand on his. Tears were now running
-down her cheeks.
-
-He caught his breath sharply at the unexpected appeal; it was like the
-fixing of a knife. There was no alternative; he saw at once with fatal
-clearness that these four little words cut the ground from under his
-feet.
-
-“Of course I will,” he said miserably, “if that is how you really feel
-about it.”
-
-She bowed her head in the moment’s intensity. “Thank you,” she said
-softly.
-
-He could only gasp. Here was the end.
-
-“We must forget each other,” she said stoically.
-
-“Or ask the sun and moon to stand still,” he said. “I shall never marry
-anyone else.”
-
-She gave him the honest hand of the good comrade and he took it to his
-lips.
-
-“I shall go back to Canada.”
-
-“Won’t you stay and help them?”
-
-“No,” he said, “these stupid people have got on my nerves. Besides,
-this city is not big enough to hold us both just now.”
-
-“I intend to go to Paris and study for the opera.”
-
-“No,” he said decisively. “This time next week I shall be on my way
-back to Vancouver, unless----”
-
-“Unless----?”
-
-“Unless Bridport House can be made to forget the Parish Pump in the
-meantime. And there’s hardly a chance of that.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TIME’S REVENGE
-
-
-I
-
-HIS Grace had had such a very bad night that he was only just able
-to reach his morning-room by the discreet hour of eleven. He was so
-exceedingly irritable that even the presence of the _Times_ on the
-little table at his elbow was almost too much for him. And barely had
-he settled himself in his chair and put on his spectacles when an
-acute annoyance with the nature of things was further increased by the
-ill-timed appearance of his private secretary, Mr. Gilbert Twalmley.
-
-Mr. Twalmley so well understood the art of being agreeable, that, of
-itself, his appearance was seldom if ever unwelcome; had the fact been
-otherwise it is reasonably certain that long ago he would have had to
-seek some other sphere of usefulness. And even on this sinister morning
-Mr. Twalmley was not the head and front of his own offending; the germ
-of unpopularity was in the message that he bore.
-
-“Sir Dugald Maclean has rung up, sir. He would like to know if you can
-see him on a matter of urgent importance.”
-
-“When?” said the Duke sourly.
-
-“He will come round at once.”
-
-The fact was clear that his Grace was not in a mood to receive anyone
-just then, least of all Sir Dugald Maclean, who at any time was far
-from being _persona gratissima_ at Bridport House. But after a mental
-struggle, which if quite short was rather grim, he allowed public
-policy to override his private feelings.
-
-“I suppose I’d better,” he said with something ominously like a groan
-of disgust.
-
-
-II
-
-Even when the decision was taken and Mr. Twalmley had gone to make it
-known, the Duke was not quite clear in his mind as to why he should
-submit to such an ordeal. Was it really necessary to see this man?
-Would any purpose be served by his so doing?
-
-This morning the Duke was in a mood of vacillation, itself the sequel
-to a night of physical and mental torment. Men and events and Nature’s
-own self were conspiring against him; the future and the past were
-alike in their menace; he could see nothing ahead but a vista of
-anxiety.
-
-Waiting for this man whom he disliked so intensely, he tried at first
-to fix his mind on the morning’s news, and failed lamentably. For one
-thing the paper itself was a sinister portent of the times. But there
-were others, and in the interval of waiting for an unwelcome visitor
-his Grace reviewed them gloomily.
-
-Albert John had lived to see dark days. At heart a time-server and a
-cynic, his strongest wish had been to go to the grave in the faith of
-his fathers. In the beginning none had realized more clearly than he
-that dukes were not as other men. Born to that convenient dogma, or
-at least having imbibed it with the milk of infancy, it was in the
-very marrow of his bones. But now, it would seem, the Time Spirit had
-overtaken the order to which he belonged.
-
-Twin portents of that fact had hovered all night round his pillow.
-First came the business of Jack and the lady of his choice, who
-at close quarters had proved to be so much more than his Grace
-had bargained for; then there was the minor yet entirely vexing
-complication of Muriel and her Berserker of a Radical.
-
-Compared with the first gigantic issue, the second was a mere sideshow,
-which in a happier hour his Grace would have treated with sardonic
-contempt. After all, did it greatly matter if Muriel had the ill taste
-to prefer an obvious political thruster and _arriviste_ to a state of
-single blessedness? The heavens were not likely to fall in either case.
-The man was a cad and there was no more to be said, yet even Albert
-John was not quite able to maintain the standpoint of High Olympus.
-Such a mountebank of a fellow ought not to count, yet when the best had
-been said there was something about the brute which rankled horribly.
-
-Some years before, in a historic speech in the Gilded Chamber, the Duke
-had drawn a lurid picture of democracy knocking at the gate. His words
-were so nakedly obvious that in a single morning they awoke to fame
-throughout a flattered and delighted island. Everybody had known for a
-generation that democracy was knocking at the gate, but the true art of
-prophecy as a going concern is to predict the event the day after it
-happens.
-
-His Grace of Bridport, in the course of an admired speech, left no
-doubt as to his own feeling in the matter. He conceived it to be his
-duty to hold the gate as long as possible against the mob. But his
-memorable remarks, a little touched, no doubt, with the crudity of one
-who spoke seldom, gave opportunity for a thruster in the person of a
-rising Scots publicist to convulse the Lower House with his fanciful
-portrait of the Great Panjandrum of Bridport House with little round
-button on top.
-
-That had happened some years ago. But the alchemies of time had now
-prepared a charming comedy for the initiated. The temerarious Scotsman,
-moving from triumph to triumph, had determined to consolidate his
-fortunes by marrying the third daughter of the house of Dinneford.
-
-When Sir Dugald’s decision became known to the Duke, his amazement took
-a very caustic turn. He had never forgiven the fellow for so savagely
-flaunting him as a trophy at the end of a pole. “_Rien qui blesse comme
-la vérité._” It was therefore hard for his Grace to knuckle down to
-this adventurer. Besides, had Sir Dugald’s opinions been other than
-they were, one of his kidney must not look for a welcome at Bridport
-House.
-
-Democracy was knocking at the gate with a vengeance. Muriel’s affair
-had shaken the Family to its base. For some little time past it was
-known that she was cultivating breadth. Her coquettings with that
-dangerous tendency had affected her diet, her clothes, her reading, as
-well as her social and mental outlook. She had formed quite a habit
-of emerging from the Times Book Club with all kinds of highbrows in a
-strap. She had made odd friendships, she had joined queer movements,
-and from time to time she regaled very remarkable people with tea and
-cake at Bridport House.
-
-To all this there could only be one end. First she consulted her
-oculist and changed her glasses, and then she fell in love. She was
-the first of the Bridport ladies to enter that state; thus she was
-less a portent than a phenomenon. Sarah, Blanche, and Marjorie gave
-her the cold shoulder, and Aunt Charlotte frowned, but there was no
-getting over the sinister fact that Breadth had at last undone her. Sir
-Dugald had recently been seen for the first time in one of the smaller
-and less uncomfortable drawing-rooms of Bridport House. The Dinneford
-ladies seldom read the newspapers, at least the political part of
-them, being beyond all things “healthy-minded” women; therefore they
-knew little of the facts of his career. Moreover, they were in happy
-ignorance of the attack he had launched three years ago upon their
-sire. But it cannot be said of Muriel that she was equally innocent.
-Evil communications corrupt good manners; Breadth had made a recourse
-to politics inevitable. And the slight importance she attached to a
-certain incident was, to say the least, unfilial.
-
-In the cool, appraising eyes of Sarah, Blanche, and Marjorie, the bold
-Sir Dugald was set down already as a freak of nature. They were not
-used to that sort of person at Bridport House. Unfortunately such an
-attitude forbade any just perception of the man himself. His career
-was still in the making, and in the view of keen but unsympathetic
-observers who had followed it from the start, the hapless Muriel had
-been marked down in order that she might advance him in it. Moreover,
-up till now, his ambition had never known defeat, particularly when
-inflamed by a worthy object.
-
-According to biographies of the People’s Champion, portrait on cover,
-price one shilling net, which flooded the bookstalls of his adopted
-country, his life had been a fine expression of the deep spiritual
-truth, “God helps those who help themselves.” His career had been truly
-remarkable, yet in the opinion of qualified judges it was only just
-beginning. In the person of Sir Dugald Maclean, Democracy was knocking
-at the gate with a vengeance. Its keepers must be up and doing lest
-Demos ravish the citadel within and get clear away with the pictures,
-the heirlooms and the gold plate.
-
-“She must be out of her mind,” declared the Duke at the first
-announcement of the grisly tidings. Lady Wargrave went further. “She is
-out of her mind,” trumpeted the sage of Hill Street.
-
-There were alarums and excursions, there was a pretty todo. But Muriel
-had grown so Broad that she treated the matter very lightly. The
-ruthless Sir Dugald had tied her to the wheel of his car; he was now
-determined to lead her to the altar with or without the sanction of his
-Grace.
-
-
-III
-
-All too soon for the Duke’s liking in this hour of fate, Sir Dugald
-arrived for his interview. At any time he was a bitter pill for his
-Grace to swallow; just now, in the light of present circumstances, it
-called for the virtue of a stoic to receive him at all.
-
-Now these adversaries met again certain ugly memories were in their
-minds. But the advantage was with the younger man who could afford to
-be secretly amused by the business in hand. A semblance of respect, to
-be sure, was in his bearing, but that was no more than homage paid by
-worldly wisdom to the spirit of place. Right at the back lay the mind
-of the cool calculator, which in certain aspects had an insight almost
-devilish into the heart of material man. Well he knew the hostility of
-this peevish, brooding invalid. He was in a position to flout it; yet,
-after all, the man who now received him would have been rather more
-than human had he not hated him like poison.
-
-Sir Dugald could afford to smile at this figure of impotence; yet the
-Duke, in his way, was no mean adversary. Up to a point his mind was
-extremely vigorous. The will to prevail against encroachment on the
-privileges of his class was still strong. Besides physical suffering
-had not yet bereft him of a maliciously nice appreciation of the human
-comedy. It may even have been that which now enabled him to receive
-“the thruster.”
-
-As Sir Dugald entered the room he was keenly aware that the eyes of
-a satyr were fixed upon him. And the picture of a rather fantastic
-helplessness, propped in its chair, was not without its pathos. The old
-lion, stricken sore, would have given much to rend the intruder, but he
-was in the grip of Fate.
-
-The success of Sir Dugald had been magical, but luck had played no part
-in it, beyond the period of the world’s history and the particular
-corner of the globe in which he happened to be born. He had got as far
-as he had in a time comparatively short for the simple reason that he
-was a man of quite unusual powers.
-
-No man could have had a truer perception of the conditions among which
-he had been cast than Dugald Maclean, no man could have had a stronger
-grasp of certain forces, or of the alchemy transmuting them into things
-undreamt of; no man could have had a bolder outlook upon the whole
-amazing phantasmagoria evolved by the cosmic dust out of the wonders
-within itself. The Duke had the cynicism of the materialist; the man
-who faced him now had the vision of him who sees too much.
-
-The Duke, with a great air and a courtesy which was second nature,
-begged his visitor to forgive his being as he was.
-
-Sir Dugald, with a mechanical formula and a mechanical smile, responded
-with a ready sympathy. But while their conventional phrases flowed,
-each marked the other narrowly, like a pair of strange brigands
-colloguing for the first time on the side of a mountain. It was as if
-each knew the other for a devil of a fellow, yet not quite such a devil
-of a fellow as he judges himself to be.
-
-Efficiency was the watchword of Maclean. There was no beating about the
-bush. He knew what he wanted and had come to see that he got it. In a
-cool, aloof, rather detached way he lost no time in putting forward the
-demand he had made at a former meeting.
-
-“But one has been led to infer from your speeches,” said the Duke,
-bluntly, “and the facts of your career, that you stand for an order of
-things very different from those obtaining here.”
-
-“Up to a point, yes,” was the ready answer. “But only up to a point.
-In order to govern efficiently it is wise to aim at a centralization
-of power. The happiest communities are those in which power is in the
-hands of the few. Now there is much in the social hierarchy, even as
-at present constituted, which deserves to survive the shock of battle
-that will soon be upon us. It ought to survive, for it has proved its
-worth. And in identifying myself with it I shall be glad when the time
-comes to help your people here if only you will help me now.”
-
-“In a word, you are ready to throw over your friends,” said the Duke
-with a narrowing eye.
-
-“By no means! I have not the least intention of doing that.”
-
-His Grace was hard to convince; besides the man’s nonchalance incensed
-him. “Well, as I have told you already, the only terms on which we
-can begin to think of having you here are that you quit your present
-stable.”
-
-“Don’t you think you take a parochial view?” The considered coolness
-had the power to infuriate. “Whichever stable one happens to occupy at
-the moment is not very material. It is simply a means to an end.”
-
-“To what end?”
-
-“The better government of the country--of the Empire, if you prefer it.”
-
-“You aim at the top?”
-
-“Undoubtedly. And I think I shall get there.”
-
-The note of self-confidence was a little too much for his Grace. He
-shot out an ugly lower lip and plucked savagely at the small tuft of
-hair upon it. “That remains to be seen, my friend.” And he added in a
-tone of ice, “When you have got there you can come and ask me again.”
-
-“But it is going to take time,” Sir Dugald spoke lightly and readily,
-not deigning to accept the challenge. “Meanwhile Lady Muriel and I
-would like to get married.”
-
-It seemed, however, that the Duke had made up his mind in the matter
-quite definitely. There must be a coat of political whitewash for a
-dirty dog before he could hope to receive any kind of official sanction
-as a son-in-law. Such in effect was the last word of his Grace; and it
-was delivered with a point that was meant to lacerate.
-
-It did not fail of its effect. Somehow the ducal brand of cynicism was
-edged like a razor, and the underlying contempt poisoned the wounds it
-dealt. The man who had sprung from the people, who in accordance with
-the brutal innuendo of the man of privilege would be only too ready
-to throw them over as soon as they had served his turn, was powerless
-before it. At this moment, as he was ruefully discovering, place and
-power did not hesitate to use loaded dice.
-
-Sir Dugald was savagely angry. In spite of an iron self-control, the
-cold insolence of one who made no secret of the fact that he regarded
-the man before him as other clay was hard to bear. A career of success,
-consistent and amazing, had given Sir Dugald a pretty arrogance of his
-own. And he was a very determined man playing for victory.
-
-
-IV
-
-It was clear from the Duke’s manner that as far as he was concerned
-the interview was at an end. But Sir Dugald had made up his mind to
-carry the matter a step farther. He was a bold man, his position was
-stronger than his Grace had reason to guess, moreover, a powerful will
-had been reënforced by a growing animosity.
-
-“Before I go,” said Sir Dugald, “there is one last word, and to me it
-seems of great importance.”
-
-The Duke sat silent, a stony eye fixed upon his visitor.
-
-“First, let me say as one man of the world to another, that your
-objection to my marrying Lady Muriel is injudicious.”
-
-“No doubt--from your point of view. But we won’t go into that.”
-
-“On the contrary, I think we had better. As I say, it is injudicious.
-We have fully made up our minds to marry. You can’t hinder us, you
-know--so why make things uncomfortable?”
-
-“Because I dislike it, sir--I dislike it intensely!” His Grace was
-suddenly overwhelmed by his feelings.
-
-“Do you mind stating the grounds of your objection?”
-
-“It would be tedious to enumerate them.”
-
-“Well, I’d like you to realize the advantages of letting things go on
-as they are.”
-
-“There are none so far as one can see at the moment.”
-
-“We are coming to them now,” said Sir Dugald blandly. “In the first
-place, has it occurred to you that I may know the history of Mr.
-Dinneford’s fiancée?”
-
-The Duke stared fixedly at the man before him. “What do you mean?” he
-said.
-
-“Suppose one happens to know her secret?”
-
-“Her secret!”
-
-“Her origin and early history.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“Is there really any need to ask the question?”
-
-The Duke shook his head perplexedly. “I’m afraid I don’t follow you.”
-
-“Well,” said Sir Dugald coolly, “it happens that you are the one man in
-the world who is in a position to answer the question I have ventured
-to ask.”
-
-They looked at each other. A rather deadly silence followed.
-
-“The question you have ventured to ask.” The Duke repeated the words
-slowly, but with a reluctance and a venom he could not conceal.
-
-“You know perfectly well what I mean.” The tone, direct and cool, was
-exasperating.
-
-“Are you trying to blackmail me?” There was an ugly light in the Duke’s
-eyes.
-
-Sir Dugald laughed. “Why put the matter so crudely?” he said. “I am
-merely anxious that justice should be done. You ought to be grateful to
-Providence for giving you this opportunity.”
-
-“Opportunity?”
-
-“To right the wrong that has been committed.”
-
-“I don’t understand.”
-
-“I refer to Miss Lawrence’s parentage.”
-
-“One fails to see that her parentage is any business of yours or mine.”
-
-“It is certainly business of yours,” was the sardonic answer; “and
-it is going to be mine because I am determined that matters shall
-take their present course. Lady Muriel and I intend to marry, and Mr.
-Dinneford and Miss Lawrence ought to marry.”
-
-The Duke gazed at him with an air of blank stupefaction.
-
-“I invite you to give the matter very careful consideration.” Sir
-Dugald had constrained a harsh accent to the point of mellowness. “Let
-me say at once that if you don’t withdraw your opposition it is in my
-power to make myself rather unpleasant.”
-
-“Nature has relieved you of any obligation in that matter. You are the
-most unpleasant man I have ever had to do with.”
-
-“Let me outline the position.” The mellifluous note spurred his Grace
-to fury. “Mr. Dinneford and Miss Lawrence, Lady Muriel and I are
-determined to marry and we must have your consent.”
-
-“And if I don’t give it?” The tone matched the truculent eyes.
-
-“I may be tempted to use my knowledge in a way which will be much more
-disagreeable than the things you wish to prevent.”
-
-“Do I understand this to be a threat?”
-
-Sir Dugald smiled darkly.
-
-“Very well!” Defiance and resentment rode the Duke very hard. “Use your
-knowledge as you like. You are a scoundrel.”
-
-“A hard name.” Again the Duke was met by a saturnine Scottish smile.
-“But my motives are sound.”
-
-“So are mine.” The Duke’s voice shook with fury. “If you are not
-careful I will have you put out of the house.”
-
-“We are not living in the Middle Ages, you know.”
-
-“More’s the pity. I’d have found a short way with you then, my friend.
-Your wanting to marry Muriel is bad enough, your interference with
-Dinneford is an outrage.”
-
-“In the circumstances I feel it to be my duty to do what I can in an
-exceedingly delicate matter.”
-
-“Self-interest, sir, that’s all your duty amounts to.” But the Duke was
-now thoroughly alarmed, and he saw that recrimination was not going to
-help him. “Tell me,” he said in a tone more conciliatory than he had
-yet used, “exactly on what ground you are standing?”
-
-“In the first place, there is a very remarkable family likeness.”
-
-“And you base your allegation upon a mere conjecture of that kind!”
-said the Duke scornfully.
-
-“Upon far more than that, believe me. I have very strong and direct
-evidence which at the present moment I prefer not to disclose.”
-
-The Duke paused at this bold statement. He turned a basilisk’s eye
-upon his adversary, but Sir Dugald offered a mask, behind which, as
-his Grace well knew, lurked unlimited depth and cunning. One thing was
-clear: a man of this kidney was not likely to venture such a _coup_
-without having carefully weighed his resources. In any case there
-cannot be smoke unless there is fire. A certain amount of knowledge
-must be in the possession of Maclean; the question was how much, and
-what use was he prepared to make of it?
-
-“Do I understand,” said the Duke after a moment of deep thought, “that
-you have spoken of this matter to Mr. Dinneford?”
-
-“I have not yet done so.”
-
-“Or to Miss Lawrence?”
-
-“No--nor to Mrs. Sanderson.”
-
-The Duke’s look of concentration at the mention of that name was not
-lost upon Sir Dugald. It had the effect of hardening the ironical
-smile which for some little time now had hung round his lips.
-
-“May I ask you,” said the Duke with the air of a man pretty badly
-hipped, “not to speak of this matter to anyone until there has been an
-opportunity for further discussion?”
-
-The abrupt change in the tone confessed a moral weakness which Sir
-Dugald was quick to notice. But he fell in with the suggestion, with
-a show of ready magnanimity for which the Duke could have slain him.
-There was no wish to cause avoidable unpleasantness. Sir Dugald was
-good enough to say that it was in the interests of all parties that
-the skeleton should be kept in the cupboard. The matter was bound to
-give pain to a number of innocent people, and if the Duke, even at the
-eleventh hour, would be reasonable he might depend upon it that Sir
-Dugald Maclean would be only too happy to follow his example.
-
-
-V
-
-Upon the retirement of the unwelcome visitor, the Duke gave himself up
-to a state of irritation verging on fury. Unprepared for this new turn
-of the game, taken at a complete disadvantage by a man of few scruples
-and diabolical cleverness, he was now horribly smitten by a sense of
-having said things he ought not to have said. On one point he was
-clear. In the shock of the unforeseen he had yielded far too much to
-the impact of a scoundrel.
-
-The position seen as a whole was one of very grave difficulty, and the
-instinct now dominating his mind was to seek a port against a storm
-which threatened at any moment to burst upon him. It was of vital
-importance that certain facts should be kept from certain people;
-otherwise there could be little doubt that the private cosmos of Albert
-John, fifth Duke of Bridport, would fall about his ears.
-
-Alone with his fluttered thoughts, the Duke spent a bad half-hour
-trying to marshal them in battle array. Face to face with a situation
-dangerous, disagreeable, unforeseen, it would call for much tactical
-skill to fend off disaster. Never in his life had he found it so hard
-to choose a line of action. At last, the prey of doubt, he rang for
-Harriet Sanderson.
-
-She came to him at once and he told her promptly of Sir Dugald’s visit.
-And then, his eyes on her face, he went on to tell her there was reason
-to fear that a secret had been penetrated which he had always been led
-to believe was known only to her and to himself.
-
-Watching her narrowly while he spoke he saw his words go home. She
-stood a picture of dismay.
-
-“I wonder if the man really can know all?” he said finally.
-
-At first she made no attempt to answer the question; but after a while,
-in a low, rather frightened voice, she said, “I don’t think he can know
-possibly.”
-
-He searched her troubled eyes, almost as if he doubted. “Perhaps you
-will tell me this.” He spoke in a tone of growing anxiety. “Would you
-say there is anything like a marked family resemblance?”
-
-“A very strong one, I’m afraid.”
-
-“It is confined, I hope, to the picture at the top of the stairs?”
-
-“Oh, no--at least to my mind----”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“She has her father’s eyes.”
-
-“Very interesting to know that.” The Duke laughed, but it was a curious
-note in which there was not a grain of mirth. “Yet, even assuming that
-to be the case, it would take a bold man to jump to such a conclusion.
-Surely he would need better ground to go upon.”
-
-“I am sorry to say he has much more than a mere likeness to help him.”
-As Harriet spoke the bright color ran from neck to brow. “He happened
-to be at my brother-in-law’s on the evening the child was first brought
-to the house.”
-
-That simple fact was far more than the Duke had bargained for. A look
-of dismay came upon him, he shook an ominous head. “It throws a new
-light on the matter,” he said, after a pause, painful in its intensity.
-“Now tell me this--did he see the child?”
-
-“Oh, yes!”
-
-“That helps him to put two and two together at any rate.” A look of
-tragic concern came into his face. “What an amazing world!”
-
-She agreed that the world was amazing. And in spite of the strange
-unhappiness in her eyes she could not help smiling a little as a surge
-of memories came upon her. She sighed softly, even tenderly as she made
-the confession. “To my mind, Sir Dugald Maclean is one of the most
-amazing men in it.”
-
-“Have you any particular reason for saying that?”--The gaze was
-disconcerting in its keenness--“apart, I mean, from the mere obvious
-facts of his career?”
-
-“It is simply that I have watched him rise,” said Harriet, between a
-smile and a sigh. “When I knew him first he was a London policeman.”
-
-“How in the world did he persuade Scotland Yard to part with him?”
-scoffed his Grace. “One would have thought such a fellow would have
-been worth his weight in gold.”
-
-She could not repress a laugh which to herself seemed to verge on
-irreverence. “My brother-in-law says he soon convinced them he was far
-too ambitious for the Metropolitan Police Force.”
-
-“I should say so!”
-
-“And then he studied the law and got into parliament.”
-
-“And made his fortune by backing a downtrodden people against a vile
-aristocracy.” The Duke’s smile was so sour that it became a grimace.
-“In other words a self-made man.”
-
-“Oh, yes--entirely!” The sudden generous warmth of admiration in
-Harriet’s tone surprised the Duke. “When one considers the enormous
-odds against him and what he has been able to do at the age of
-forty-two, it seems only right to think of him as wonderful.”
-
-“Personally,” said his Grace, “I prefer to regard him as an
-unscrupulous scoundrel.”
-
-Harriet dissented with a smile. “A great man,” she said softly.
-
-“Let us leave it at a very dangerous man. He is a real menace, not only
-to us, but to the country. Anyhow, we have now to see that he doesn’t
-bring down the house about our ears.”
-
-There was something in the tone that swept the color from Harriet’s
-face. “That I realize.” Her voice trembled painfully. “Oh, I do hope he
-has not mentioned the matter to Mary.” And she plucked at her dress in
-sudden alarm.
-
-“Not yet, I think,” said the Duke venomously. “He is too sure a hand to
-spring his mine before the time is ripe. Meanwhile we are forearmed;
-let us take every precaution against him.”
-
-“Oh, yes, we must!” Her eyes were tragic.
-
-“A devilish mischance,” said the Duke slowly, “a devilish mischance
-that he, of all men, has been able to hit the trail.”
-
-
-VI
-
-When Harriet had gone from the room, the Duke surrendered again to
-his thoughts. By now they were almost intolerable. Pulled this way
-and that by a conflict of emotion that was cruel, he was brought more
-than once to the verge of a decision he had not the courage to make.
-The situation was forcing it upon him, yet so much was involved, so
-much was at stake that a weak man at bottom, he was ready to grasp at
-anything which held a slender hope of putting off the evil day. Two
-interests were vitally opposed; he sought to do justice to both, yet as
-far as he could see at the moment, any reconciliation between them was
-impossible.
-
-He was in a state of bitter, ever-growing embarrassment, when Jack was
-unexpectedly announced.
-
-His Grace was not able to detach himself sufficiently from the
-maelstrom within to observe the hue of resolution in the bearing of a
-rather unwelcome visitor.
-
-“Good morning, sir,” said the young man coolly, with an aloofness that
-came near to sarcasm. And then in a tone of very simple matter of
-fact, he said, “I have merely called to ask if you will give a formal
-consent to my marrying Mary Lawrence.”
-
-From the particular way in which the question was put it was easy to
-deduce an ultimatum. But it came at an unlucky moment. So delicately
-was the Duke poised between two contending forces, that a point-blank
-demand was quite enough to turn the scale. His Grace replied at once
-that he was not in a position to give consent.
-
-Jack was prepared for a refusal. The nature of the case had made it
-seem inevitable. But there and then he issued a ukase. His kinsman
-should have a week in which to think over the matter. And if in that
-time the Duke did not change his mind he would return to Canada.
-
-The threat was taken very coolly, but his Grace was far more concerned
-by it than he allowed Jack to see. In fact, he was very much annoyed.
-Here was an end to the plan which had been formed for the general
-welfare of Bridport House. Such conduct was inconsiderate, tiresome,
-irrational. But it was not merely the inconvenience it was bound to
-cause which was so troublesome. There was still the other aspect of the
-case. He could not rid himself of the feeling that a cruel injustice
-was being done to an innocent and defenseless person, and that the
-whole blame of it must lie at his own door.
-
-He had been given a week in which to think the matter over, in which
-to examine it in all its bearings. Just now he was not in a mood to
-urge the least objection to Jack’s departure; all the same one frankly
-an autocrat resented it deeply. Let the fellow go and be damned to
-him! But in spite of the philosophic air with which he sent the young
-fool about his business, his Grace realized as soon as he was alone
-that it was quite impossible to shut his eyes to certain facts. Vital
-issues were involved and it was no use shirking them. Even if he had
-now made up his mind to steel his heart against gross and rather brutal
-injustice, so that the common weal might prosper, nothing could alter
-the human aspect of a matter that galled him bitterly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-A BOMB
-
-
-I
-
-IT is a bad business, no doubt, when a statesman stoops to sentiment.
-Unluckily for the Duke, now that a brain cool and clear was needed in
-a critical hour, it had become miserably overclouded by a sense of
-chivalry. It was very inconvenient. Never in his life had he found a
-decision so hard to reach, and even when it had been arrived at he
-could not dismiss the girl from his mind. She had impressed him in such
-a remarkable way that it was impossible to forget her.
-
-Beyond all things a man of the world, one fact stood out with exemplary
-clearness. If this girl could have been taken upon her merits she would
-have been an almost ideal mate for the heir to Bridport House. She had
-shown such a delicate regard for his welfare, so right had been her
-feeling in the whole affair, that, even apart from mere justice, it
-seemed wrong to exclude her from a circle she could not fail to grace.
-In the matter of Bridport House her instinct was so divinely right that
-no girl in the land was more naturally fitted to help a tiro through
-his novitiate.
-
-A sad coil truly! And Jack had gone but a very few minutes, when
-the matter took another and wholly unexpected turn. The prelude to a
-historic incident was the appearance of Sarah on the scene.
-
-The eldest flower, the light of battle in her gray eyes, was plainly
-bent on mischief. So much was clear as soon as she came into the
-room. She had not been able to forgive her father for revoking Mrs.
-Sanderson’s notice. It had been a wanton dashing of the cup from lips
-but little used to victory; and the act had served to embitter a
-situation which by now was almost unbearable.
-
-Sarah had come of fell purpose, but before playing her great _coup_,
-she opened lightly in the manner of a skirmisher. Muriel, it seemed,
-was the topic that had brought her there; at any rate, it was the topic
-on which she began, masking with some astuteness the one so much more
-sinister that lay behind.
-
-“Father, I suppose you know that Muriel has quite made up her mind to
-get married?”
-
-“So I gather.” Detachment could hardly have been carried farther.
-
-“Such a pity,” Sarah lightly pursued, “but I’m afraid there’s nothing
-to be done. She was always obstinate.”
-
-“Always a fool,” muttered his Grace.
-
-“I’ve been discussing the matter with Aunt Charlotte.”
-
-The Duke nodded, but his portentous eyes asked Sarah not to claim one
-moment more of his time than the circumstances rendered absolutely
-necessary.
-
-“Aunt Charlotte feels very strongly that it will be wise for you to
-give your consent.”
-
-“Why?” The Duke yawned, but the look in his face was not of the kind
-that goes with mere boredom. “Any specific ground for the suggestion?”
-He scanned Sarah narrowly, with heavily-lidded eyes.
-
-“On general grounds only, I believe.”
-
-The Duke was more than a little relieved, but he was content to express
-the fact by transferring his gaze to the book-rest in front of him.
-
-“She thinks it will be in the interests of everyone to make the best of
-a most tiresome and humiliating business. And, after all, he is certain
-to be Prime Minister within the next ten years.”
-
-“Who tells you that?”
-
-“Last night at dinner I met Harry Truscott, and that’s his prediction.
-He says Sir Dugald Maclean is the big serpent that swallows all the
-little serpents.”
-
-“Uncommonly true!” His Grace made a wry mouth. “Still, that’s hardly a
-reason why we should receive the reptile here.”
-
-“No, of course. I quite agree. But Aunt Charlotte thinks there is
-nothing to gain by standing out. Muriel has quite made up her foolish
-mind. So the dignified thing seems to be to make the best of a
-miserable business.”
-
-“It may be,” said his Grace. “But personally I should be grateful if
-Charlotte would mind her own affairs.”
-
-The tone implied quite definitely that he had no wish to pursue the
-topic; nay, it even invited Sarah to make an end of their talk and to
-go away as soon as possible. Clearly he was far from understanding that
-it was little more than a red herring across the trail of a sinister
-intention. But the fact was revealed to him by her next remarks.
-
-“Oh, by the way, father,” she said casually, or at least with a
-lightness of tone that was misleading, “there’s one other matter. I’ve
-been thinking the situation out.”
-
-“Situation!” groped his Grace.
-
-“That has been created.” Sarah’s tone was almost infantile--“by your
-insisting that Mrs. Sanderson should stay on.”
-
-“Well, what of it, what of it?”
-
-“It simply makes the whole thing impossible.” Sarah had achieved the
-voice of the dove. “So long as this woman remains in the house one
-feels that one cannot stay here.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“Because”--Sarah fixed a deliberate eye on the face of her
-sire--“neither Aunt Charlotte nor I think that the present arrangement
-is quite seemly.”
-
-
-II
-
-The attack had been neatly launched, and she saw by the look on her
-father’s face that it had gone right home. She was a slow-witted,
-rather crass person, with a kind of heavy conceit of her own, but like
-all the other Dinneford ladies, at close quarters she was formidable.
-The button was off her foil. It was her intention to wound. And at the
-instant she struck, his Grace was unpleasantly aware of that fact.
-
-“What d’ye mean?” It was his recoil from the stroke.
-
-“I have talked over the matter with Aunt Charlotte. She agrees with me
-that the present arrangement is quite hopeless. And she thinks that as
-you are unwilling for Mrs. Sanderson to be sent away, the only course
-for Blanche, Marjorie, and myself is to leave the house.”
-
-The face of her father grew a shade paler, but for the moment that
-was the only expression of the inward fury. He saw at once that the
-dull fool who dared to beard him was no more than a cat’s-paw of
-the arch-schemer. The mine was Charlotte’s, even if fired by a hand
-infinitely less cunning.
-
-“Is this a threat?” The surge of his rage was hard to control.
-
-“You leave us no alternative,” said Sarah doughtily. “Aunt Charlotte
-thinks in the circumstances we shall be fully justified in going to
-live with her. I think so, too; and I don’t doubt that Blanche and
-Marjorie will see the matter in the same light.”
-
-“What do you think you will gain?” His voice shook with far more than
-vexation. “The proposal simply amounts to the washing of dirty linen in
-public.”
-
-“There is such a thing as personal dignity, father,” said Sarah in her
-driest tone.
-
-“No doubt; but how you are going to serve it by dancing to the piping
-of Charlotte I can’t for the life of me see.”
-
-Sarah, however, could see something else. The blow had met already
-with some success. And she was fully determined to follow up a first
-advantage.
-
-“Well, father”--her words were of warriorlike conciseness--“if you
-still insist on Mrs. Sanderson’s presence here, that is the course we
-intend to take.”
-
-“Oh!” A futile monosyllable, yet at that moment full of meaning.
-
-
-III
-
-The ultimatum delivered, Sarah promptly retired. She took away from the
-interview a pleasing consciousness that the honors were with her. And
-this sense of nascent victory had not grown less by half-past one when
-she reached Hill Street in time to lunch with Aunt Charlotte.
-
-It was a rather cheerless and ascetic meal, but both ladies were in
-such excellent fighting trim that the meagerness of the fare didn’t
-matter. Sarah was sure that she had scored heavily. A well-planted bomb
-had wrought visible confusion in the ranks of the foe. “He sees that it
-places him in a most awkward position,” was her summary for the grim
-ears of the arch-plotter.
-
-“One knew it would.” There were times when Aunt Charlotte had a
-striking personal resemblance to Moltke; and just now, beyond a doubt,
-she bore an uncanny likeness to that successful Prussian.
-
-“He hates the idea of what he calls washing dirty linen in public.”
-
-“Lacks moral courage as usual.” The remark was made in an undertone to
-the coal-scuttle.
-
-“I hope----.” But Sarah suddenly bit off the end of her sentence. After
-all, there are things one cannot discuss.
-
-“You hope what?” The eye of Aunt Charlotte fixed her like a kite.
-
-“No need to say what one hopes,” said Sarah dourly.
-
-“I agree.” Aunt Charlotte took a sip of hot water and munched a
-peptonized biscuit with a kind of savage glee. “But we have to remember
-that the ice is very thin. One has always felt that--well, you know
-what one means. One has felt sometimes that your father....”
-
-Sarah agreed. For more years than she cared to remember she....
-
-“Quite so,” Aunt Charlotte took another biscuit. “And everybody must
-know.... However, the time has now come to make an end.”
-
-“I am sure it has,” said Sarah.
-
-“Still we are playing it up very high,” said the great tactician. “And
-we shall do well to remember....”
-
-“I agree,” said Sarah cryptically.
-
-Misgiving they might have, but just now the uppermost feeling was
-pride in their work and a secret satisfaction. There could be no doubt
-that the blow had gone home. At last they had taken the measure of his
-Grace, they had found his limit, the point had been reached beyond
-which he would not go.
-
-“_Au fond_ a coward,” Aunt Charlotte affirmed once more, for the
-benefit of the coal-scuttle. And then for the benefit of Sarah, with a
-ring of triumph, “Always sets too high a value on public opinion, my
-dear.”
-
-Such being the case the conspirators had every right to congratulate
-themselves. And as if to confirm their victory, there came presently by
-telephone a most urgent message from Mount Street. Charlotte was to go
-round at once.
-
-“There, what did I tell you!” said that lady. And she sublimely ordered
-her chariot.
-
-
-IV
-
-Enroute to Bridport House, the redoubtable Charlotte did not allow
-herself to question that the foe was at the point of hauling down the
-flag. His hurry to do so was a little absurd, but it was so like him
-to throw up the sponge at the mere threat of publicity. This indecent
-haste to come to terms deepened a contempt which had lent a grim
-enjoyment to a long hostility.
-
-However, the reception in store for her ladyship in the smaller library
-did much to modify her views. She was received by her brother with an
-air of menace which almost verged upon truculence.
-
-“Charlotte”--there was a boldness of attack for which she was by no
-means prepared--“the time has now come to make an end of this comedy.”
-
-She fully agreed, yet the sixth sense given to woman found occasion to
-warn her that she didn’t know in the least to what she was agreeing.
-
-“You would have it so, you know.”
-
-He was asked succinctly to explain.
-
-“Well, it’s a long story.” Already there was a note in the mordant
-voice which his sister heard for the first time. “A long, a strange,
-and if you will, a romantic story. And let me say that it is by no wish
-of my own that I tell it. However, Fate is stronger than we are in
-these little matters, and no doubt wiser.”
-
-“No doubt,” said Charlotte drily. But somehow that note in his voice
-made her uneasy, and the look in his face seemed to hold her every
-nerve in a vise. “You are speaking in riddles, my friend,” she added
-with a little flutter of impatience.
-
-“It may be so, but before I go on I want you clearly to understand that
-it is you, not I, who insist on bringing the roof down upon us.”
-
-Charlotte’s only reply was to sit very upright, with her sarcastic
-mouth drawn in a rigid line. She could not understand in the least what
-her brother was driving at, but in his manner was a new, a strange
-intensity which somehow gave her a feeling of profound discomfort.
-
-“You don’t realize what you are doing,” he said. “Still you are not to
-blame for that. But the time has come to pull aside the curtain, and to
-let you know what we all owe a woman who has been cruelly maligned.”
-
-Charlotte stiffened perceptibly at these words. After all, the case
-was no more and no less than for more than twenty years she had known
-it to be. Still open confession was good for the soul! It was a sordid
-intrigue, an intrigue of a nature which simply made her loathe the man
-opposite. How dare he--and with a servant in his own house! If looks
-could have slain, his Grace would have been spared the necessity to
-continue a very irksome narrative.
-
-“Make provision for her and send her away.” The sharp voice was like
-the crack of a gun.
-
-The Duke raised himself slowly and painfully on his elbows. “Hold your
-tongue,” he said. And his eyes struck at her. “Be good enough to forgo
-all comment until you have heard the whole story.”
-
-It was trying Charlotte highly, but she set herself determinedly to
-listen.
-
-“Do you remember when she first came here, as second maid to poor
-Rachel, a fine, upstanding, gray-eyed Scots girl, one of the most
-beautiful creatures you ever saw? Do you remember her devotion? No, I
-see you have forgotten.” He closed his eyes for an instant, while the
-woman opposite kept hers fixed steadily upon him. “Well, I don’t excuse
-myself. But Rachel and I were never happy; the plain truth is we ought
-not to have married. It was a family arrangement and it recoiled upon
-us. The Paringtons are an effete lot and the same can be said of us
-Dinnefords. Nature asked for something else.”
-
-Now that he had unlocked the doors of memory a growing emotion became
-too much for the Duke, and for a moment he could not go on. His sister,
-in the meantime, continued to hold him with pitiless eyes.
-
-“One might say,” he went on, “that it was the call of the blood. I
-remember her first as the factor’s daughter, a long-legged creature
-in a red tam-o’-shanter, running about the woods of Ardnaleuchan. You
-haven’t forgotten Donald Sanderson, the father?”
-
-“No, I haven’t forgotten him,” said Charlotte.
-
-“That was a fine fellow. ‘Man Donald’ as our father used to call him,
-helped me to stalk my first stag. We ranged the woods together days on
-end. I sometimes think I owe more to that man than to any other human
-being.”
-
-Again he was silent, but the eyes of his sister never left his face.
-
-“Yes, it was the call of the blood.” He sighed as he passed his
-handkerchief over his face which was now gray and glistening. “As I
-say, Rachel and I ought not to have married; we didn’t suit each other.
-Our marriage was a family arrangement. It had almost ceased to be
-tolerable long before the end, but we kept our compact as well as we
-could, for we were determined that other people should not suffer. And
-then came Rachel’s long illness, and the girl’s wonderful devotion--do
-you remember how Rachel would rather have her with her than any of the
-nurses? And then she died, and of course that altered everything.”
-
-Lady Wargrave sat as if carved out of stone, her eyes still upon the
-bleak face of the invalid. “Is that all?” she said.
-
-“No, it is not. There’s more to tell.”
-
-“Tell it then so that we may have done with it.” Charlotte’s voice
-quivered.
-
-“Very well, since you insist.” The softness of the tone was surprising,
-yet to Charlotte it said nothing. “Rachel died and everything, as I
-say, was altered. ‘Man Donald’s’ daughter became the only woman who
-ever really meant anything to me. Somehow I felt I couldn’t do without
-her. And to make an end of a long and tedious story, finally I married
-her.”
-
-“You _married_ her!” Lady Wargrave sat as if she had swallowed a poker.
-
-“Yes, but before doing so I made a condition. Things were to go on as
-they were, provided....”
-
-“... provided!” Excitement fought curiosity in Charlotte’s angry voice.
-
-“... she didn’t bring a boy into the world.”
-
-“I’m afraid I don’t understand.” Charlotte’s voice cracked in the
-middle.
-
-“It was quite a simple arrangement, and in the circumstances it seemed
-the best. So long as there was no man child to complicate the thing
-unduly, the world was to be kept out of our secret. At the time it
-seemed wise and right to do that. Otherwise it would have meant a
-fearful upset for everybody.”
-
-“Is one to understand,” gasped Charlotte, “that when Rachel died you
-actually married this--this woman?”
-
-The Duke nodded. “But I made the condition that our secret should be
-rigidly guarded--always assuming that Fate did not prove too much for
-us. She went to the little house on the river at Buntisford, where I
-used to go for the fishing and shooting. And she gave me ten years of
-happiness--the only happiness I have known. And then came my breakdown,
-since when she has nursed me with more than a wife’s devotion.” His
-voice failed suddenly and he lay back in his chair with closed eyes.
-
-It was left to Charlotte to break the irksome silence that followed.
-
-“How could you be so mad!” She spoke under her breath not intending her
-words to be heard, but a quick ear caught them.
-
-“Nay,” he said in the tone that was so new to her, “it was the only
-thing to do. It was the call of the blood. And this was a devoted
-woman, a woman one could trust implicitly.”
-
-“Madness, my friend, madness!”
-
-He shook his head somberly. “All life is a madness, if you will a
-divine madness. It is a madness that damns the consequences. By taking
-too much thought for the morrow we entomb ourselves. When Rachel died
-life meant for me the woman of my choice. And, Charlotte, let me
-say this”--he raised himself in his chair and looked at his sister
-fixedly--“she is the best woman I have ever known.”
-
-For a moment she sat a picture of bewilderment, and then in a voice
-torn with emotion she said, “Out of regard for the others things had
-better go on as they are. But perhaps you will tell me, are there any
-children of this marriage?”
-
-“There is one child.”
-
-Charlotte caught her breath sharply.
-
-“A girl. And in accordance with our compact she has been brought
-up in complete ignorance of her paternity. It seemed wise that she
-should know nothing. Her mother had her reared among her own people,
-because it was her mother’s express wish that the children of the first
-marriage should suffer no prejudice; and at the present time neither
-the girl herself nor the world at large is any the wiser.”
-
-Charlotte began to breathe a little more freely. “At all events,” she
-said, “that fact seems to confirm one’s opinion that things had better
-go on as they are.”
-
-But her brother continued to gaze at her with somber eyes. “Charlotte,”
-he said very slowly, “you have forced me to tell a story I had
-hoped would never be told in my lifetime. I have had to suffer your
-suspicions, but now that you are in the secret, you must share its
-responsibilities.”
-
-“I don’t understand you,” said Lady Wargrave bluntly.
-
-“I will explain. A horrible injustice has been done this girl, the
-child of the second marriage. So much is clear to you, no doubt?”
-
-Lady Wargrave’s only reply was to tighten her lips.
-
-“You wish me to be still more explicit?”
-
-She invited him to be so.
-
-“Well, as far as I can I will be.” His air was simple matter of fact.
-“But I warn you that we are now at the point where we have to realize
-that Fate is so much stronger than ourselves.”
-
-A momentary hesitation drew a harsh, “Go on, let me hear the worst.”
-
-“Can’t you guess who this girl is?” he said abruptly.
-
-“Pray, why should one?”
-
-“She is the girl Jack wants to marry.”
-
-A long silence followed this announcement. It would have been kind
-perhaps had he helped his sister to break it, but a clear perception
-of the first thought in her mind had raised a barrier. With a patience
-that was half-malicious he waited for a speech that he knew was bound
-to come.
-
-“It was to have been expected,” she said at last with something
-perilously like a snarl of subdued anger.
-
-“Why expected?” They were the words for which he had waited, and he
-seized them promptly.
-
-“She has been too much for you, my friend.”
-
-“Whom do you mean?”
-
-“The mother, of course. She has planned this marriage so that she might
-be revenged upon us here.”
-
-He was quite ready to do Charlotte the justice of allowing that it was
-the only view she was likely to hold. The pressure of mere facts was
-too heavy. Words of his would be powerless against them; and yet he was
-determined to use every means at his command to clear that suspicion
-from her mind.
-
-“I hope you will believe me when I tell you she is entirely innocent,”
-he said in a voice of sudden emotion.
-
-Charlotte slowly shook her head, but it was a gesture of defeat. She
-was beyond malice now.
-
-“Charlotte, I give you my word that she had no part in it.”
-
-His sister looked at him pityingly. “It is impossible to believe that,”
-she said without bitterness.
-
-“So I see. But it is my duty to convince you.”
-
-For a moment he fought a growing emotion, and then his mind suddenly
-made up, he pressed the button of the electric bell that was near his
-elbow.
-
-
-V
-
-The familiar summons was answered by Harriet herself. As she came into
-the room her rather scared eyes were caught at once by the profile of
-the dowager. But the reception in store for her was far from being of
-the kind she had reason to expect, for which she had had too little
-time to prepare.
-
-To begin with Lady Wargrave rose to receive her. And that stately and
-considered act was supplemented by the simple words of the Duke.
-
-“She knows everything,” he said from the depths of his invalid chair,
-without a suspicion of theatricality.
-
-Harriet, all the color struck from her face, shrank back, a picture of
-horror and timidity.
-
-“Sit down, my dear, and let us hold a little family council.” That note
-of intimacy and affection was so strange in Charlotte’s ear, that it
-hit her almost as hard as the previous words had hit the wife of his
-bosom. However, the two ladies sat, and the Duke with a nonchalance
-that hardly seemed credible, went on in a quietly domestic voice, as
-he turned to Harriet again. “We shall value your help and advice, if
-you feel inclined to give it, in this matter of Mary and the young man
-Dinneford.”
-
-At this amazing speech Lady Wargrave stirred uneasily on her cushion
-of thorns. She breathed hard, her mordant mouth grew set, in her grim
-eyes were unutterable things.
-
-“One moment, Johnnie,” she interposed. “Does Mrs.--er Sanderson quite
-understand what it means to us?”
-
-“Perfectly,” he said, “no one better.” The depth of the tone expressed
-far more than those dry words. “It may help matters,” he added, turning
-to Harriet again, “if I say at once that we are going to ask you to
-make two decisions in the name of the people you have served so long
-and so faithfully. And the first is this: Since, as you will see I
-have been forced, much against my will, to let a third person into our
-secret, you have now the opportunity of taking your true position in
-the sight of the world.”
-
-Lady Wargrave shivered. Somehow this was a turn of the game she had not
-been able to foresee.
-
-“That is to say,” the Duke went on, “you have now, as far as I am
-concerned, full liberty to assume your true style and dignity as
-mistress here. For more than twenty years you have sacrificed yourself
-for others, but the time has now come when you need do so no longer.
-What do you say?”
-
-Harriet did not speak. Lady Wargrave was silent also, but a kind of
-stony horror was freezing her. The whole situation had become so
-fantastic that she felt the inadequacy of her emotions.
-
-“You shall have a perfectly free hand,” the Duke went on. “Assume
-your position now, and good care shall be taken that you are amply
-maintained in it. What do you say, my dear?” he added gently.
-
-Tears were melting her now, and she was unable to speak.
-
-“Well, think it over,” said his Grace. “And be assured that whichever
-course you take, it will be the right one. We owe you more than we can
-repay. However, that is only one issue, and there is another, which is
-hardly less important.”
-
-Lady Wargrave stirred again on her cushion. For a moment there was not
-a sound to be heard in the room.
-
-“You see,” the Duke went on, “I’ve been giving anxious thought to--to
-this girl of ours. And I really don’t see, having regard to all the
-circumstances, why justice should any longer be denied her. No matter
-who the man is, he is lucky to get her. And, as I understand, they are
-a very devoted couple.”
-
-“Oh, yes, they are!” The words were Harriet’s and they were uttered in
-a tone broken by emotion.
-
-“Well, you shall make the decision,” he said. “You know, of course, how
-the matter stands.” Harriet bowed her head in assent, and his Grace
-turned an eye bright with malice upon the Dowager. “You see, Charlotte,
-this girl of ours, brought up in a very humble way, and left to fight
-her own battle, under the providence of the good God, absolutely
-declines to come among us unless she has the full and free consent of
-the head of the clan. So far that consent has not been given, and if
-in the course of the next week it is not forthcoming, the young man
-Dinneford threatens to return to Canada.”
-
-“I see.” The walls of Charlotte’s world had fallen in, her deepest
-feelings had been outraged, but she was still perfect mistress of
-herself. She turned her hard eyes upon Harriet, but in them now was
-a look very different from the one that had been wont to regard the
-housekeeper.
-
-Much had happened in a very little time, but to the last a fine
-tactician, Charlotte had contrived to keep her head. She was in the
-presence of calamity, she had met a blow that would have broken a
-weaker person in pieces, but already a line of action was formed in her
-mind. One thing alone could save them, and that the continued goodwill
-of the woman they had so long misjudged and traduced.
-
-“Mrs. Sanderson”--she used the old name unconsciously--“we owe you a
-great deal.” It was not easy to make the admission, even if common
-justice rather than policy called for it. “I hope now you will let us
-add to the debt.”
-
-The Duke was forced to admire the dignity and the directness of the
-appeal. He knew how hard she had been hit. But that was not all.
-Marking his sister’s tone, intently watching her grim face, he saw how
-completely her attitude had changed. The other woman had conquered,
-but in spite of all he had suffered at the hands of Charlotte, it was
-difficult not to feel a certain respect as well as a certain pity for
-her in the hour of her defeat.
-
-By this, Harriet, too, had become mistress of herself. She, also, had
-suffered much, but she had never played for victory, and she was very
-far from the thought of it now. “I have but one wish,” she said.
-
-“And that is?” His tone was strangely gentle for her voice had failed
-suddenly.
-
-“To do what is right.”
-
-The simplicity of the words held them silent. Brother and sister looked
-at her with a kind of awe in their eyes. It was as if another world had
-opened to their rather bewildered gaze.
-
-“I want to do right to those who have been so good to me, and to my
-father and my grandfather before me.”
-
-Somehow that speech, gentleness itself, yet sharp as a sword, brought
-the blood to Lady Wargrave’s face. In a flash she saw and felt the
-justification of her brother’s amazing deed. This devoted woman in
-her selflessness held the master key to life and Fate; in a flash of
-insight she saw that groundlings and grovelers like themselves were
-powerless before it. Somehow those words, that bearing, solved the
-mystery. She could no longer blame her brother; he had been caught in
-the toils of an irresistible force.
-
-“Mrs. Sanderson”--there was reverence now in the harsh voice--“you are
-the best judge of what is right. We are content to leave the matter to
-your discretion.” Even if the accomplished tactician was uppermost in
-Charlotte’s words, in the act of uttering them was a large rather noble
-simplicity.
-
-The Duke nodded acquiescence.
-
-“I should like the present arrangement to go on,” said Harriet.
-“Perhaps the truth will have to be known some time, but let it come out
-after we are dead, when it can hurt nobody.”
-
-Lady Wargrave drew a long breath of relief and gratitude.
-
-“You are very wise,” she said.
-
-But the Duke took her up at once with a saturnine smile. “You seem to
-forget, Charlotte, that the existing arrangement can no longer go on.”
-
-“Pray, why not?”
-
-“You have just been kind enough to tell us,” he said bitingly, “that
-Sarah and the girls are going to live with you at Hill Street--except,
-of course, on one condition!”
-
-Their eyes met. Suddenly they smiled frostily at each other.
-
-“If you care to leave the matter to me,” said Charlotte, “I will see to
-that.”
-
-“But that woman, Sarah,” he persisted. “She’s so obstinate that we may
-have to tell her.”
-
-Charlotte shook her head doughtily. “I think I shall be able to manage
-her.”
-
-“So be it.” He smiled grimly. “Anyhow we shall be very glad to leave
-that matter in your hands.”
-
-“With perfect safety, I think you may do that.” And Charlotte, sore and
-embittered as she was, rounded off this comfortable assurance with a
-long sigh of relief.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-ARDORS AND ENDURANCES
-
-
-I
-
-“THERE,” cried Mary upon a note of triumph.
-
-An excited wave of that delightful journal, the _Morning Post_,
-accompanied the pæan. And then it was hurled across the breakfast-table
-with deft precision into the lap of Milly.
-
-“A marriage has been arranged,” said the courier of Hymen, “and will
-shortly take place between Charles, only son of the late Simeon
-Cheesewright and Mrs. Cheesewright, of Streatham Hill, and Mildred
-Ulrica, younger daughter of the late H. Blandish Wren and Mrs. Wren, 5,
-Victoria Mansions, Broad Place, Knightsbridge, W.”
-
-Again arose the triumphant cry.
-
-But Mrs. Wren, excavating the interior of a boiled egg, felt it to be
-her duty to check this unbridled enthusiasm. For some days past, with
-rather mournful iteration, she had let it be known that the impending
-announcement could not hope to receive her unqualified approval.
-
-In the first place, as she frankly admitted, the Marquis had spoiled
-her. She had to confess that he had proved sadly lacking in backbone
-when brought to the test, but his sternest critics could not deny that
-“before everything he was a gentleman.”
-
-Mrs. Wren ascribed her own pure taste in manhood to the fact that she
-had begun her career in the legitimate drama under the ægis of Mr.
-Painswick at the Theater Royal, Edinburgh. He, too, had been before
-everything a gentleman. Mr. Painswick had shaped Lydia Mifflin, as she
-was then, in his own inimitable mold. Upon a day she was to play Grace
-to his Digby Grant in “The Two Roses.” Then it was, as she had always
-felt, that she had touched her high-water mark; and the signal occasion
-was ever afterwards a beacon in her life. From that bright hour the Mr.
-Painswick standard had regulated the fair Lydia’s survey of the human
-male. Even the late lamented Mr. H. Blandish Wren, who was without a
-peer in “straight” comedy, whose Steggles in “London Assurance” had
-never been surpassed, even that paladin----. Still it isn’t quite fair
-to give away State secrets!
-
-Mrs. Wren had once said of Charles Cheesewright “that he was not out
-of the top drawer.” However, if he was not of the caste of Vere de
-Vere she had to own that “he had points.” He was one of those young
-men who mean more than they say, who do better than they promise, who
-clothe their thoughts with actions rather than words. Also, he had two
-motors--a Daimler and a Rolls-Royce, he had rooms in the Albany, and
-though perhaps just a little inclined to overdress, he had such a sure
-taste in jewelry that he took his fiancée once a week to Cartier’s. And
-beyond everything else, he had the supreme advantage over my lord that
-he knew his own mind pretty clearly.
-
-In the opinion of Princess Bedalia, Milly was an extremely lucky girl.
-Her young man was a simple, good fellow, honest as the day, he was
-incapable of any kind of meanness, he was very rich, and, what was
-hardly less important, he was very much in love. Milly, however, who
-had her mother’s knack of seeing men and events objectively, did not
-yield a final graceful assent until she extorted a promise from Mr.
-Charles that he would suffer the rape of his mustache, at the best a
-mere scrub of an affair, and that he would solemnly eschew yellow plush
-hats which made him look like a piano-tuner.
-
-Still, on this heroic morning, in the middle of July, Mrs. Wren seemed
-less pleased with the world than she had reason to be. She did some
-sort of justice to her egg, but she wouldn’t look at the marmalade.
-If the truth must be told, a rather histrionic mind was still haunted
-by the shade of the noble Marquis. As Milly, in one of her moments
-of engaging candor, had told Mary already, as far as her mother was
-concerned Wrexham had simply queered the pitch for everybody.
-
-Certainly that lady felt it to be her duty to rebuke Mary’s enthusiasm.
-There was nothing to make a song about. Milly was simply throwing
-herself away. If everyone had had their rights, she would have been
-Lady W., with a coronet on her notepaper. As it was, there was
-really nothing so very wonderful in being the wife of an overdressed
-tobacconist.
-
-Mary cried “Shame,” and for her pains was sternly admonished. One who
-has made such hay of her own dazzling matrimonial chances must not
-venture to say a word. She who might have queened it among the highest
-in the land merely by substituting the big word “Yes” for the small
-word “No” must forever hold her peace on this vexed subject. But Mary
-was in such wild spirits at the announcement in the _Morning Post_ that
-she refused to be browbeaten. She continued to sing the praises of
-“Charley” in spite of the clear annoyance of Mrs. Wren. The good lady
-was unable to realize that the girl was trying with might and main to
-stifle an ache that was almost intolerable.
-
-“What ho!” Milly suddenly exclaimed, withdrawing a slightly _retroussé_
-but decidedly charming nose from Page 5 of the _Morning Post_, “so
-they’ve actually made Uncle Jacob a Bart.”
-
-“My dear, you mean a baronet. Who?--made who a baronet?” Mrs. Wren laid
-down an imperious egg-spoon.
-
-“Jacob Cheesewright, Esquire, M.P. for Bradbury, a rich manufacturer
-and prominent philanthropist. He’s in the honor list just issued by the
-King’s government.”
-
-“Hooray!” Mary indulged in an enthusiastic wave of the tea-pot which
-happily was rather less than half full. “Which means, my dear Miss
-Wren, that one of these days there’s just a chance of your being my
-lady.”
-
-“As though that could possibly matter!” cried Milly upon a note of the
-finest scorn imaginable.
-
-“As though that could possibly matter!” Mary’s reproduction of the note
-in question was so humorously exact that it sent her victim into a fit
-of laughter.
-
-But Mrs. Wren had her word to say on the subject. In her opinion,
-which was that of all sensible people, it mattered immensely.
-
-“As though it could!” persisted Milly.
-
-“My dear,” said Mrs. Wren, “that is shallow and ignorant. A baronetcy
-is a baronetcy. All people of breeding think so, anyway.”
-
-The prospect of Uncle Jacob’s elevation had already been canvassed
-in Broad Place by Charles, his nephew. There was evidently something
-in the wind Whitehall way. Uncle Jacob had professed such a heroic
-indifference to Aunt Priscilla’s intelligent anticipations, that even
-Charles, his nephew, the simplest of simple souls, and a singularly
-unworldly young man, had been constrained to take an interest in the
-matter. As for Aunt Priscilla, she had been in such a state of flutter
-for the past two months, that the upper servants at Thole Park,
-Maidstone, even had visions of an earldom. Still, as Mr. Bryant, the
-butler, who in his distinguished youth had graduated at Bridport House,
-Mayfair, remarked to Mrs. Jennings the housekeeper in his statesmanlike
-way, “The Limit for baby’s underclothing is a baronetcy.”
-
-
-II
-
-Breakfast was just at an end when the trim parlormaid came into the
-room with a portentous-looking milliner’s box. It had that moment
-arrived, and on examination was found to contain a long coat of
-sable. This enchanting garment was with Mary’s best wishes for future
-happiness.
-
-The donor was scolded roundly for her lavishness, but Milly was
-delighted by the gift, and Mrs. Wren, who had professed a stern
-determination to be no longer friends with Mary was rather touched. She
-well knew that she was a person “to bank on.” Besides, Mrs. Wren had an
-honest admiration for a fine talent and the unassumingness with which
-it was worn. She was incapable of making an enemy, for her one idea
-was to bring pleasure to other people. If ever human creature had been
-designed for happiness it must have been this girl, yet none could have
-been more fully bent on casting it willfully away.
-
-As a fact, both Milly and her mother had been much troubled by the
-course of recent events. The previous afternoon Jack had taken a sad
-farewell of his friends in Broad Place. His passage was already booked
-in the _Arcadia_, which that very Saturday was to sail from Liverpool
-to New York. All his hopes had proved futile, all his arguments vain.
-Mary could not be induced to change her mind, which even at the
-eleventh hour he had ventured to think was just possible. In those
-last desperate moments, strength of will had enabled her to stick to
-her resolve. And in the absence of any intimation from Bridport House
-the Tenderfoot had been driven to carry out his threat. Yet up till
-the very last he had tried his utmost to persuade the girl he loved to
-merge her own life in his and accompany him to that new world where a
-career awaited him.
-
-Perhaps these efforts had not been wholly reasonable. She had a real
-vocation for the theater if ever girl had, even if he had a real
-vocation for jobbing land. But allowance has to be made for a strong
-man in love. He was in sorry case, poor fellow, but her sense of duty
-to others was so strong, that even if it meant tragic unhappiness for
-both, as it surely must, she still sought the courage not to yield.
-
-Such a decision was going to cost a very great deal. The previous
-afternoon, at the moment of parting, she had been fully aware of that,
-and hour by hour since she had realized it with a growing intensity.
-A stern effort of the will had been needed for Princess Bedalia to
-achieve her five hundred-and-sixty-second appearance that evening; she
-had spent a miserable night and now, in spite of the whole-heartedness
-with which she threw herself into Milly’s affairs, her laugh was
-pitched a little too high.
-
-Since the visit to Bridport House she had come to know her own mind
-quite definitely. She was deeply in love with Jack, but unless the
-powers that were gave consent, she was now resolved never to marry him.
-In vain her friends continued to assure her that such an attitude was
-wrong. In vain the Tenderfoot declared it to be simply preposterous.
-Cost what it might, it had become a point of honor not to yield. To one
-of such clear vision, with, as it seemed, a rather uncanny insight into
-the workings of worlds beyond her own, it was of vital importance to
-study the interests of Bridport House.
-
-Milly, even if very angry with her friend, could not help admiring this
-devotion to a quixotic sense of right, and the force of character which
-faced the issue so unflinchingly. She could not begin to understand
-the point of view, but she well knew what it was going to cost. And
-this morning, in spite of the pleasant and piquant drama of her own
-affairs, she could not rid herself of a feeling of distress on Mary’s
-account. Now it had come “to footing the bill,” a heavy price would
-have to be paid. And to Milly’s shrewd, engagingly material mind, the
-whole situation was exasperating.
-
-So much for the thoughts uppermost in a loyal heart, while the
-misguided cause of them danced a _pas seul_ in honor of the morning’s
-news. Milly, indeed, as she gazed in the glass over the chimney-piece
-to see what sort of a figure she made in the coat of sable, was much
-nearer tears than was either seemly or desirable. Still, in spite of
-that, she was able to muster a healthy curiosity upon the subject of
-her appearance. Fur has a trick of making common people look more
-common, and uncommon people look more uncommon, a trite fact of which
-Milly, the astute, was well aware. It was pleasant to find at any
-rate that a moment’s fleeting survey set all her doubts at rest upon
-that important point. The coat, a dream of beauty, became her quite
-miraculously. What a virtue there was in that deep, rich gloss! It gave
-new values to the eyes, the hair, the rounded chin, even the piquant
-nose of the wearer.
-
-“You’re a dear!” Milly burst out, as she turned aside from the glass.
-But the person to whom the tribute was offered was quite absorbed
-in looking through the open window. Indeed, at that very moment a
-succession of royal toots from a motor horn ascended from the precincts
-of Broad Place, and Mary ran out on to the veranda with a view halloa.
-Then, her face full of humor and eloquence, she turned to look back
-into the room with the thrilling announcement: “Charley’s here!”
-
-
-III
-
-In two minutes, or rather less as time is measured in Elysium, Mr.
-Charles Cheesewright had entered that pleasant room with all the gay
-assurance of an accepted suitor.
-
-“How awfully well it reads, doesn’t it?” he said, taking up the
-_Morning Post_ with the fingers of a lover.
-
-“Uncle Jacob’s baronetcy?” said Mary, with an eye of bold mischief.
-
-“Oh, no! That’s a bit of a bore,” said Mr. Charles with a polite
-grimace.
-
-“Why a bore?”
-
-“Uncle Jacob has no heir and he’s trying to arrange for me to be the
-second bart.”
-
-Princess Bedalia looked with a royal air at her favorite. “The truth
-is, dear Charles, you are shamelessly pleased about the whole matter.”
-
-“Well, ye-es, I am.” Charles was hopelessly cornered, but like any
-other self-respecting Briton he was quite determined to put as good
-a face as possible upon a most damaging admission. “I am so awfully
-pleased for Milly. And, of course, for Uncle Jacob.”
-
-“Not to mention Aunt Priscilla,” interposed Milly. It was her proud
-boast that she had already tried a fall with Aunt Priscilla, had tried
-it, moreover, pretty successfully. That lady, within her own orbit, was
-a great light, but Miss Wren had proved very well able for her so far.
-The Aunt Priscillas of the world were not going to harry Miss Wren, and
-it was by no means clear that this simple fact did not count as much
-to her honor in the sight of Uncle Jacob as it undoubtedly did in the
-sight of Charles, his nephew.
-
-At any rate, Mr. Charles had come that morning to Broad Place on a
-diplomatic mission. It seemed that Uncle Jacob had made the sporting
-suggestion that the happy pair should motor down to Thole Park,
-Maidstone, for luncheon, that Charles, whose only merit in the sight of
-heaven was that he was “plus one” at North Berwick, should afterwards
-give careful consideration to the new nine-hole course which had been
-laid out in front of the house by the renowned Alec Thomson of Cupar,
-while Milly had a little heart-to-heart talk with Aunt Priscilla.
-
-In a word, it began to look like being quite a good world for Charles
-and Milly. And even Mrs. Wren was constrained to admit it. Sheer human
-merit was becoming a little too much for the higher criticism. And
-daily these twain were discovering new beauties in each other. For one
-thing, Charles’s upper lip was now as smooth as a baby’s, and a mouth
-so firm and manly was thereby disclosed that it really seemed a pity
-to hide it. Moreover, for a fortnight past, in subtle, unsuspected
-ways he had been bursting forth into fine qualities. This morning, for
-instance, he seemed to have added a cubit to his stature. He was in the
-habit of saying in regard to himself that “he was not a flyer,” but
-really if you saw him at the angle Milly did, and you came to think
-about him in her rational manner, it began to seem after all he might
-turn out a bit of one. If only he could be persuaded to give up his
-piano-tuner’s hat there would be hope for him anyway.
-
-
-IV
-
-Milly had scarcely left the room to put on her things before she was
-back in it. And she returned in such a state of excitement that she
-could hardly speak. The cause of it, moreover, following hard upon her
-heels, was a wholly unexpected visitor.
-
-“He was just coming in at the front door,” Milly explained, as soon as
-the state of her emotions would allow her to do so. “I was never so
-taken aback in my life. Why, a feather would have downed me.”
-
-In that moment of drama it was not too much to say that a feather
-would have had an equal effect upon Mary. If human resolve stood for
-anything, and it stood for a good deal in the case of Jack Dinneford,
-he should have been on his way to Liverpool. At six o’clock the
-previous evening they had parted heroically, not expecting to see each
-other again. For seventeen hours or so, they had been steeling their
-wills miserably. About 2 a.m., the hour when ghosts walk and pixies
-dance the foxtrot, both had felt that, after all, they would not be
-strong enough to bear the self-inflicted blow. But daylight had found
-them true to the faith that was in them. She had just enough fortitude
-not to telephone a change of mind, he was just man enough to decide not
-to miss the 10.5 from Euston.
-
-Still, when the best has been said for it, the human will is but a
-trivial affair. Man is not much when the Fates begin to weave their
-magic web. A taxi was actually at the door of Jack’s chambers, nay,
-his luggage had even been strapped into the front of the vehicle, when
-there came an urgent message by telephone from Bridport House to say
-that his Grace most particularly desired that Mr. Dinneford and Miss
-Lawrence would come to luncheon at half-past one.
-
-What was a man to do? To obey the command was, of course, to forgo all
-hope of sailing by the _Arcadia_. To ignore it was to forgo all hope of
-entering Elysium. In justice to Mr. Dinneford it took him rather less
-than one minute to decide. His servant was promptly ordered to unship
-his gear and dismiss the taxi.
-
-It was the nearest possible shave. His Grace had run matters so
-fine, that had he delayed his communication another two minutes, the
-Tenderfoot would have been on his way to New York. Some miraculous
-change of plan had occurred at the fifty-ninth minute of the eleventh
-hour. Exactly what it was must now be the business of a distracted
-lover to find out.
-
-Jack’s totally unexpected return to Broad Place was in itself an epic.
-And his unheralded appearance had such an effect upon Mary, upon Milly,
-upon Mrs. Wren, that he regretted not having had the forethought
-to telephone his change of plans. He came as a bolt from the blue,
-bringing with him an immensely difficult moment; and the presence
-of Mr. Charles Cheesewright, of whom Jack only knew by hearsay,
-undoubtedly added to its embarrassments.
-
-Before anything could be done, even before the excited Milly could
-interpose a “Tell me, is it all right?” it was necessary for these
-paladins to be made known to each other. There was wariness on the part
-of both in the process. Neither was quite able to accept the other on
-trust. But a brief taking of the moral temperature by two members of
-the sex which inclines to reserve convinced the one that Wrexham’s
-successor had the air and the look of a good chap, and what was quite
-as important, convinced the other that the heir to the dukedom was not
-the least of a swankpot. All of which was so far excellent.
-
-A desire to ask a thousand questions was simply burning holes in Milly.
-But she had to endure the torments of martyrdom. Questions could not
-be asked in the presence of Charles. It called for a great effort to
-behave as if the bottom had not fallen out of the universe. In the most
-heroic way she kept the conversation at a diplomatic level, remarking
-among other things that it was an ideal day for motoring, which finally
-reminded her that she must really go and put on her hat.
-
-“And don’t forget a thick veil,” Mary called after her, in a voice of
-superhuman detachment.
-
-The business of not letting the innocent Charles into the secret was a
-superb piece of comedy. There is really no need to write novels or to
-go to the play. They are the stuff our daily lives are made of. The way
-in which these four people set themselves to hoodwink a Simple Simon
-of a fifth was quite a rich bit of humor. Little recked Mr. Charles
-Cheesewright that the heavens had just opened in Broad Place.
-
-At last Milly returned _cap-à-pie_, and then by the mercy of Divine
-Providence Mr. Charles suddenly remembered that it was a long way to
-Maidstone and that it was now a quarter past eleven.
-
-“I’m quite ready when you are,” said Milly to her cavalier, with all
-the guile of a young female serpent. Mr. Charles shook hands gravely
-and Britishly all round, and Mary wished them a pleasant journey, and
-Mrs. Wren “hoped they would wrap up well,” and then Milly stepped
-deftly back three paces from the door, saying, “You know the way down,
-Charley,” as clear an intimation as any young man could desire that it
-was up to him to lead it.
-
-Charles led the way accordingly, and then came Milly’s chance.
-
-“What _has_ happened?”
-
-“Uncle Albert has sent for us.”
-
-“For both?”
-
-“For both!”
-
-Just for a moment Mary’s feelings nearly proved too much for her.
-Having come to despair of Bridport House, there had been no reason to
-hope for this sudden change of front. She simply couldn’t fathom it.
-That was also true of Milly. And as the significance of the whole thing
-rushed upon that imperious creature, she turned to Mary in the manner
-of Helen, the Spartan Queen. “A last word to you, Miss Lawrence!” Her
-voice trembled with excitement. “If you do anything idiotic, I’ll never
-speak to you again. And that’s official!”
-
-
-V
-
-As the crow flies, it is just nine minutes from Broad Place to Bridport
-House. Therefore they had time to burn. And as it was such a perfect
-day for motoring, it was a day equally well adapted for sitting under
-the trees in the Park.
-
-_Force majeure_ was applied so vigorously by Mrs. Wren, with timely aid
-from the Tenderfoot, that Mary was not given half a chance to jib at
-this new and amazing turn of fortune’s shuttle. She must wear her new
-hat with the roses--Mrs. Wren. She must wear Raquin’s biscuit-colored
-masterpiece--Mr. Dinneford. Her diamond earrings thought Mrs. Wren. Mr.
-Dinneford thought her old-fashioned seed pearl. There was never really
-any question of her going to luncheon at Bridport House at 1.30. Her
-friends and counselors did not even allow it to arise. The only thing
-that need trouble her was how she looked when she got there.
-
-En route she made a picture of immense distinction beyond a doubt.
-Whether it was the hat with the roses, or the sunshine of July, or the
-dress of simple muslin, which on second thoughts seemed more in keeping
-with the occasion than the Raquin masterpiece, and in the opinion of
-Mrs. Wren had the further merit “that it gave her eyes a chance,” or
-her favorite earrings which Aunt Harriet had given her as a little
-girl; or the fact that Jack walked beside her, and that Happiness
-is still the greatest of Court painters, who shall say?--but in the
-course of a pilgrimage from Albert Gate to the Marble Arch and half way
-back again, she certainly attracted more than her share of the public
-notice. In fact, with her fine height and her lithe grace she actually
-provoked a hook-nosed, hard-featured dame in a sort of high-hung
-barouche to turn in the most deliberate manner and look at her. Or it
-may have been because the Tenderfoot in passing had raised a reluctant,
-semi-ironical hat.
-
-“Aunt Charlotte,” said he.
-
-“I hope Aunt Charlotte is not as disagreeable as she looks,” was Mary’s
-thought, but doubtless remembering in the nick of time Talleyrand’s
-famous maxim, she merely said, “What a _clever_ face!”
-
-“Is it?” said Jack, unconcernedly. But his mind was on other things,
-perhaps.
-
-As a matter of fact, it _was_ on other things.
-
-“Let’s sit here five minutes,” he said, as they came to a couple of
-vacant chairs. “Then I’ll tell you a bit of news.”
-
-They sat accordingly. And the bit of news was the following:
-
-“Muriel’s hooked it.”
-
-Respect for her mother tongue caused Mary to demand a repetition of
-this cryptic statement.
-
-“Hooked it with her Radical,” Jack amplified. “They were married
-yesterday morning, quite quietly, ‘owing to the indisposition of
-his Grace,’ the papers say. And they are now in Scotland on their
-honeymoon.”
-
-“Let us hope they’ll be happy,” said Mary. “She has a very brilliant
-husband, at any rate.”
-
-“Not a doubt of that. If brains breed happiness, they’ll be all right.”
-
-But do brains breed happiness? that was the question in their minds at
-the moment. Aunt Charlotte had brains undoubtedly, but as she passed
-them three minutes since no one could have said that she looked happy.
-The Duke had brains, but few would have said that he was happy. Mary
-herself had brains, and they had brought her within an ace of wrecking
-her one chance of real happiness.
-
-They were in the midst of this philosophical inquiry, when Chance, that
-prince of magicians, gave the kaleidoscope a little loving shake, and
-hey! presto! the other side of the picture was laughingly presented to
-them.
-
-A rather lop-sided young man in a brown bowler hat was marching head
-in air along the gravel in front of them. One shoulder was a little
-higher than its neighbor, his clothes looked shabby in the sun of July,
-his gait was slightly grotesque, yet upon his face was a smile of rare
-complacency. In one hand he held a small girl of five, and in the other
-a small boy to match her; and that may have been why at this precise
-moment he looked as if he had just acquired a controlling interest in
-the planet. And yet there must have been some deeper, subtler reason
-for this young man’s air of power mingled with beatitude.
-
-Rather mean of mansion as he was, it was impossible for two shrewd
-spectators of the human comedy on the Park chairs to ignore him as he
-swung gayly by. In spite of his impossible hat and his weird trousers,
-the mere look on his face was almost cosmic in its significance, he
-was so clearly on terms with heaven. But in any case he would have
-forcibly entered their scheme of existence. Just as he came level with
-them he chanced to lower his gaze abruptly and by doing so caught the
-fascinated eyes of Mary fixed upon his face.
-
-“Good morning, Miss Lawrence. What a nice day!”
-
-He was not in a position to take off his hat, but he enforced a hearty
-greeting with a superb bow, and passed jauntily on.
-
-The Tenderfoot could not help being amused. “Who’s your friend?” He
-turned a quizzical eye upon a countenance glowing with mischief.
-
-“That’s Alf.”
-
-“In the name of all that’s wonderful, who is Alf?” The tone was
-expostulation all compact, but as mirth was frankly uppermost, even
-the most sensitive democrat could hardly have resented it.
-
-“He’s a man on a newspaper.”
-
-“I see,” said the Tenderfoot. But somehow it didn’t explain him.
-
-“An old friend, my dear, and he’s now the Press, with a capital letter.
-The other day he interviewed me for his paper.”
-
-“How could you let him?” gasped the Tenderfoot.
-
-“For the sake of old times.” Suddenly she loosed her famous note. “That
-little man is in my stars. He dates back to my earliest flapperdom,
-when my great ambition was to kill him. He was the greengrocer’s boy in
-the next street, and he used to call after me:
-
- “‘I am Mary Plantagenet;
- Who would imagine it?
- Eyes full of liquid fire,
- Hair bright as jet;
- No one knows my hist’ry,
- I am wrapt in myst’ry,
- I am the She-ro
- Of a penny novelette.’”
-
-“Well, I hope,” said the Tenderfoot, “you jolly well lammed into him
-for such a piece of infernal cheek.”
-
-“Yes, I did,” she confessed. “One day I turned on him and boxed his
-ears, and I’m bound to say he’s been very respectful ever since. It
-was very amusing to be reminded of his existence when he turned up the
-other day. He paid me all sorts of extravagant compliments; he seems to
-hold himself responsible for any success I may have had.”
-
-“Nice of him.”
-
-“He says he has written me up for the past two years; and that when
-he edits a paper of his own, and he’s quite made up his mind that it
-won’t be long before he does, I can have my portrait in it as often as
-I want.”
-
-“_My_ Lord!”
-
-“All very honestly meant,” laughed Mary Plantagenet. “It is very
-charming of Alf--a _nom de guerre_, by the way. His real name is
-Michael Conner, but now he’s Alf of the _Millennium_. And the other day
-at our interview, when he came to talk of old times, somehow I couldn’t
-help loving him.”
-
-“What, love--_that_!”
-
-“There’s something to love in everybody, my dear. It’s really very
-easy to like people if you hunt for the positive--if that’s not a high
-brow way of putting it! The other day when Alf began to talk of his
-ambitions, and of the wife he had married, and of the little Alfs and
-the little Alfesses, I thought the more there are of you the merrier,
-because after all you are rather fine, you are good for the community,
-and you make this old world go round. Anyhow we began as enemies, and
-now we are friends ‘for keeps,’ and both Alf and I are so much the
-better for knowing it.”
-
-“I wonder!”
-
-“Of course we are. And when Alf is a great editor, as he means to be,
-and he is able to carry out his great scheme of founding a Universal
-Love and Admiration Society, for the purpose of bringing out the best
-in everybody, including foreign nations--his very own idea, and to my
-mind a noble one--he has promised to make me an original member.”
-
-“A very original member!” The Tenderfoot scoffed.
-
-But sitting there in the eye of the morning, with the gentle leaves
-whispering over his head, and the finest girl in the land by his side
-drawing a fanciful picture of “Alf” on the gravel with the point of her
-sunshade, he was not in the mood for mockery. The world was so full of
-a number of things, that it seemed but right and decent to have these
-large and generous notions. Let every atom and molecule that made up
-the pageant of human experience overflow in love and admiration of its
-neighbor. He was a dud himself, his dwelling-place was _en parterre_,
-yet as heaven was above him and She was at his elbow, there was no
-denying that the little man who had just passed out of sight had laid
-hold somehow of a divine idea.
-
-Yes, the ticket for the future was Universal Love and Admiration, at
-any rate for the heirs of the good God. Not a doubt that! He didn’t
-pretend to be a philosopher, or a poet, but even he could see that
-yonder little scug in the brown pot hat was a big proposition.
-
-“I wonder,” he mused aloud, “how the little bounder came to think of
-_that_?”
-
-“He says it came to him in his sleep.” And the artist at his elbow
-gave one final masterful curl to the amazing trousers of the latest
-benefactor of the human species.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-EVERYTHING FOR THE BEST
-
-
-I
-
-JACK glanced at the watch on his wrist. By the mercy of Allah there
-were fifty minutes yet. A whole fifty minutes yet to stay in heaven.
-And then....
-
-Suddenly hard set by thoughts which had no right to be there he looked
-up and away in the direction of Bridport House.
-
-“There they go!” He gave the pavement artist a little prod.
-
-“Who--goes--where?”
-
-“Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie.”
-
-True enough! Sublimely unconscious of two pairs of amused eyes upon
-them, Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie were passing slowly by. As
-usual at that hour they were riding their tall horses. And they became
-their tall horses so remarkably well that they might have belonged to
-the train of Artemis. In the saddle, at any rate, Cousin Blanche and
-Cousin Marjorie looked hard to beat.
-
-“Now for your precious theory,” said the Tenderfoot with malice.
-“Here’s your chance to hunt for the positive.”
-
-She fixed her eyes on the slowly-receding enemy. “Well, in the first
-place, my dear, those old-fashioned habits become them marvelously.”
-
-“No use for that sort of kit myself,” growled the hostile critic.
-
-“Then they are so much a part of their horses they might be female
-centaurs.”
-
-“And about as amusing as female centaurs.”
-
-“But we are hunting for the positive, aren’t we? We are trying ‘to
-affirm something,’ as Alf would say. Now those two and their horses are
-far grander works of art than anything that ever came out of Greece or
-Italy. It has taken millions of years to produce them and they are so
-perfect in their way that one wonders how they ever came to be produced
-at all.”
-
-“You might say that of anything or anybody--if you come to think of it.”
-
-“Of course. I agree. And so would Alf. And that’s why universal love
-and admiration are so proper and natural.”
-
-“Wait till you are really up against ’em and then you’ll see.”
-
-“The more I’m up against them--if I am to be up against them--the more
-I shall love and admire them, not for what they are perhaps, but for
-what they might be if only they’d take a little trouble over their
-parts in this wonderful Play, which I’m quite sure the Author meant to
-be so very much finer than we silly amateurs ever give it a chance of
-becoming.”
-
-The sunshade began to scratch the gravel again, while Jack Dinneford
-sighed over its owner’s crude philosophy.
-
-Presently he began to realize again that they were in a fool’s
-paradise. Surely they were taking a climb down too much for granted.
-Why should these hardshells give in so inexplicably? It was in the
-nature of things for a flaw to lurk under all this fair-seeming. Only
-fools would ever build on such a sublime pretense as Bridport House.
-Was it rational to expect its denizens to behave like ordinary sensible
-human people?
-
-In order to sidetrack his fears he turned again to watch the labors of
-the pavement artist. The tip of a gifted sunshade was doing wonderful
-things with the gravel. It had just evolved a _chef d’œuvre_, which
-however was only apparent to the eye of faith.
-
-“Who do you imagine that is?”
-
-Imagination was certainly needed. It would not have been possible
-otherwise to see a resemblance to anything human.
-
-“That is his lamp,” hovered the sunshade above this masterpiece. “That
-is his truncheon. Those are his boots. That is his overcoat. And there
-we have his helmet. And there,” the tip of the sunshade traced slowly,
-“the noble profile of the greatest dear in existence.”
-
-At that he was bound to own that had the Park gravel been more
-sensitive, here would have been a living portrait of Sergeant Kelly of
-the X Division. And even if it was only visible to the eye of faith it
-was pretext enough for honest laughter.
-
- “No one knows her hist’ry,
- She is wrapt in myst’ry,”
-
-he quoted softly.
-
-It was quite true. Various zephyrs and divers little birds had
-whispered the romantic fact in their ears long ago. But what did it
-matter? It was but one plume more in the cap of the Magician, a mere
-detail in that pageant of which Mystery itself is the last expression.
-
-There may have been wisdom in their laughter. At any rate it seemed to
-give them a kind of Dutch courage for the ordeal that was now so near.
-But a rather forced gayety did not long continue; it was soon merged in
-a further piece of news which Jack suddenly remembered.
-
-“By the way,” he announced, “there’s more trouble at Bridport House. My
-cousins, I hear, are going to live with Aunt Charlotte.”
-
-She was obliged to ask why, but he had to own that it was beyond his
-power to answer her question. All that he knew was that his cousins
-were “at serious outs” with their father, and that according to recent
-information they were on the point of leaving the paternal roof.
-
-The Tenderfoot, however, in professing a diplomatic ignorance of a
-matter to which he had indiscreetly referred, had only pulled up in
-the nick of time. He knew rather more than he said. “There’s a violent
-quarrel about Mrs. Sanderson,” was at the tip of his tongue, but
-happily he saw in time that such words in such circumstances would
-be pure folly. Nay, it was folly to have drifted into these perilous
-waters at all; and in the face of a suddenly awakened curiosity, he
-proceeded at once to steer the talk into a safer channel.
-
-[Illustration: “We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the light
-fringed her eyelids]
-
-After all, that was not very difficult. As they sat under the
-whispering leaves, gazing a little wistfully at the pomp of a summer’s
-day, heaven was so near that it hardly seemed rational to be giving
-a thought to those who dwelt in spheres less halcyon. The previous
-evening at six o’clock they had parted for ever in this very spot. But
-a swift turn of Fate’s shuttle had changed everything.
-
-As now they tried to understand what had occurred, it was hard to keep
-from building castles. An absurd old planet might prove, after all,
-such a wonderful place. When you are four-and-twenty and in love, and
-the crooked path suddenly turns to the straight, and the future is seen
-through magic vistas just ahead, surprising things are apt to arise,
-take shape, acquire a hue, a meaning. The light that never was on sea
-or land is quite likely to be found south of the Marble Arch and north
-of Hyde Park Corner. They were on the threshold of a very wonderful
-world. What gifts were theirs! Health, youth, a high-hearted joy in
-existence, here were the keys of heaven. Life was what they chose to
-make it.
-
-Poetry herself clothed them as with a garment. But not for a moment
-must they forget, even amid the dangerous joys of a rather wild
-reaction, that all might be illusion. Voices whispered from the leaves
-that as yet they were not out of the wood. Jack, it is true, was fain
-to believe that the latest act of Bridport House implied a very real
-change of heart. For all that, as the hour of Fate drew on, he could
-not stifle a miserable feeling of nervousness. And Mary, too, in spite
-of a proud surface gayety, felt faint within. The dream was far too
-good to be true.
-
-“Of _course_ it’s a climb down,” said Jack, whistling to keep up his
-courage. “Do you suppose Uncle Albert would have sent for us like this
-unless he meant to chuck up the sponge?”
-
-“We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the light fringed her
-eyelids.
-
-“We’ll build ’em as high as the moon!”
-
-She shook a whimsical head. And then the goad of youth drove her to a
-smile of perilous happiness. All sorts of subtle fears were lurking in
-that good, shrewd brain of hers. They were on the verge of chaos and
-Old Night--yet she had not the heart to rebuke him.
-
-The dread hour of one-thirty was now so very near, that it was idle
-to disguise the fact that one at least of the two people on the Park
-chairs had grown extremely unhappy. Mary was quite sure that a horrible
-ordeal was going to prove too much for her. It was hardly less than
-madness to have yielded in the way she had. But qualms were useless,
-fears were vain. There was only one thing to do. She must set her teeth
-and go and face the music.
-
-
-II
-
-Punctual to the minute they were at the solemn portals of Bridport
-House. And then as a servant in a grotesque livery piloted them across
-an expanse of rather pretentious hall into a somber room, full of
-grandiose decoration and Victorian furniture, a grand fighting spirit
-suddenly rose in one whose need of it was sore. Mary was quaking in
-her shoes, yet the joy of battle came upon her in the queerest, most
-unexpected way. It was as if a magician had waved his wand and all
-the paltry emotions of the past hour were dispelled. Perhaps it was
-that deep down in her slept an Amazon. Or a clear conscience may have
-inspired her; at any rate she had no need to reproach herself just
-then. She could look the whole world in the face. Her attitude had been
-sensitively correct; if other people did not appreciate that simple
-fact, so much the worse for other people!
-
-A long five minutes they waited in that large and dismal room, a
-slight flush of anxiety upon their faces, their hearts beating a
-little wildly, no doubt. In all that time not a word passed between
-them; the tension was almost more than they could bear. If Fate had
-kept till the last one final scurvy trick it would be too horrible!
-And then suddenly, in the midst of this grim thought, an old man came
-hobbling painfully in. Both were struck at once by the look of him.
-There was something in the bearing, in the manner, in the play of the
-rather exquisite face which spoke to them intimately. For a reason
-deeply obscure, which Jack and Mary were very far from comprehending,
-the welcome he gave her was quite touching. It was full of a simple
-kindness, spontaneous, unstudied, oddly caressing.
-
-Jack, amazed not a little by the heart-on-the-sleeve attitude of this
-old barbarian, could only ascribe it to the desire of a finished man of
-the world to put the best possible face on an impossible matter. Yet,
-somehow, that cynical view did not seem to cover the facts of the case.
-
-In a way that hardly belonged to a tyrant and an autocrat, the old man
-took one of the girl’s hands into the keeping of his poor enfeebled
-ones, and was still holding it when his sister and his eldest daughter
-came into the room. Both ladies were firm in the belief that this was
-the most disagreeable moment of their lives. Still it was their nature
-to meet things heroically, and they now proceeded to do so.
-
-The picture their minds had already formed of this girl was not
-a pleasing one. But as far as Lady Wargrave was concerned it was
-shattered almost instantly. The likeness between father and daughter
-was amazing. She had, in quite a remarkable degree, the look of
-noblesse the world had always admired in him, with which, however, he
-had signally failed to endow the daughters of the first marriage. But
-there was far more than a superficial likeness to shatter preconceived
-ideas. Another, more virile strain was hers. The mettle of the pasture,
-the breath of the moorland, had given her a look of purpose and fire,
-even if the grace of the salon had yielded much of its own peculiar
-amenity. Whatever else she might be, the youngest daughter of the House
-of Dinneford was a personality of a rare but vivid kind.
-
-As soon as the Duke realized that the ladies had entered the room,
-he gravely presented the girl, but with a touch of chivalry that she
-simply adored in him. The little note of homage melted in the oddest
-way the half-fierce constraint with which she turned instinctively to
-meet these enemies. Sarah bowed rather coldly, but Aunt Charlotte came
-forward at once with a proffered hand.
-
-“My sister,” murmured his Grace. In his eyes was a certain humor and
-perhaps a spice of malice.
-
-For a moment speech was impossible. The girl looked slowly from one
-to the other, and then suddenly it came upon her that these people
-were old and hard hit. She felt a curious revulsion of feeling. Their
-surrender was unconditional, and woman’s sixth sense told her what
-their thoughts must be. They must be suffering horribly. All at once
-the fight went out of her.
-
-In a fashion rather odd, with almost the naïveté of a child, she turned
-aside in a deadly fight with tears, that she managed to screw back into
-her eyes.
-
-It was left to Lady Wargrave to break a silence which threatened to
-become bitterly embarrassing: “Come over here and talk to me,” she said
-with a directness the girl was quick to obey.
-
-Lady Wargrave led the way to a couple of empty chairs near a window,
-Mary following with a kind sick timidity she had never felt before, and
-a heart that beat convulsively. What could the old dragon have to say
-to her? Even now she half expected a talon.
-
-The Dowager pointed to a chair, sat down grimly, and then said
-abruptly, “I hope you will be happy.”
-
-There was something in the words that threw the girl into momentary
-confusion. The fact was a miracle had occurred and her bewilderment
-was seeking a reason for it. Only one explanation came to her, and it
-was that these great powers, rather than suffer Jack to depart, were
-ready to make the best of his fiancée. There was not much comfort in
-the theory, but no other was feasible. Place and power, it seemed, were
-caught in meshes of their own weaving. And yet bruised in pride as she
-was by a situation for which she was not to blame, the rather splendid
-bearing of these old hard-bitten warriors touched a chivalry far down.
-Deep called unto deep. At the unexpected words of the griffin, she had
-again to screw the tears back into her eyes. And then she said in a
-voice that seemed to be stifling her, “It’s not my fault. I didn’t
-know.... I didn’t want this.... If you will.... If you will help me I
-will do my best ... not ... to....”
-
-The eyes of the Dowager searched her right through.
-
-“No, you are not to blame,” she said judicially. “We are all going to
-help you,” and then in a voice which cracked in the middle she added,
-to her own surprise, “my dear.”
-
-
-III
-
-At luncheon the girl had the place of honor at the right hand of his
-Grace. It was a rather chastened assembly. The arrival of the cuckoo
-in the nest was a fitting climax to Muriel. Both episodes were felt
-to be buffets of a wholly undeserved severity; they might even be
-said to have shaken a sublime edifice to its base. Not for a moment
-had the collective wisdom of the Dinneford ladies connived at Muriel’s
-Breadth, nor had it in any way countenanced the absurd fellow Jack in
-his infatuation for a chorus girl.
-
-Simple justice, however, compelled these stern critics to own that
-Bridport’s future duchess had come as a rather agreeable surprise. She
-differed so much from the person they had expected. They couldn’t deny
-that she was a personality. Moreover, there was a force, a distinction
-that might hope to mold and even harmonize with her place in the table
-of precedence. So good were her manners that the subtle air of the
-great world might one day be hers.
-
-It amazed them to see the effect she had already had on their
-fastidious and difficult parent. He was talking to her of men and
-events and times past in a way he had not talked for years. He
-discoursed of the great ones of his youth, the singers and dancers of
-the ’Sixties when he was at the Embassy at Paris and ginger was hot in
-the mouth. Then by a process of gradation he went on to tell his old
-stories of Gladstone and Dizzy, to discuss books and politics and the
-pictures in the Uffizi, and to cap with tales of his own travels an
-occasional brief anecdote, wittily told, of her own tours in America
-and South Africa.
-
-Sarah, Blanche, and Marjorie could not help feeling hostile, yet it
-was clear that this remarkable girl had put an enchantment on their
-father. While he talked to her the table, the room, the people in it
-seemed to pass beyond his ken. Candor bred the thought that it was
-not to be wondered at, her way of listening was so delightful. The
-beautiful head--it hurt them to admit the fact yet there it was--bent
-towards him in a kind of loving reverence, changing each phrase of his
-into something rare and memorable by a receptivity whose only wish
-was to give pleasure to a poor old man struggling with a basin of
-arrowroot--that sight and the sense of a presence alive in every nerve,
-a voice of pure music, and a face incapable of evil: was it surprising
-that a spell was cast upon their sire? Take her as one would she was a
-real natural force--an original upon whom the fairies had lavished many
-gifts.
-
-The family chieftain was renewing his youth, but only Charlotte
-understood why. In common with the rest of the world, Sarah, Blanche,
-and Marjorie were to be kept in ignorance of the truth--for the present
-at any rate. But already the Dinneford ladies had taken further
-counsel of the sage of Hill Street, and upon her advice all thought
-of secession from Bridport House had been given up. Reflection had
-convinced Lady Wargrave, now in possession of the light, that the true
-interests of the Family would be served by silence and submission.
-After all, Mrs. Sanderson was an old and valued retainer; her integrity
-was beyond question; her devotion and single-minded regard for their
-father’s welfare ought not to be forgotten!
-
-Taking all the circumstances into account, it was in Aunt Charlotte’s
-opinion, a case for humble pie. And to do the ladies no injustice they
-were ready to consume it gracefully. Jack, after all, was quite a
-distant connection; and what was even more important in their sight,
-the girl herself was presentable. Their father, at any rate, made no
-secret of the fact that he found her sympathetic. Nay, he was even a
-little carried away by her. As the meal went on, his manner towards her
-almost verged upon affection; and at the end, in open defiance of his
-doctors, he went to the length of wishing her happiness in a glass of
-famous Madeira.
-
-
-IV
-
-At five minutes past three Mary and Jack awoke with a start from a
-dream fantasy, to find themselves breathing the ampler air of Park
-Lane. Even then they could not quite grasp the meaning of all that had
-happened. Unconditional surrender indeed, yet so sudden, so causeless,
-so mysterious. Why had this strange thing come to be?
-
-But just now they were not in a mood to question the inscrutable wisdom
-of the good God. Behind the curtain of appearances the sun shone more
-bravely than ever, the dust of July lay a shade lighter on the trees
-across the road. No, there was really no need for Providence to give an
-account of itself at that moment; the nature of things called for no
-analysis.
-
-“I’ve fallen in love with that old man.”
-
-Even if Jack heard the words he was not in a position to offer comment
-upon them, for he was in the act of summoning a taxi from the lee of
-the Park railings.
-
-“Where shall we go?”
-
-“To the moon and back again?”
-
-And why not! It is not very far to the moon if you get hold of the
-right kind of vehicle. But MX 54,906 proved on inspection hardly to
-be adapted for the purpose; at any rate Jack came to the conclusion
-after a mere glance at the tires that Hampton Court, via Richmond and
-Elysium, would meet the case equally well.
-
-
-V
-
-Meanwhile his Grace in his favorite chair in his favorite room, was
-doing his best to envisage “The Outlook for Democracy,” with the aid
-of the _Quarterly Review_. Of a sudden the clock on the chimneypiece
-chimed a quarter past three, and he laid down an article perfect
-alike in form, taste and scholarship, with the air of one who expects
-something to happen.
-
-Something did happen. In almost the same moment, the housekeeper, Mrs.
-Sanderson, came into the room. She carried a tray containing a glass, a
-spoon, and a bottle.
-
-His Grace shook his head. “I’ve had a glass of Madeira.”
-
-“How could you be so unwise!” It was the gentle, half-smiling tone of
-a mother who reproves a very dear but willful child.
-
-She measured the draught inflexibly and he drank it like a man. As
-he returned the glass to the tray he sighed a little, and then with
-a whimsical glance upwards he said slowly and softly, “She has her
-mother’s brains.”
-
-As she looked down upon him, he saw the color darkening a strong and
-beautiful face. “And her father’s eyes.” The warmth of her voice almost
-stifled the words.
-
-For nearly a minute there was so deep a silence that even the clock on
-the chimneypiece was lost in it. And then very slowly and gently, as
-one who thinks aloud, he said, “I am trying to remember those words of
-Milton.” He closed his eyes with a smile of perplexity. “Ah, yes, yes.
-I have them now:
-
-“‘He for God only, she for God in him.’”
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
-
-On pages 43 and 51, Number Five Beaconsfield has been changed to Number
-Five, Beaconsfield.
-
-On page 53, universed has been changed to unversed.
-
-On page 58, spirt has been changed to spirit.
-
-On page 59, réclamce has been changed to réclame.
-
-On pages 72 and 218, a period has been added to Mrs.
-
-On page 88, Majorie has been changed to Marjorie.
-
-On page 90, Majorie’s has been changed to Marjorie’s.
-
-On pages 97, 107 and 117, commonsense has been changed to common sense.
-
-On page 102, the single quote has been removed from America’s.
-
-On page 130, the single quote has been removed from Wren’s.
-
-On page 143, decidely has been changed to decidedly.
-
-On page 163, cause has been changed to course.
-
-On page 188, the single quote has been removed from Parington’s.
-
-On page 235, Panjandram has been changerd to Panjandrum.
-
-On page 239, efficiency has been changed to efficiently.
-
-On page 259, redoutable has been changed to redoubtable.
-
-On page 266, a closing double quote has been added to “Whom do you mean?.
-
-On page 267, familar has been changed to familiar.
-
-On page 274, financée has been changed to fiancée.
-
-On page 290, green-grocer’s has been changed to greengrocer’s.
-
-On page 302, undeservedly has been changed to undeserved.
-
-On page 305, a closing double quote has been added to the last sentence.
-
-All other hyphenation and variant/archaic spellings have been retained.
-
-Illustrations in the midst of a paragraph have been moved to avoid
-interrupting the paragraph flow.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The time spirit, by J. C. Snaith</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The time spirit</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A romantic tale</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: J. C. Snaith</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 24, 2022 [eBook #68398]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: D A Alexander and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by University of California libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TIME SPIRIT ***</div>
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-<div class="figcenter hide" style="width: 35%">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="ph1">THE TIME SPIRIT</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<a id="i_frontispiece"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" width="300" alt="Three pairs of eyes met in challenge"
-title="" /></a></div></div>
-
-<p class="caption">Three pairs of eyes met in challenge<br />
-<span class="right3">[Page <a href="#Page_84">84</a>]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1>THE<br />
-TIME SPIRIT</h1></div>
-
-<p class="ph3 center"><i>A Romantic Tale</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">BY</p>
-
-<p class="ph2 center no-indent">J. C. SNAITH</p>
-
-<p class="center no-indent p4b">AUTHOR OF “THE COMING,” “THE SAILOR,” ETC.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 70px;">
-<img src="images/i_title.jpg" width="70" alt="Publishers Logo" /></div>
-
-<p class="ph3 p4">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br />
-NEW YORK &ensp;&ensp; 1918
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="p6b center no-indent"><span class="smcap">Copyright, 1918, by</span><br />
-D. APPLETON AND COMPANY</p></div>
-
-<p class="center no-indent">Printed in the United States of America</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">CONTENTS</p>
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-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="CONTENTS">
-<tr><td class="tdbr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td>
-<td>&#160;</td>
-<td class="tdc"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">I.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Arrival</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">II.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Aunt Annie and Aunty Harriet</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">III.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Flowing Water</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">IV.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Bridport House</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">V.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Alarums and Excursions</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">VI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Plot and Counterplot</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">VII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Tragic Coil</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">VIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Busy Morning</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">IX.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Interlude</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_210">210</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">X.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Time’s Revenge</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">XI.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Bomb</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">XII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ardors and Endurances</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_273">273</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdbr">XIII.</td>
-<td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Everything for the Best</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="3" summary="ILLUSTRATIONS">
-<tr><td class="tdl">&#160;</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><small>FACING<br />
-PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">Three pairs of eyes met in challenge</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#i_frontispiece">Frontispiece</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“How did you come by it, Joe?”</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo1">24</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“You give up your young man&mdash;simply because of that?”</td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo2">198</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl">“We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the light<br />
-<span class="hang">fringed her eyelids</span></td>
-<td class="tdbr"><a href="#illo3">296</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph1 nobreak" id="THE_TIME_SPIRIT">THE TIME SPIRIT</p>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-THE ARRIVAL</h2>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> fog of November in its descent upon Laxton,
-one of London’s busiest suburbs, had effaced the
-whole of Beaconsfield Villas, including the Number
-Five on the fanlight over the door of the last house
-but two in the row. To a tall girl in black on her way
-from the station this was a serious matter. She was
-familiar with the lie of the land in the light of day
-and in darkness less than Cimmerian, but this evening
-she had to ask a policeman, a grocer’s boy, and a
-person of no defined status, before a kid-gloved hand
-met the knocker of her destination.</p>
-
-<p>It was the year 1890. Those days are very distant
-now. Victoria the Good was on the throne of Britain.
-W.G. went in first for Gloucestershire; Lohmann and
-Lockwood bowled for Surrey. The hansom was still
-the gondola of London. The Tube was not, and eke
-the motor-bus. The <i>Daily Mail</i> had not yet invented
-Lord Northcliffe. Orville Wright had not made good.
-William Hohenzollern used to come over to see his
-grandmother.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<p>Indeed, on this almost incredibly distant evening in
-the world’s history, his grandmother in three colors
-and a widow’s cap, with a blue ribbon across her bosom,
-surmounted the sitting-room chimney-piece of Number
-Five, Beaconsfield Villas. And at the other end of the
-room, over the dresser, was an old gentleman with a
-beard, by common consent the wisest man in the realm,
-who talked about “splendid isolation,” and gave Heligoland
-to deep, strong, patient Germany in exchange for
-a tiny strip of Africa.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, there were giants in those days. And no doubt
-there are giants in these. But it is not until little Miss
-Clio trips in with her scroll that we shall know for
-certain, shall we?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>At the first crisp tap the door of Number Five
-was flung open.</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet, so here you are!”</p>
-
-<p>There was welcome in the eyes as well as in the voice
-of the eager, personable creature who greeted the visitor.
-There was welcome also in the gush of mingled gas and
-firelight from a cosy within.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you, Eliza?”</p>
-
-<p>The tall girl asked the question, shut the door, and
-kissed her sister, all in one breath, so that only a
-minute quantity of a London “partickler” was able to
-follow her into the room.</p>
-
-<p>The hostess pressed Harriet into a chair, as near the
-bright fire as she could be persuaded to sit.</p>
-
-<p>“What a night! I was half afraid you wouldn’t
-face it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I always try to keep a promise.” The quiet, firm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</span>
-voice had a gravity and a depth which made it sound
-years older than that of the elder sister.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you do&mdash;and that’s a lot to say of anyone.
-How’s your health, my dear? It’s very good to
-see you after all these months.”</p>
-
-<p>Chattering all the time with the artlessness of a
-nature wholly different from that of her visitor, Eliza
-Kelly took the kettle from the hob and made the tea.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond a superficial general likeness there was
-nothing to suggest the near relationship of these two.
-The air and manner which invested the well-made coat
-and skirt, the lady-like muff and stole, with a dignity
-rather austere, were not to be found in the unpretentious
-front parlor opening on to the street, or in its
-brisk, voluble, easy-going mistress.</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet, you are really all right again?” Eliza impulsively
-poured out the tea before it had time to brew,
-thereby putting herself to the trouble of returning it to
-the pot.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes.” Harriet removed her gloves elegantly.
-She was quite a striking-looking creature of nine-and-twenty.
-In spite of a recent illness, she had an air
-of strength and virility. The face and brow had been
-cast in a mold of serious beauty, the eyes, a clear deep
-gray, were strongholds of good sense. Even without
-the aid of a considered, rather formidable manner,
-this young woman would have exacted respect anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“Take a muffin while it’s warm.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet did so.</p>
-
-<p>“I had no idea your illness was going to be so bad.”</p>
-
-<p>The younger woman would not own that her illness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span>
-had been anything of the kind; she was even inclined
-to make light of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you’ve been away weeks and weeks. And
-Aunt Annie says you’ve had to have an operation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only a slight one.” The tone was casual. “Nothing
-to speak of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to speak of! Aunt Annie says you have
-been at Brighton I don’t know how long.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you know,” said Harriet in a discreet, rather
-charming voice, “they thought I was run down and
-that I ought to have a good rest. You see, the long
-illness of her Grace was very trying for those who had
-to look after her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so. Although her Grace has been dead
-nearly two years. Anyhow, I hope the Family paid
-your expenses.” The elder sister and prudent housewife
-looked at Harriet keenly.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything, even my railway fare.” A fine note
-came into the voice of Harriet Sanderson.</p>
-
-<p>“Lucky you to be in such service,” said Eliza in a
-tone of envy.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the color deepened in Harriet’s cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way, what are you doing at Buntisford?
-Does it mean you’ve left Bridport House for good?”</p>
-
-<p>“It does, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I thought Buntisford had been closed for years?”</p>
-
-<p>“His Grace had it opened again, so that he can go
-down there when he wants to be quiet. He was always
-fond of it. There’s a bit of rough shooting and a
-river, and it’s within thirty miles of London; he finds
-it very convenient. Of course, it’s quite small and easy
-to manage.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What is your position there?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m housekeeper,” said Harriet. “That is to say,
-I manage everything.”</p>
-
-<p>The elder sister looked at her with incredulity, in
-which a little awe was mingled. “Housekeeper&mdash;to the
-Duke of Bridport&mdash;and you not yet thirty, Hattie.
-Gracious, goodness, what next!”</p>
-
-<p>The visitor smiled at this simplicity. “It’s hardly
-so grand as it sounds. The house doesn’t need much
-in the way of servants; the Family never go there.
-His Grace comes down now and again for a week-end
-when he wants to be alone. Just himself&mdash;there’s never
-anyone else.”</p>
-
-<p>“But housekeeper!” Eliza was still incredulous. “At
-twenty-nine! I call it wonderful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it so remarkable?” Harriet’s calmness seemed
-a little uncanny.</p>
-
-<p>“The dad would have thought so, had he lived to see
-it. He always thought the world of the Family.”</p>
-
-<p>The younger sister smiled at this artlessness.</p>
-
-<p>“Every reason to do so, no doubt,” she said with a
-brightening eye and a rush of warmth to her voice.
-“I am sure there couldn’t be better people in this world
-than the Dinnefords.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was the father’s opinion, anyway. He always
-said they knew how to treat those who served them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a doubt of that,” said Harriet. “They have
-been more than good to me.” The color flowed over
-her face. “And his Grace often speaks of the father.
-He says he was his right hand at Ardnaleuchan, and
-that he saved him many a pound in a twelvemonth.”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect he did,” said Eliza, her own eyes kindling.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span>
-“He simply worshiped the Family. Mother used to
-declare that he would have sold his soul for the
-Dinnefords.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was a very good man,” said Harriet simply.</p>
-
-<p>“It would have been a proud day for him, Hattie,
-had he lived to see you where you are now. And not
-yet thirty&mdash;with all your life before you.”</p>
-
-<p>But the words of the elder sister brought a look of
-constraint to the face of Harriet. Mistaking the cause,
-Eliza was puzzled. “And it won’t be my opinion only,”
-she said. “Aunt Annie I’m sure will think as I do.
-She’ll say you’ve had a wonderful piece of luck.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the position <i>does</i> mean great responsibility”&mdash;there
-was a sudden change in Harriet’s tone.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza kept her eyes on the face of the younger woman,
-that fine Scots face, so full of resolution and character.
-“Whatever it may be, Hattie, I’m thinking you’ll just
-about be able to manage it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean to try.” Harriet spoke very slowly and
-softly. “I mean to show myself worthy of his Grace’s
-confidence.”</p>
-
-<p>The elder sister smiled an involuntary admiration;
-there was such a calm force about the girl. “And, of
-course, it means that you are made for life.”</p>
-
-<p>But in the eyes of Harriet was a fleck of anxiety.
-“Ah! you don’t know. It’s a big position&mdash;an awfully
-big position.”</p>
-
-<p>Eliza agreed.</p>
-
-<p>“There are times when it almost frightens me.”
-Harriet spoke half to herself.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything has to run like clockwork, of course,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span>
-said the sympathetic Eliza. “And it’s bound to make
-the upper servants at Bridport House very jealous.”</p>
-
-<p>“It may.” The deep tone had almost an edge of
-disdain. “Anyhow it doesn’t matter. I don’t go to
-Bridport House now.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you can’t tell me, my dear, that they like to hear
-of her Grace’s second maid holding the keys in the
-housekeeper’s room.”</p>
-
-<p>The calm Harriet smiled. “But it’s only Buntisford,
-after all. You speak as if it was Bridport House or
-Ardnaleuchan.”</p>
-
-<p>Eliza shook a knowledgeable head. “They won’t like
-it all the same, Hattie. The dad wouldn’t have, for
-one. He was all his life on the estate, but he was turned
-fifty before he rose to be factor at Ardnaleuchan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Eliza”&mdash;there was a force, a decision in the
-words which made an end of criticism&mdash;“it’s just a
-matter for the Duke. The place is not of my seeking.
-I was asked to take it&mdash;what else could I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t think I blame you. If it’s the wish of his
-Grace there is no more to be said. Still, there’s no
-denying you’ve a big responsibility.”</p>
-
-<p>At these words a shadow came into the resolute eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Said the elder sister reassuringly, “You’ll be equal to
-the position, never fear. That head of yours is a good
-one, Hattie. Even Aunt Annie admits that. By the
-way, have you seen her lately?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seen&mdash;Aunt Annie?” said Harriet defensively. The
-sudden mention of that name produced an immediate
-change of tone in her distinguished niece.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s been asking about you. She wants very much
-to see you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</span></p>
-
-<p>The shadow deepened in Harriet’s eyes. But an
-instant later she had skillfully covered an air of growing
-constraint by a conventional question.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s Joe, Eliza?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretty much as usual. He’ll be off duty soon.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe Kelly was Eliza’s husband, and a member of the
-Metropolitan police force. In the eyes of her family,
-Eliza Sanderson had married beneath her. But Joe, if a
-rough diamond, was a good fellow, and Eliza could afford
-not to be over-sensitive on the score of public opinion.
-Joe had no superficial graces, it was as much as he could
-do to write a line in his notebook, high rank in his calling
-was not prophesied by his best friends, but his wife
-knew she was well off. They had been married eight
-years, and if only Providence had blessed a harmonious
-union in a becoming manner, Eliza Kelly would not
-have found it in her heart to envy the greatest lady in
-the land. But Providence had not done so, the more
-was the pity.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way,”&mdash;Eliza suddenly broke a silence&mdash;“there’s
-a piece of news for you, Hattie. A friend is
-coming to see you at five.”</p>
-
-<p>“A friend&mdash;to see me!”</p>
-
-<p>“To see you, my dear. In fact, I might say an admirer.
-Can’t you guess who?”</p>
-
-<p>“I certainly can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I think you ought.” Mischief had yielded to
-laughter of a rather quizzical kind.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know that I had any admirers&mdash;in Laxton.”</p>
-
-<p>The touch of manner delicately suggested ducal circles.</p>
-
-<p>“You can have a husband for the asking, our Harriet.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span>
-The eternal feminine was now in command of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet frowned.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t think who it can be.”</p>
-
-<p>“No?” laughed the tormentress. “You are not going
-to tell me you have forgotten the young man you met
-the last time you were here?”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that the distinguished visitor had.</p>
-
-<p>“I do call that hard lines,” mocked Eliza. “You have
-really forgotten him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I really have!”</p>
-
-<p>“He has talked of you ever since. When was Miss
-Sanderson coming again? Could he be invited to meet
-her? He wanted to see her aboot something verra impoortant.”</p>
-
-<p>A light dawned upon Harriet’s perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely you don’t mean&mdash;you don’t mean that red-headed
-young policeman&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dugald Maclean. Of course, I do. He has invited
-himself to meet you at five o’clock.” Eliza sat back in
-her chair and laughed at the face of Harriet, but the
-face of Harriet showed it was hardly a laughing matter.</p>
-
-<p>“Well!” she cried. Her eyes were smiling, yet they
-could not veil their look of deep annoyance.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Hattie,” admonished the voice of maternal
-wisdom, “there’s no need to take offense. Don’t forget
-you are twenty-nine, Dugald Maclean is a smart young
-man, and Joe says he’ll make his way in the world.
-Of course, you hold a very high position now, but if
-you don’t want to find yourself on the shelf it’s time
-you began to think very seriously about a husband.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will change the subject, if you don’t mind.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span>
-The tone revealed a wide gulf between the outlook of
-Eliza Kelly and that of a confidential retainer in the
-household of the Duke of Bridport.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, my dear. But don’t bite. Have the last
-piece of muffin. And then I’ll toast another for Constable
-Maclean.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>The clock on the chimney-piece struck five. Before
-its last echo had died there came a loud knock on the
-front door.</p>
-
-<p>Constable Maclean was a ruddy young Scotsman. He
-was tall, lean, large-boned, with prominent teeth and
-ears. Although freckled like a turkey’s egg, he was not
-a bad-looking fellow. His boots, however, took up a
-lot of space in a small room, and the manner of his
-entrance suggested that the difficult operation known as
-“falling over oneself” was in the act of consummation.
-But there was an intense earnestness in his manner, and
-a personal force in his look, which gave a redeeming
-grace of character to a shy awkwardness, verging on
-the grotesque.</p>
-
-<p>“Good afternune,” said Constable Maclean, removing
-his helmet with a polite grimace.</p>
-
-<p>One of the ladies shook hands, the other welcomed
-the young man with a cordial good-evening and bade him
-sit down. Constable Maclean, encumbered with a
-regulation overcoat, sat down rather like a performing
-bear.</p>
-
-<p>At first conversation languished. Yet no welcome
-could have been more cordial than Eliza’s. She felt like
-a mother to this young man. It was her nature to feel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span>
-like a mother to every young man. Moreover, Dugald
-Maclean, as he sat perspiring with nervousness on the
-edge of a chair much too small for him, seemed to need
-some large-hearted woman to feel like a mother towards
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Harriet Sanderson was to blame, no doubt, for
-the young policeman’s aphasia. Her coolness and ease,
-with a half quizzical, half ironical look surmounting it,
-seemed to increase the bashfulness of Dugald Maclean
-whenever he ventured to look at her out of the tail of
-his eye.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear that the young man was suffering acutely.
-Nature had intended him to be expansive&mdash;not in the
-Sassenach sense perhaps,&mdash;but given the time and the
-place and a right conjunction of the planets, Dugald
-Maclean had social gifts, at least they were so assessed
-at Carrickmachree in his native Caledonia. Moreover,
-he was rather proud of them. He was an ambitious
-and gifted young police officer. For many moons he
-had been looking forward to this romantic hour. Since
-a first chance meeting with the semi-divine Miss
-Sanderson he had been living in the hope of a second,
-yet now by the courtesy of Providence it was granted
-to him he might never have seen a woman before.</p>
-
-<p>The lips of Constable Maclean were dry, his tongue
-clove to the roof of an amazingly capacious mouth. As
-for Miss Sanderson, mere silence began to achieve
-wonders in the way of gentle, smiling irony. But the
-hostess was more humane. For one thing she was married,
-and although Fate had been cruel, she had a sacred
-instinct which made her regard every young man as a
-boy of her own.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span></p>
-
-<p>Every moment the situation became more delicate,
-but Eliza’s handling of it was superb. She brewed a
-fresh cup of tea for Constable Maclean, and then plied
-the toasting-fork to such purpose that the young man
-became so busy devouring muffins that for a time he
-forgot his shame. Eliza could toast and butter a muffin
-with anyone, Constable Maclean could eat a muffin with
-anyone&mdash;thus things began to go better. And when,
-without turning a hair, the young man entered upon his
-third muffin, Miss Sanderson dramatically unbent.</p>
-
-<p>“Allow me to give you another cup of tea.” The
-voice was melody.</p>
-
-<p>A succession of guttural noises, which might be interpreted
-as “Thank ye kindly, miss,” having come
-apparently from the boots of Constable Maclean, Miss
-Harriet Sanderson handed him a second cup of tea.</p>
-
-<p>Still, the conversation did not prosper. But the perfect
-hostess, kneeling before the fire in order to toast
-muffin the fifth, had still her best card to play. It was
-the ace of trumps, in fact, and when she rose to spread
-butter over a sizzling, delicious, corrugated surface, she
-decided that the time had come to make use of it.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the factor in the situation which moved her
-to this step was that only one muffin now remained for
-her husband when he came off duty half-an-hour hence,
-and that his young colleague of the X Division seemed
-ready to go on devouring them until the crack of doom.</p>
-
-<p>“That reminds me,” Eliza suddenly remarked as she
-cut the fifth muffin in half, “I promised Mrs. Norris I
-would go across after tea to have a look at her latest.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not going out, Eliza, such a night as this?”
-said Harriet in a voice of consternation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-<p>“A promise is a promise, my dear, you know that.
-Mrs. Norris has just had her sixth&mdash;the sweetest little
-boy. Some people have all the luck.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the fog&mdash;you can’t see a yard in front of you!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only just across the street, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Eliza, hatted and cloaked, had gone to
-see Mrs. Norris’s latest, a change came over Constable
-Maclean. He was a young man of big ideas. But all
-that they had done for him so far was to turn life into
-a tragedy. By nature fiercely sensitive, the shyness
-which made his life a burden had a trick of crystallizing
-at the most inconvenient moments into a kind of dumb
-madness. A crisis of this kind was upon him now.
-Yet he had a will of iron. And in order to keep faith
-with the highest law of his being that will was always
-forcing him to do things, and say things, which people
-who did not happen to be Dugald Maclean could only
-regard as perfectly amazing.</p>
-
-<p>His acquaintance with Miss Sanderson was very
-slight. They came from neighboring villages in their
-native Scotland; many times he had gazed from afar on
-his beautiful compatriot, but only once before could he
-really be said to have met her. That was months ago,
-in that very room, when he had been but a few days in
-London. Since then a very ambitious young man had
-thought about her a great deal. The force and charm
-of her personality had cast a spell upon him; this was
-a demonic woman if ever there was one; he had hardly
-guessed that such creatures existed. It would be wrong
-to say that he was in love with her; his passion was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-centered upon ideas and not upon people; yet Harriet
-Sanderson was already marked in the catalogue as the
-property of Dugald Maclean.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you like vairse?” inquired the young man, with
-an abruptness which startled her.</p>
-
-<p>The unexpected question was far from the present
-plane of her thoughts, but it was answered to the best
-of her ability.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I like it very much,” she said, tactfully.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m gled.” Constable Maclean unbuttoned his great
-coat.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in the mind of Harriet lurked the romantic
-hope that this remarkable young man was about to
-produce a hare or a rabbit after the manner of a wonder-worker
-at the Egyptian Hall. But in this she was disappointed.
-He simply took forth from an inner pocket
-of his tunic several sheets of neatly-folded white foolscap,
-and handed them to Miss Sanderson without a word. He
-then folded his arms Napoleonically and watched the
-force of their impact upon her.</p>
-
-<p>“You wish me to read <i>this</i>?” she asked, after a brief
-but sharp mingling of confusion and surprise.</p>
-
-<p>The young man nodded.</p>
-
-<p>With fingers that trembled a little, she unrolled the
-sheets of a fair, well-written copy of “Urban Love, a
-trilogy.”</p>
-
-<p>She read the poem line by line, ninety-six in all, with
-the face of a sphinx.</p>
-
-<p>“What do ye think o’ it, Miss Sanderrson?” There
-was a slight tremor in the voice of the author. The
-silence which had followed the reading of “Urban Love,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-a trilogy” had proved a little too much, even for that will
-of iron.</p>
-
-<p>“It is very nice, if I may say so, very nice indeed,” said
-Miss Sanderson cautiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be doin’ better than that, I’m thinkin’.” A certain
-rigidity came into the voice of the author of the
-poem. The word “nice,” was almost an affront; it had
-come upon his ear like a false quantity upon that of a
-classical scholar.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you really do it all by yourself?” The inquiry
-was due less to the performance, which Harriet was
-quite unable to judge, than to the author’s almost terrible
-concentration of manner, which clearly implied
-that it would not do to take such an achievement for
-granted.</p>
-
-<p>“Every worrd, Miss Sanderrson. Except&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Except what, Mr. Maclean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Lonie, the Presbyterian Minister, helped me a
-bit wi’ the scansion.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I may say so, I think it is remarkably clever.”</p>
-
-<p>It appeared, however, that these pages were only the
-opening stanzas of a poem which was meant to have
-many. They were still in the limbo of time, behind
-the high forehead of the author, but upon a day they
-would burst inevitably upon an astonished world.
-Would Miss Sanderson accept the dedication?</p>
-
-<p>Miss Sanderson, blushing a little from acute surprise,
-said that nothing would give her greater pleasure. She
-was amazed, she wanted to laugh, but the intense, almost
-truculent earnestness of the young man had put an
-enchantment upon her.</p>
-
-<p>But all this was simply a prelude to the great drama<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
-of the emotions which Constable Maclean had now to
-unfold. He had broken the ice with the charmer. The
-butterfly was pinned down with “Urban Love, a trilogy,”
-through its breast. Miss Sanderson had never had time
-for reading, therefore she was in nowise literary. Thus,
-perhaps, it was less the merit of the work itself, which
-must be left to the judgment of scholars, than the force,
-the audacity, the driving-power of its author which
-seemed almost to deliver her captive into his hands.</p>
-
-<p>She, it seemed, was its <i>onlie</i> true begetter. The poem
-was in her honor. Heroica, calm and fair, was the protagonist
-of “Urban Love, a trilogy,” and she was Heroica.
-The position was none of her seeking, but it carried with
-it grave responsibilities.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place it exposed her to an offer of marriage.
-“Urban Love, a trilogy,” had broken so much
-of the ice that Dugald Maclean plunged horse, foot and
-artillery through the hole it had made. At the moment
-he could not lead Heroica to the altar; it would hardly
-be prudent for a young constable of eight months’ standing
-to offer to do so, but he sincerely hoped that she
-would promise to wait for him.</p>
-
-<p>Galled by the spur of ambition, Dugald Maclean took
-the whole plunge where smaller men would have been
-content merely to try the depth of the water.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Sanderson was frozen with astonishment. It was
-true that “Urban Love, a trilogy,” had half prepared
-her for a declaration in form, but she had not foreseen
-the swiftness of the onset. This was her first experience
-of the kind, but she was a woman of the world and
-she gathered her dignity about her like a garment.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’re no offendit, Miss Sanderrson?” There was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span>
-something titanic in the slow mustering of his forces to
-break an arid pause.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not offended, Mr. Maclean.” The tone of Miss
-Sanderson said she was offended a little. “But I do
-think&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“What do ye think, Miss Sanderrson?” The naïveté
-of the young man provoked a sharp intake of breath.</p>
-
-<p>“I think, Mr. Maclean”&mdash;the candor of Miss Sanderson
-was deliberate but not unkind&mdash;“if I were you, before I
-offered to marry anybody, I should try seriously to
-better myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The words, pregnant and uncompromising, were
-masked by a tone so deep and calm that a first-rate intellect
-was able to treat them on their merits. In spite
-of a flirtation with the Muses, this young man was a
-remarkable combination of wild audacity and extreme
-shrewdness. He had a power of mind which enabled
-him to distinguish the false from the true. Thus he
-saw at once, without resentment or pique, that the advice
-of Heroica was that of a friend.</p>
-
-<p>She had a strong desire to box the ears of this rawboned
-young policeman for his impertinence; but at heart this
-was a real woman, and the dynamic forces of her sex
-were strong in her. It was hard to keep from laughing
-in the face of this young man in a hurry, who rushed
-his fences in a way that was simply grotesque; yet she
-could not help admiring the power within him, and she
-wished him well.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s gude advice, Miss Sanderrson.” His tone of
-detachment drew a ripple from lips that laughed very
-seldom. “I’m thinkin’ I’ll tak’ it. But ye’ll bear the
-matter in mind?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I make no rash promises, Mr. Maclean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if ye won’t, ye won’t. But I’m thinkin’ I’d
-work the better at the Latin if I could count on ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“Studying Latin, are you, Mr. Maclean?” The surprise
-of Miss Sanderson was rather respectful.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Lonie is learnin’ me,” said the young man, with
-a slight touch of vainglory. “And I’m thinkin’ he’ll
-verra soon be learnin’ me the Greek.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to college?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe ay. Maybe no. You never can tell where
-a pairson may get to. Anyhow I’m learnin’ to speak the
-language. Ae day I’ll be as gude at the Saxon as you
-and your sister have become, Miss Sanderrson.”</p>
-
-<p>It was hard not to smile, yet she knew her countrymen
-too well to treat such a matter lightly.</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ve a’ready set aboot writin’ for the papers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Begun already to write for the papers, have you, Mr.
-Maclean?” This was not a young man to smile at.
-“Well, wherever you may get to,” Miss Sanderson’s tone
-was softer than any she had yet used, “I am sure I
-wish you well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye,” said the young man dryly. “But why
-not gie a pairson a helping hand?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not sure that I like you well enough.” Such
-candor was extorted by the seriousness with which she
-was now having to treat him. “You see, Mr. Maclean,
-it is all so sudden. We have only met once before.”</p>
-
-<p>“May I hope, Miss Sanderrson?”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he moved his chair towards her and took
-her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Maclean, you may not.” The hand was withdrawn
-firmly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, think it owre, Miss Sanderson.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man moved back his chair to its first position
-in order to restore the <i>status quo</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet shook her head. And then all at once, to the
-deep consternation of Constable Maclean, she broke into
-an anguish of laughter, which good manners, try as they
-might, were not able to control.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of this unseemly behavior on the part
-of Miss Sanderson, the door next the street was flung
-open with violence. A figure Homeric of aspect emerged
-from the night.</p>
-
-<p>It was that of Constable Joseph Kelly, of the Metropolitan
-Police; an ornament of the X Division, a splendid
-man to look at, nearly six feet high. Broad of girth,
-proportioned finely, his helmet crowned him like a hero
-of old. His face, richly tinted by daily and nightly
-exposure to the remarkable climate of London, was the
-color of a ripe apple, and there presided in it the almost
-god-like good-humor of the race to which he belonged.</p>
-
-<p>This emblem of superb manhood was laden heavily.
-There was his long overcoat, a tremendous, swelling
-affair; there was his furled oilskin cape; at one side of
-his girdle was his truncheon-case, his lamp at the other
-side of it; in his left hand was a modest basket which
-had contained his dinner, and in his right was a larger
-wicker arrangement which might have contained anything.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that our Harriet?” said Constable Kelly, in the act
-of closing the door deftly with his heel. “Good evening,
-gal. Pleased to see you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span></p>
-
-<p>He set down the large basket on the floor in a rather
-gingerly manner, placed the small one on the table, came
-to Harriet, kissed her audibly, and then turned to the
-room’s second occupant with an air of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Scotchie! What are <i>you</i> doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>Before Dugald Maclean could answer the question he
-was in the throes of a second attack of dumb madness.
-This malady made his life a burden. When only one
-person was by he seldom had difficulty in expressing
-himself, but any addition to the company was apt to
-plunge him into hopeless defeat.</p>
-
-<p>“Up to no good, I expect.” Joseph Kelly, disapproval
-in his eyes, answered his own question, since other answer
-there was none. “I never see such a feller. Been
-mashing you, Harriet, by the look of him.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a bow drawn at a venture by a shrewd colleague
-of the X Division. An immediate effusion of rose pink
-to the young man’s freckled countenance was full of
-information for a close observer.</p>
-
-<p>“Durn me if he hasn’t!” Gargantuan laughter rose to
-the ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet blushed. But the look in her face was not
-discomfiture merely. There was plain annoyance and a
-look of rather startled anxiety for which the circumstances
-could hardly account.</p>
-
-<p>“Scotchie, you’re a nonesuch.” But Joe suddenly
-lowered his voice in answer to the alarm in the face of
-his sister-in-law. “You are the limit, my lad. Do you
-know what he did last week, Harriet? I’ll tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me make you a cup of tea, Joe.” And his sister-in-law,
-who seemed oddly agitated by his arrival, rose
-in the humane hope of diverting the attack.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span></p>
-
-<p>But the story was too good to remain untold.</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll take the X Division twenty years to live it down.”
-Kelly throbbed and gurgled like a donkey-engine as he
-fixed his youthful colleague with a somber eye. “This
-young feller, what do you think he did last week?”</p>
-
-<p>“The kettle will soon boil, Joe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet!”&mdash;the rich rolling voice thrilled dramatically&mdash;“about
-midnight, last Monday week as ever was, this
-smart young officer saw an old party in an eyeglass and
-a topper and a bit o’ fur round his overcoat, standin’ on
-the curb at Piccadilly Circus. He strolls up, taps him
-on the shoulder, charges him with loitering with intent
-and runs him in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s your tea, Joe.” The voice was sweetly polite.</p>
-
-<p>“And who do you think the old party was, my gal?
-Only a Director of the Bank of England&mdash;that’s all.
-The rest of the Force is guying us proper. They want
-to know when we are going to lock up the Governor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Joe, your tea!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll never get over it, gal, not in my time.
-Scotchie, you are too ambitious. There isn’t scope for
-your abilities in the Metropolitan Force. Turn your
-attention to some other branch of the law. You ought
-to take chambers in the Temple, you ought, my lad.”</p>
-
-<p>But in answer to the look in the eyes of Harriet, her
-brother-in-law checked the laugh that rose again to his
-lips. There was a strange anxiety upon her face, an
-anxiety that was now in some way communicated to him.
-It was clear from the glances they exchanged and the
-silence that ensued, that both were much embarrassed by
-the presence of Maclean.</p>
-
-<p>However, after the young man had entered upon a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-struggle for words with which to meet this persiflage and
-they had refused to come forth, he suddenly noticed that
-the hands of the clock showed a quarter to six and he
-rose determinedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it’s time you went on duty,” said the sardonic
-Kelly with an air of relief.</p>
-
-<p>Constable Maclean, feeling much was at stake, made
-a great effort to achieve a dignified exit. He was an odd
-combination of the thick-skinned and the hypersensitive.
-At this moment the shattering wit of his peer of the X
-Division made him wish he had never been born, but he
-was too dour a fighter to take it lying down.</p>
-
-<p>“Gude-nicht, Miss Sanderrson.” With one more
-grimace he offered a hand not indelicately.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, Mr. Maclean.” The tone of studied
-kindness was a salve for his wounds. The effrontery
-of this young man did not call for pity. And yet it was
-his to receive it from the sterling heart of a true
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>The smile, the arch glance, the ready handshake did
-so much to restore Dugald Maclean in his own esteem,
-that he was able to retire with even a touch of swagger,
-which somehow, in spite of an awkwardness almost
-comically ursine, sat uncommonly well on such a dashing
-young policeman.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the exit of Constable Maclean came very near
-the point of bravado. For as he passed the large wicker
-basket which Kelly had placed on the floor, the young
-man turned audaciously upon his tormentor. Said he
-with a grin of sheer defiance:</p>
-
-<p>“What hae ye gotten i’ the basket, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind. ’Op it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span></p>
-
-<p>Less out of natural curiosity, which however was
-very great, than a desire to show all whom it might
-concern that he was again his own man, Dugald Maclean
-laid his hand on the lid of the basket.</p>
-
-<p>“What hae ye gotten, Joe? Rabbuts?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you must know, it’s a young spannil.” The
-answer came with rather truculent hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>“A young spannil, eh? I’m thinkin’ I’ll hae a look.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be off about your duty, my lad.” Joe began to look
-threatening.</p>
-
-<p>“Juist a speir.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Op it, I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>But in open defiance, Dugald Maclean had already
-begun to untie the string which held the lid of the basket
-in place. The majestic Kelly rose from his tea. Without
-further words he seized the young man firmly from
-behind by the collar of his coat. And then he hustled
-him as far as the door in a very efficient professional
-manner, straight into the arms of Eliza, who at that
-moment was in the act of entering it.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>At the open door there was a brief scurry of laughter
-and protest which ended in a riot of confusion. And
-then happened an odd thing. But of the three persons
-struggling upon the threshold of Number Five only one
-was aware of it, and he had the wit to raise a great voice
-to its highest pitch in order to conceal a fact so remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>“For heaven’s sake hold your noise, Joe, else you’ll
-frighten the neighbors,” said Eliza, getting in it at last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-and indulging in suppressed shrieks at the manner of
-Dugald Maclean’s putting out.</p>
-
-<p>An instant later, the young policeman was in the street
-and the door of Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas, had
-closed upon him. But his singular exit was merely the
-prelude to an incident far more amazing.</p>
-
-<p>In the uproar of Joe had been fell design. As soon
-as it ceased the reason for it grew apparent. An incredible
-sound was filling the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever’s that!” Eliza almost shrieked in sheer
-wonderment.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet’s behavior was different. For a moment she
-was spellbound. The look in her eyes verged upon
-horror.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that a child was crying lustily.</p>
-
-<p>“Wherever can it be!” cried the frantic Eliza.</p>
-
-<p>A wild glance round the room told Eliza that there
-was only one place in which it could be. Her eyes fell
-at once on the large wicker basket, which had been set
-on the floor near the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in all my born days!”</p>
-
-<p>She rushed to the basket and began furiously to untie
-the lid. But the maxim “the more haste the less speed”
-was as true in 1890 as it is today. Eliza’s fingers merely
-served to double and treble knot the string.</p>
-
-<p>Uncannily calm, Harriet rose from the table, the bread
-knife in her hand. In silence she knelt by the hearth
-and cut the knot. The deliberation of her movements
-was in odd contrast to Eliza’s frenzy.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<a id="illo1"><img src="images/i_024.jpg" width="300" alt="“How did you come by it, Joe?”" title="" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption">“How did you come by it, Joe?”</p>
-
-<p class="p2">The lid was off the basket in a trice. And the sight
-within further emphasized the diverse bearing of the
-two women. Harriet rose a statue; Eliza knelt in an
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span>ecstasy. One seemed to gloat over the sight that met
-her eyes; the other, with the gaze of Jocasta, stood turned
-to stone.</p>
-
-<p>It was the sweetest little baby. In every detail immaculate,
-bright as a new pin, its long clothes were of a fine
-quality, and it was wrapped in a number of shawls. A
-hot-water bottle was under its tiny toes, and a bottle of
-milk by its side.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza’s first act was to take the creature out of its
-receptacle. And then began the business of soothing it.
-Near the fire was a large rocking-chair, made for motherhood,
-and here sat Eliza, the foundling upon her knee.
-Evidently it had a charming disposition. For in two
-shakes of a duck’s tail it was taking its milk as if nothing
-had happened. Yet the calm, tense Harriet had a little
-to do with that. The milk was her happy thought.
-Moreover, she tested its quality and temperature with
-quite an air of experience. And the effect of the milk
-was magical.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as sheer astonishment and the cares of
-motherhood would permit, a number of searching questions
-were put to Constable Kelly.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you come by it, Joe?” was question the
-first.</p>
-
-<p>Before committing himself in any way, Joe scratched
-a fair Saxon poll like a very wise policeman, indeed.
-It was as if he had said, “Joseph Kelly, my friend,
-anything you say now will be used in evidence against
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>At last, cocking at Harriet a cautious eye, he replied
-impressively, “I’ll tell you.” But it was not until Eliza<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-had imperiously repeated the question that he came to
-the point of so doing.</p>
-
-<p>So accustomed was Joseph Kelly to the giving of evidence
-that unconsciously he assumed the air of one upon
-his oath.</p>
-
-<p>“I was <i>perceding</i>” said he, “about twenty-past four
-through Grosvenor Square, on my way to Victoria, when
-I see through the fog this bloomin’ contraption on a
-doorstep.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the number?” Eliza asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I was so flabbergasted, I forgot to look.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, really, Joe!”</p>
-
-<p>“When I saw what was in the basket, I was so took,
-as you might say, that it was not until I was at the end
-of the street that I thought of looking for the number.
-And then it was too late to swear to the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“In Grosvenor Square?” said Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not <i>per</i>cisely sure. The fog was so thick in
-Mayfair you could hardly see your hand before you. It
-may have been one of them cross streets going into Park
-Lane.”</p>
-
-<p>“A nice one you are, Joe.” And Eliza began to croon
-softly to the babe in her arms.</p>
-
-<p>Kelly stroked his head perplexedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I am,” he said, solemnly. “A proper guy I’ll look
-when I take it to the Yard tomorrow and they ask me
-how I come by it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Take it to the where?” asked Eliza sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“To Scotland Yard the first thing in the morning, to
-the Lost Property Department.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s going to be no Scotland Yard for this sweet
-lamb.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
-
-<p>“If I had done my duty it’d ha’ gone there tonight.”</p>
-
-<p>Said Eliza: “You haven’t done it, Joe, so it’s no use
-talking. And if I have a say in the matter, you are not
-going to do it now.”</p>
-
-<p>Here were the makings of a very pretty quarrel. But
-Eliza had one signal advantage. She knew her own
-mind, whereas Joe evidently did not know his. By his
-own admission he had already been guilty of a grave
-lapse of duty. And in Eliza’s view that was a strong
-argument why the creature should stay where it was.
-It would be foolish for Joe to give himself away by
-taking it to Scotland Yard.</p>
-
-<p>The argument was sound as far as it went, but when
-it came to the business of the Metropolitan Force, Joe
-was a man with a conscience. As he said, with a dour
-look at Harriet, two wrongs didn’t make a right, and to
-suppress the truth by keeping the kid would not clear
-him.</p>
-
-<p>But Eliza was adamant. Joe had made a fool of himself
-already. He had nothing to gain by landing himself
-deeper in the mire, whereas the heart of a mother had
-yearned a long eight years for the highest gift of Providence.
-The truth was that from the outset Joseph Kelly
-had precious little chance of doing his duty in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps he knew that. At any rate he did not argue
-his case as strongly as he might have done. And Eliza,
-rocking the babe on her knee, in the seventh heaven of
-bliss, rent Joe in pieces, laughed him to scorn. Harriet,
-standing by, a curious look on her face, well knew how
-to second her; yet the younger woman did not say a
-word.</p>
-
-<p>In a very few minutes Joe had hauled down his flag.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>
-Really he had not a chance. It was a very serious lapse
-from the path of duty, but what could he do, the
-simpleton!</p>
-
-<p>“‘Finding is keeping’ with this bairn,” said the triumphant
-Eliza.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that the silent, anxious, hovering Harriet
-claimed a share of the spoils of victory.</p>
-
-<p>“Eliza,” she said, “if you are to be the sweet thing’s
-mother, I must be its godmother.”</p>
-
-<p>“You shall be, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet sealed the compact by a swift, stealthy kiss
-upon the cheek of the foundling, who now slept like a
-cherub on the knee of its new parent.</p>
-
-<p>“The lamb!” whispered Eliza.</p>
-
-<p>Tears of happiness came into the eyes of the mother-elect.
-Harriet turned suddenly away as if unable to bear
-the sight of them.</p>
-
-<p>Said Joe to himself: “This is what I call a rum
-’un.” But even in the moment of his overthrow, he did
-not forget the philosophical outlook of that august body
-of men, whose trust he had betrayed. He turned to his
-long neglected cup of tea, now cold alas! and swallowed
-it at a gulp. He then went on with the solemn business
-of toasting bread and eating it.</p>
-
-<p>To add to Joe’s sense of defeat, the two women paid
-him no more attention now than if he had not been in
-the room at all.</p>
-
-<p>“The sweetest thing!” whispered the one ecstatically.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we call it?” whispered the other.</p>
-
-<p>“A boy or a girl?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span></p>
-
-<p>“By its mouth. A boy could never have a mouth like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that, my dear. I’ve seen boys with
-mouths&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But look at the dimples, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have seen boys with dimples&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“&mdash;&mdash;Joe Kelly, you are the durnedest fool alive.”
-This emotioned statement was the grace to a very substantial
-slice of buttered toast. Joe ate steadily, but
-his countenance now bore a family likeness to that of
-a bear.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose we say Mary? It’s the best name there is,
-I always think.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it may turn out a George, my dear. I hope it
-will.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel sure it’s a Mary,” affirmed the godmother of
-the sleeping babe. “I wonder who are the parents?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever’s child it may be,” said the mother-elect,
-“one thing is sure. They are people well up. I don’t
-think I ever saw a child so cared for. And, my dear,
-look at the shape of that chin and the set of that ear.
-And that lovely hand&mdash;a perfect picture with its filbert
-nails. Look at the fall of those eyelids. No wonder it
-comes out of Grosvenor Square.”</p>
-
-<p>“Grosvenor Square I’ll not swear to,” came a further
-interpellation from the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Get on with your tea, Joe,” said the mother-elect.
-“What we are talking of is no concern of yours.”</p>
-
-<p>The miserable Joe took off his boots and put on a
-pair of carpet slippers.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve made a bad slip-up, my boy,” he remarked, as
-he did so.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span></p>
-
-<p>The two women continued to croon over the wonder-child.
-Joe took a pipe, filled it with shag and lit it
-dubiously. This was a bad business. He was a great
-philosopher, as all policemen are, but whenever a grim
-eye strayed across the hearth, it was followed by a frown
-and a grunt of perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>Joe smoked solemnly. The women prattled on. But
-quite suddenly, like a bolt from a clear sky, there came
-a very unwelcome intrusion. The street door was flung
-open and a young constable entered breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>Dugald Maclean was received with surprise, anger,
-and dismay. “Now then, my lad, what about it?” demanded
-Joe, with a snarl of suppressed fury.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m seekin’ ‘Urban Love, a trilogy,’” proclaimed
-Dugald Maclean; and he spoke as if the fate of the
-empires hung upon his finding it.</p>
-
-<p>“Seekin’ what, you durned Scotchman?” said the
-alarmed and disgusted Joe.</p>
-
-<p>With deadly composure, Harriet rose from the side of
-the sleeping babe.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Maclean, it is there,” she said, icily. And she
-pointed to the table where the precious manuscript reclined.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank ye,” said Dugald, coolly. And he proceeded
-to button into his tunic “Urban Love, a trilogy.”</p>
-
-<p>But the mischief was done. The alert eye of an ambitious
-police constable had traveled from the open basket
-at one side of the fire to the object at the other, sleeping
-gently now upon Eliza’s knee. A slow grin crept over
-a freckled but vulpine countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“Blame my cats,” he muttered, “so there’s the young
-spannil.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span></p>
-
-<p>Joe rose majestically. He said not a word, but again
-taking the intruder very firmly by the collar of his regulation
-overcoat, hustled him with quiet truculence through
-the open door into the street. Closing the door and turning
-the key, he then went back to his meditations, looking
-more than ever like a disgruntled bear.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-AUNT ANNIE AND AUNTY HARRIET</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>unt Annie</span> was the first to be told the great
-news. In the view of both nieces it was in the
-natural order of things that this august lady
-should take precedence of the rest of the world. She
-was so incontestably the family “personage,” the eminence
-she occupied was such a dizzy one, that it would
-have been just as unthinkable not to grant her priority in
-a matter of such vital importance, as it would have been
-to deny it to Queen Victoria in an affair of State.</p>
-
-<p>In point of fact, Aunt Annie, within her own orbit,
-was the counterpart and reflection of her Sovereign. In
-an outlook they were alike, they were alike in the range
-of their ideas, and well-informed people had said that
-they had tricks of speech and manner in common. This
-may have been a little in excess of the truth, one of those
-genial pleasantries it is the part of wisdom to accept in
-the spirit in which they are offered, but it would be wrong
-to deny that in the suburb of Laxton Aunt Annie took
-rank as a very great lady.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that she lived in a small and modest house
-in an unpretentious street, but all the world knew that
-the flower of her years had been passed in abodes very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-different. And not only that, it was also known that
-every year on her birthday, the twenty-sixth of March,
-those whom it is hardly right to mention in these humble
-pages came to call on her. On the twenty-sixth of every
-March, sometime in the afternoon, a remarkable equipage
-would appear before the chaste precincts of “Bowley,”
-Croxton Park Road. At that hour every self-respecting
-pair of eyes in the immediate neighborhood would be
-ambushed discreetly behind curtains in order to watch the
-descent of a real live princess with a neat parcel.</p>
-
-<p>The contents of the parcel were said to vary from
-year to year. Now it would be a piece of choice needlework,
-fashioned by the accomplished hands of Royalty
-itself, which would take the shape of a cushion or a footstool,
-now a framed photograph of Prince Adolphus or
-Princess Geraldine in significant stages of their adolescence,
-now a chart of the august features of even more
-important members of the family. Many were the historical
-objects disposed about Aunt Annie’s sitting-room,
-which the elect of the neighborhood had the privilege of
-seeing and handling when they came to call upon her.
-But when all was said, the undoubted gem of the collection
-was a superb edition, bound in full calf, of the
-Poems of A. L. O. E., with a certain signature upon the
-fly-leaf. This was always kept under glass.</p>
-
-<p>It chanced that Aunt Annie had invited herself to tea
-at Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas, the day after the
-arrival of the babe. This was strictly in accord with
-rule and precedent. She was far too much a personage
-to be invited by her niece Eliza, but if she intimated by
-a letter, which was the last word in precision, that she
-proposed to call on a certain day, Eliza humbly and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span>
-gratefully overhauled the best tea service and polished
-the lacquer tray which was only used on State occasions.</p>
-
-<p>Not merely the mother-elect, but also godmother
-Harriet, saw the hand of a very special Providence in
-the impending visit of Aunt Annie to Beaconsfield Villas.
-It was only right and fit that the news should be first told
-to her. The matter must have her sanction. By comparison
-the rest of the world was of small account. The
-entire clan Sanderson lived in awe of her, and particularly
-her imprudent and démodé niece Eliza. The
-prestige of Aunt Annie was immense, and it did not make
-things easier for those who lived within the sphere of
-her influence that the old lady was fully alive to the
-fact.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza confided to Harriet that she would breathe more
-freely when the morrow’s visit had taken place. Harriet
-boldly said it didn’t really matter what view Aunt Annie
-took of the affair. But Eliza knew better. In spite of
-the joys of vicarious motherhood, there could be no
-peace of mind for Eliza until the fateful day was over.</p>
-
-<p>Half-past four in the afternoon was the hour mentioned
-in the official note. And it was then, punctual to
-the minute, that a vehicle of antique design even for that
-remote period of the world’s history, in charge of a
-Jehu to match it, drew up on the cobblestones exactly
-opposite Number Five. The fog had cleared considerably
-since the previous evening, therefore three urchins,
-spellbound by the appearance of such a turnout in their
-own private thoroughfare, beheld the slow and stately
-emergence of a superbly Victorian bonnet of the most
-authentic design and a black mantle of impressive simplicity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jehu, like the equipage itself, jobbed for the occasion,
-was the mirror of true courtliness. He had an uncle in
-the Royal stables, therefore he knew the deference due
-to the august Miss Sanderson. In promoting her descent
-from the chariot he did not actually take off his hat, but
-he stood with it off in spirit; a fact sufficiently clear to
-the three youthful onlookers, one of whom remarked in
-a voice of awe, “It’s the mayoress.”</p>
-
-<p>Eliza, quaking over her best tea service on its elegant
-tray, knew without so much as a glance through the
-window that Aunt Annie had come. But she waited for
-the knock. And then apronless, in her best dress, with
-never a hair out of place, she opened the door with a
-certain slow stateliness. Before her <i>mésalliance</i> she had
-had great prospects as lady’s maid.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, dear Eliza.”</p>
-
-<p>It was four o’clock in the afternoon, but the distinguished
-visitor undoubtedly said, “Good morning, dear
-Eliza.” Moreover, she offered a large and rigid cheek
-and Eliza pecked at it rather nervously.</p>
-
-<p>The door of Number Five closed upon Jehu, upon his
-wonderful and fearful machine, and also upon the general
-public.</p>
-
-<p>“And how is Joseph?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nicely, thank you, Aunt Annie. I hope <i>you</i> are quite
-well.”</p>
-
-<p>“As well as my rheumatism will permit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you take off your things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, no, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Annie would rather have died than take off her
-things in that house. In her heart she had never been
-able to forgive Eliza her marriage. Joseph Kelly was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-a worthy fellow no doubt, a good husband, and a conscientious
-police officer, but by no exercise of the imagination
-could he ever occupy the plane of a Sanderson. It
-may have been mere pride of family but then pride of
-family is a queer thing.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Eliza had fallen sadly from grace. She had come
-down in the world, whereas a true Sanderson always
-made a point of going up in it. Even if Eliza’s relations
-as a whole were inclined to take a sympathetic view of
-her marriage, the one among them who really counted,
-was never quite able to overlook the fact in her dealings
-with her. Eliza had cause to feel nervous for Aunt
-Annie was never so impressive as when she entered the
-modest front parlor of Number Five.</p>
-
-<p>It was easy for Aunt Annie to do that, because nature
-was on her side. With the honorable exception of her
-friend, Alderman Bradbury, the present mayor of the
-borough, she had more personality than anyone in
-Laxton. For forty years she had moved in the highest
-circles in the land. Moreover, she had moved in them
-modestly, discreetly, with the most punctilious good
-sense. She had known her place exactly, had kept it,
-therefore, with ever increasing honor and renown; but
-the spirit of imperious self-discipline which had entered
-into her in the process, sternly required that ordinary
-people in their dealings with her should know their
-place, too, and also be careful to keep it. In the domestic
-circle Aunt Annie was a pitiless autocrat, and in public
-life even the Mayor of Laxton and its leading Aldermen
-did not withhold their deference when she condescended
-to converse with them upon matters relating to the infant
-life of the borough.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span></p>
-
-<p>No wonder Laxton’s leading inhabitants kow-towed
-to Aunt Annie. No wonder niece Eliza cowered in spirit
-when she superbly entered that modest dwelling and sat
-in its most capacious chair. Tea was offered her, without
-sugar and with only a very little milk according to
-her stoical custom.</p>
-
-<p>“Thankee, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>The great lady removed a black kid glove, and
-coquetted with a delicate slice of bread and butter. If
-you have lived in palaces most of your days you know
-that simplicity in all things is the true art of life. Right
-at the back, as Eliza well knew, Aunt Annie was by no
-means so simple as she made a point of seeming. Her
-tastes and manners were modeled upon a sublime Original,
-but as the memoirs of the time have shown in the
-one case that things may not be always what they seem,
-the same held true in the other.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza had never felt so nervous in her life. Even the
-historic hour in which she had first announced her
-engagement to Joe could hardly compare with this. But
-it was not until Aunt Annie had passed to her second
-piece of bread and butter that the thunderbolt fell.</p>
-
-<p>“A cradle, my dear!”</p>
-
-<p>It was quite true that a cradle was in the chimney
-corner, within three yards of Laxton’s leading authority
-on the subject. Moreover, it was a cradle of the latest
-design, a cradle of the most elegant contour, it was a
-cradle provided with springs and lace curtains.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza blushed hotly and murmured something about
-Harriet having had it sent that morning. And then all
-at once she became so confused that she began to pour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-out her own tea into the slop-basin instead of the cup
-provided for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p>“Harriet who, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p>There was only one Harriet, and Eliza knew that Aunt
-Annie knew that. It was a mere ruse to gain time&mdash;if
-such a word can be used without impropriety in such
-connection. Eliza sought to cover her confusion by a
-sedulous holding of the tongue, and by an attempt to
-pour out her tea as if she really knew what she was
-about.</p>
-
-<p>“What is there in it?”</p>
-
-<p>The demand was point-blank. It was almost passionate.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting to be told what there was in it, Aunt
-Annie rose, tea cup and all, and with the glower of a
-sibyl drew aside the curtains.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>Mary was sleeping. Empirical science had proved her
-beyond a doubt to be a Mary. And she was sleeping
-as the best Marys do at the age of one month and a
-bittock, with her thumb in her mouth&mdash;if they are
-allowed to do so.</p>
-
-<p>To say that Aunt Annie was taken aback would be
-like saying that Zeus was a little offended with certain
-events when he blew the planet Earth out of the firmament
-in the year 19&mdash;. However!&mdash;it was as much as
-Aunt Annie could do to believe the evidence of her eyes.
-She fronted her niece augustly.</p>
-
-<p>“And you never told <i>me</i>, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“It didn’t come till last evening,” stammered Eliza.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span></p>
-
-<p>But a leading authority, even upon a subject so recondite,
-is not deceived in that way.</p>
-
-<p>“The child is five weeks old if it’s an hour,” scornfully
-affirmed the expert. “Besides,”&mdash;the eye of the expert
-transfixed her niece piercingly&mdash;“do you suppose&mdash;a
-woman of my experience&mdash;needs to be told&mdash;but why
-pursue the subject!”</p>
-
-<p>For the moment Eliza felt so guilty that she was quite
-unable to pursue the subject. Yet there was no reason
-why she should allow herself to be overwhelmed, except
-that Aunt Annie had an almost sublime power of putting
-people in the wrong. The situation in sheer grandeur
-and magnitude was altogether too much for her. And
-the mind of Aunt Annie, capable of volcanic energy
-when dealing with the subject it had made its own, had
-already traveled an alarming distance before Eliza could
-impose any check upon it.</p>
-
-<p>“A very fine child&mdash;a very fine child indeed&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;!”</p>
-
-<p>The portentous gravity of the words should have
-brought a chill to the soul of Eliza. But for some odd
-reason it caused her to laugh hysterically.</p>
-
-<p>“It is not a laughing matter,” said the face of Aunt
-Annie; her stern lips made no comment on the preposterous
-behavior of her niece.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s mine,” gasped Eliza, when laughter had brought
-her to the verge of tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell that to the Marines,” said the face of Aunt
-Annie. In fact the face of Aunt Annie said more
-than that. It said, “Eliza, I should like to give
-you the soundest shaking you have ever had in your
-life.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Joe and I have adopted it,” gurgled Eliza at last.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Annie drew herself up to her full, formidable,
-dragoon-like height of five feet ten inches, and gazed
-sublimely down from that Olympian elevation.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why not say so, my dear, in so many
-words, without making yourself so profoundly ridiculous?”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>With tingling ears, Eliza humbly admitted her fault.
-But as soon as she had done so, there arose a serious
-problem, for a simple creature in whose sight the truth,
-the whole truth and nothing but the truth was very precious.
-Aunt Annie began to ask questions&mdash;questions
-which forbade a person of ordinary discretion to answer
-with candor.</p>
-
-<p>Whose was the child? What was its origin? What
-did the parents&mdash;&mdash;? Why did the parents&mdash;&mdash;?
-When did the parents&mdash;&mdash;? Did Eliza fully realize the
-grave nature of the responsibility she was taking upon
-herself?</p>
-
-<p>It was the last question of the series that Eliza
-answered first. And this she did for a sufficient reason:
-to answer the others was wholly beyond her power.</p>
-
-<p>“We may be doing a very unwise thing,” said Eliza.
-“Joe and I know that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure I hope you do, my dear. But tell me,
-where did you get it?”</p>
-
-<p>The voice of truth enjoined on a doorstep in
-Grosvenor Square, but the voice of prudence said otherwise.
-And the voice of prudence sounded a very clear
-and masterful note in Eliza’s ear, for Joe, Harriet, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span>
-she were fully agreed that the true story must
-not be given to the world. Diplomacy was called
-for. Such a forthright creature was quite unversed
-in that dubious art, but she must prepare to use
-it now.</p>
-
-<p>“I promised I wouldn’t tell.” Alas! that crude
-formula was all in the way of guile that poor flustered
-Eliza could muster at the moment.</p>
-
-<p>Less by instinctive cleverness than by divine
-accident there was a world of meaning, however, in that
-faltering tone. And a word to the wise is sufficient.
-There was not a wiser woman in England than Aunt
-Annie, except&mdash;of course, that is to say!&mdash;speaking
-merely for the lieges of the realm&mdash;.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, I don’t press the question.” It was the
-tone she had once accidentally overheard a very great
-Personage use to Lord Gr-nv-lle.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza sighed relief.</p>
-
-<p>“But, let me say this,” Aunt Annie looked steadily
-at her niece. “I ask no questions in regard to the parents,
-but whoever they may be, you must know that you run
-a risk. The offspring of a regular union are often unsatisfactory,
-the offspring of an irregular union, although
-I praise heaven I have had no personal experience of
-them, always bring sorrow to those with whom they
-have to do.”</p>
-
-<p>Eliza could only reply that the creature was such a
-dear lamb that she was quite prepared to take the risk.
-Aunt Annie shook a solemn head at her niece, and then
-surveyed the infant in true professional style. The babe
-still slept. Before the great critic and connoisseur made
-any comment she removed the thumb from the delightful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-mouth. And the act was done with such delicacy as
-not to bring a cloud to the dreams of this wonderful
-Mary.</p>
-
-<p>This was a rosebud of a creature, and she lay in her
-grand cradle as if she simply defied even the highest
-criticism to dispute the fact. Certainly one who knew
-what babies were did not try to do so. Only one remark
-was offered at that moment, but to the initiated it was
-worth many volumes.</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever’s child it may be,” said Aunt Annie, “and
-mind I don’t go into that, it is not a child of common
-parents.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>For some odd reason, Eliza was so intensely flattered
-by Aunt Annie’s words, that she felt a desire to hug
-her. None knew so well as Eliza that it was not a child
-of common parents, but it was not the way of this
-expert to say so. The wonderful creature was “wrapt
-in mystery,” but the hallmark of quality must have been
-stamped very deep for such a one as Aunt Annie to
-commit herself to any such statement. Her standard was
-princes and princesses. Every babe in Christendom was
-judged thereby, and there was perhaps one in a million
-that could hope to survive the test.</p>
-
-<p>A miracle had happened, but it was really too much to
-expect that the cradle would have a share in it. Aunt
-Annie shook her head over the cradle. It had too many
-fal-lals. She approved neither its curtains nor its air of
-grandeur. She was a believer in plainness and simplicity.
-If before incurring an unwarrantable expense,
-her niece had only mentioned the matter, the great lady<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-would have gone to Armitt’s personally and have
-arranged for a replica of the hygienic but unpretentious
-design supplied by that famous firm to the Nursery over
-which she had presided.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza, however, could accept no responsibility for the
-cradle. Harriet had sent it that morning quite unexpectedly.
-Aunt Annie was a little surprised that the
-taste of Bridport House in cradles was not a little surer.
-Yet upon thinking the matter over she found she was
-less surprised than she thought she was. The Dinnefords
-were a good family, the Duke was esteemed, his
-late Duchess, for a brief period, had been Mistress of
-the Posset, but after all Bridport House was not Bowley.
-After all a Gulf was fixed.</p>
-
-<p>It was vain for Eliza to show how disappointed Harriet
-would be; the cradle had so clearly cost a great
-deal of money. It had cost too much money, that was
-the head and front of the cradle’s offending. There
-was an air of the parvenu about it. Such a cradle would
-never have been tolerated at Bowley, nay, it was open to
-doubt whether it would have been tolerated at Bridport
-House.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Annie was still discoursing upon cradles out of
-a full mind, when Harriet herself came on the scene.
-She was spending a few days at Number Five, Beaconsfield
-Villas before going down to Buntisford, and she had
-now returned from a day’s shopping in London. She
-knew that Aunt Annie was coming to tea, yet in spite
-of being forewarned, the sight of the dominant old lady
-seated at the table seemed to dash her at once.</p>
-
-<p>For one thing, perhaps they were not the greatest of
-friends. It may have been that Bowley set too high<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span>
-a value upon itself in the eyes of Bridport House, it
-may have been that Bridport House held itself too independent
-in the eyes of Bowley. The clan Sanderson,
-one and all, revered Aunt Annie; there was no gainsaying
-that her career had been immensely distinguished;
-but at this moment Harriet’s greeting certainly seemed
-just a little perfunctory; it might even be said to have
-a covert antagonism.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet’s health was tenderly inquired after, she was
-solemnly congratulated on her recent appointment, which
-did her much credit and conferred honor upon her
-family; but it was soon apparent that there was only
-one subject, to which, at that moment, Harriet could
-give her mind. Had she been the mother of the babe,
-instead of the godmother merely, her impatience to draw
-aside the curtains of the cradle could hardly have been
-greater, or her delight in looking upon a ravishing spectacle
-when she had done so.</p>
-
-<p>Even the stern criticism of those curtains she did not
-heed, until she had gazed her fill. It was a babe in
-a million. And when at last she was up against the
-curtains, so to speak, instead of meeting the curtains
-fairly and squarely, she began to paint extravagant pictures
-of the future.</p>
-
-<p>Her name was Mary. That was settled. She was
-to be brought up most carefully; indeed, it was decided
-already that she was to have a first-rate education.</p>
-
-<p>“A first-rate education!” There was a slight curl
-of a critical lip.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” inquired godmother Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“The expense, my dear!”</p>
-
-<p>“I think I shall be able to afford it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>You</i>, my dear,” said Aunt Annie, rather pointedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I am the godmother,” said Harriet, with the light of
-battle in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“So I hear. But don’t forget she is to be the child
-of a police constable.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is not the child of a police constable,” said Harriet,
-with a mounting color.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know whose child she is. That is a question
-I prefer to avoid. But in my humble opinion it
-will be a grave mistake to educate her above the class to
-which it has pleased Providence to call her. No good
-can come of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s nonsense!” The fine voice had a slight tremble
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Annie looked down her large nose. “At any
-rate, that has always been my view. And it has always
-been the view of, I will not say who. It is very perilous
-to tamper with the order of Divine Providence. And
-I am surprised that one who has been called to a position
-of high responsibility should think otherwise.”</p>
-
-<p>The quick flush upon Harriet’s cheek showed that the
-old lady had got home. She was always formidable
-at close quarters; even Harriet had to be wary in trying
-a fall with her.</p>
-
-<p>“The child must have a good, sensible upbringing.
-Let her be taught cooking, sewing, plain needlework, and
-so on. And <i>I</i> shall be very glad to give a little advice
-from time to time. But I repeat it will be most unwise
-to set her up, no matter who her parents may be, above
-the station in life to which it has pleased Providence
-to call her.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the light of battle darkened the eyes of Harriet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It is early days at present to talk about it,” she
-said. And she laughed suddenly in a high-pitched key.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>Water flowed under London Bridge. The flight of
-time demanded that Mary should fulfill her promise of
-being the most wonderful child ever seen. She did not
-fail, but grew in grace and beauty like a flower. At the
-date of her arrival her age was deemed to be one month.
-By the time it had been multiplied by twelve a personality
-had begun to emerge, twelve months later it was
-possible to gauge it.</p>
-
-<p>There never was such a child. Eliza held that opinion
-from the first, and godmother Harriet shared it. Aunt
-Annie was more discreet, but her actions expressed an
-interest of the highest kind. From the moment she had
-committed herself to the memorable statement that
-“Whoever’s child she may be, she is not a child of common
-parents,” there was really no more to be said.
-But as the months passed and Mary became Mary yet
-more definitely, the old lady, to the astonishment of both
-her nieces, began to identify herself intimately with the
-fortunes of the creature.</p>
-
-<p>The critical age of two was safely passed. And the
-age of three found Mary more than ever the cynosure
-of Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas. The infant had
-such health, her eyes were so blue, her laugh was so
-gay, her rose-bloom tints were so dazzling, that the
-childless hearth of the Kellys’ was somehow touched
-with the hues of Paradise. In moments of gloom Joe
-had his doubts, and now and again expressed them.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span>
-He had certainly done very wrong, the whole matter
-was most irregular, but the look in Eliza’s face was a
-living contradiction to official pessimism.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime Aunt Annie sat many an hour, spectacles
-on nose, making “undies” for her new niece.
-The old lady was much courted by the rest of her
-family. Even amid the remoter outposts of the clan,
-her word was law. Apart from the romance of her
-career, she enjoyed a substantial pension, she owned
-house property, and the stocking in which she kept her
-savings was known to be a long one. But beyond all
-things was the woman herself. It was sheer weight of
-character that gave her such a special place among her
-peers.</p>
-
-<p>The clan Sanderson was extensive, and inclined to
-exclude. There were Sandersons holding positions of
-trust in various parts of London and the country. There
-was Mr. George Sanderson, who was in a bank at Surbiton,
-who, if he did not actually share the apex with
-his cousin Annie, was immensely looked up to; there
-was Francis, who, from very small beginnings, had
-blossomed into a chartered accountant; there was young
-Lawrence, of the new generation, who had given up
-being a page boy in very good service, for the lures
-of journalism. He was far from being approved by his
-Aunt Annie, and he had not the sanction of his Uncle
-George, but he was understood to be doing very well,
-and if he only kept on long enough and made sufficiently
-good in this eccentric way of life, the mandarins
-of the family might regard him a little more hopefully.
-Finally, there was Harriet. Hers was a truly remarkable
-case.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span></p>
-
-<p>At the age of twenty-nine, without special training
-or any particular influence, she had been made housekeeper
-to the Duke of Bridport at Buntisford Hall,
-Essex. The more modern minds among the clan might
-affect to despise a success of that kind, but for generations
-there had been a sort of feudal connection between
-the great house of Dinneford and the honest
-race of yeomen who had served it. Chartered Accountant
-Francis might smile in a superior way, young
-Lawrence of Fleet Street, a perfect anarchist of a fellow,
-might scoff, but every true-blue Sanderson of the older
-generation was amazed at Harriet’s achievement, and
-felt a personal pride in it.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Annie, who had a temperamental dislike of Harriet,
-was the first to admit that the rise of her niece had
-been very remarkable. The august Miss Sanderson
-was an unequaled judge of what Mr. George Sanderson
-called “general conditions.” Her own historical
-career had given her peculiar facilities for gauging the
-lie of a country, socially speaking, her sense of values
-was absolutely correct, and she was constrained to admit,
-much as it hurt her to do so, that Harriet’s success
-had no parallel in her experience.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza Kelly occupied a very different place in the
-hierarchy. She was perilously near the base of the
-statue. Her brothers, her sisters, her uncles, her cousins,
-and her aunts, had always made a practice of going
-up in the world, but she had unmistakably come down
-in it. It was not that they had anything against Joe
-personally. He was sober, honest, a good husband, and
-he well knew the place allotted to him by an all-wise
-Providence. But when the best had been said for him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-he was not, and could never hope to be, a Sanderson.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, the more surprising that Aunt Annie
-should take so great an interest in the waif that the
-Kellys had adopted. None knew the name of its parents,
-none so much as ventured to hint at the source of its
-origin, yet the mandarin-in-chief accepted it as soon as
-she set eyes upon it, and month by month, year by year,
-to the increasing surprise of the clan as a whole, her
-regard for the creature waxed in ever growing proportions.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Francis&mdash;A Miss Best, of Sheffield&mdash;had given an
-account of her afternoon call at Bowley, which she
-had timed as usual for the day after Royalty had paid
-its annual visit. Mrs. F.&mdash;in the family, she was always
-Mrs. F.&mdash;had then seen Mary for the first time. And
-although she had five of her own, the child had made a
-great impression. She was like a fairy, with vivid eyes
-and wonderful hair, which Aunt Annie used to brush
-over a stick every time she came to Croxton Park
-Road; her clothes were simple and in perfect taste, but
-of a style and quality far beyond the reach of Mrs.
-F.’s own progeny. She was then a little more than
-three, and not only Mrs. F., but <i>others</i>, according to
-Aunt Annie’s account of the matter, had been greatly
-struck by her. She certainly made a picture with her
-dainty limbs, her laughing eyes, her flaxen curls. All
-the same, it was very absurd that the child should
-be turned out in that way. Eliza and Joe could not
-possibly afford it, and if the old lady was responsible,
-as was feared was the case, she ought to have had more
-sense than to set her up in that way.</p>
-
-<p>As the result of inquiries, Mrs. F. felt bound to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-make in the matter, and there were very few matters
-in which Mrs. F. did not feel bound to make inquiries
-of one kind or another, it appeared that Aunt Annie
-was not responsible for her clothes. The clothes lay at
-the door of godmother Harriet. She had insisted on
-choosing them, and had further insisted on sharing the
-considerable expense they involved. Mrs. F. gathered
-that in the opinion of Aunt Annie and also in that of
-Eliza, godmother Harriet was inclined to abuse her
-position. She was always insisting. No detail of the
-creature’s upbringing escaped her interference. She
-must have her say in everything; indeed, she came over
-from Buntisford regularly once a week for the purpose
-of having it. At Beaconsfield Villas, and also at Bowley,
-she took a very high tone, which Eliza and Aunt
-Annie strongly resented. But it seemed there was no
-remedy. Harriet was the godmother, she had her rights,
-her will was as imperious as Aunt Annie’s own&mdash;and
-her purse seemed fathomless.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Mary was four, it was settled that she
-should go every morning to Bowley to be taught her
-letters. And she must be taken there by a girl “who
-spoke nicely.” It seemed that a girl, who spoke nicely,
-was a rather rare bird in Laxton. At any rate Eliza
-having been compelled in the first place to yield to a
-nursemaid, had many to review before one was found
-whose style of delivery could satisfy the fastidious ear
-of Aunty Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza might be piqued by such “officiousness,” but she
-could not deny that Harriet had reason on her side. Perhaps
-it was overdoing things a bit for people in their
-position, but Eliza, if fallen from high estate, was still<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-at heart a Sanderson. Therefore she knew what was
-what. And the secret was hers that the child’s real home
-was a long way from Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas,
-Laxton. Eliza could never quite forget the source of
-origin of her adopted daughter.</p>
-
-<p>Every month that went by seemed to make it increasingly
-difficult to forget that. Princess Geraldine herself,
-that figure of legend who used to call at Bowley
-every twenty-sixth of March, could never have been
-in more devout or judicious hands than little Mistress
-Mary in that of the Council of Three, not to mention
-those of Miss Sarah Allcock, specially coöpted.
-No child so tended and cared for, whose welfare was
-so carefully studied by experts, could have failed to
-grow in beauty and grace. She was so perfectly charming
-and superb when in the charge of the discreet Miss
-Allcock, she took the air with her wonderful hair, her
-patrician features and her white socks, that the nearest
-neighbors began to resent it. It was considered rather
-swank on the part of the Kellys to set up such a child
-at all. They were surprised that Joe, a popular man,
-should not have a truer sense of the fitness of things.
-They were less surprised at Mrs. Joe, who was not
-quite so popular. But Joe was a sensible fellow, and
-he should have seen to it that the child did not become
-the talk of the neighborhood.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, after all, it may not have been so much the fault
-of Joe or of Eliza, his wife, that the child became the
-talk of the neighborhood. In the purview of local
-society, whose salon was Mrs. Connor’s, the greengrocer’s
-lady, at the end of the street, the blame lay
-at the door of Miss Sarah Allcock. The truth was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-incursion of Miss Allcock was keenly resented by the
-local ladies. She was altogether too fine&mdash;yet the odd
-thing was that she was not fine at all. But she was
-in every way uncommonly superior. No greater tribute
-could have been paid to the social supremacy of the presiding
-genius of Croxton Park Road, or to the strength
-of character of Aunty Harriet, than that such a one
-as Miss Allcock should condescend to Beaconsfield Villas.
-Truth to tell, Miss Allcock was a remote connection of
-the clan Sanderson, although never admitted as such by
-the mandarins. But she knew there were strings to
-pull, and a good place had been guaranteed her when she
-really started out in service.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, as far as the neighbors were concerned,
-Miss Sarah Allcock was an error of judgment. She was
-amazingly neat and trim, she had the true Sanderson
-refinement of manner and address, she was fond of
-airing her voice to her charge with all sorts of subtle
-Mayfair inflections, and she looked <i>away</i> from the neighbors
-as if they were dirt. As if they were dirt&mdash;that
-was the gravamen of their complaint in the sympathetic
-ear of Mrs. Bridgit Connor.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Bridgit Connor, the greengrocer’s wife, was a
-widespread lady of Irish descent, of great but fluctuating
-charm, and unfailing volubility. Her vocabulary was
-immense, but scorn often taxed it. Her scorn of Miss
-Allcock taxed it to the breaking point. Born on a
-bog and descended in the remote past from the kings of
-the earth, Mrs. Connor had facilities of speech and gesture
-denied to the common run of her kind. She avenged
-the slights put by Miss Allcock upon herself and friends
-by alluding to that lady’s charge in a loud voice whenever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span>
-opportunity offered as “a by-blow,” or “a no-man’s
-child.”</p>
-
-<p>When Mary was five there arose the grand question
-of her education proper. At first a great clash of wills
-was threatened. Aunt Annie had her views. Aunty
-Harriet had hers. Eliza, being merely “the mother,” was
-not allowed to have any. Aunty Harriet thought perhaps
-the kindergarten. Aunt Annie did not believe in such
-new-fangled nonsense. Besides no kindergarten would
-take her.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked Aunty Harriet. But as she spoke
-there came a slight flush to the proud face.</p>
-
-<p>“Because they won’t,” said Aunt Annie with stern
-finality. “All schools of the better sort are very particular.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunty Harriet bit her lip sharply. She retorted, perhaps
-unwisely, that if they were not very particular
-they would cease to be schools of the better sort.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” said Aunt Annie.</p>
-
-<p>For the moment it looked as if daggers were going
-to be drawn. These two were always at the verge of
-conflict. Both were impatient of any kind of opposition,
-and in the matter of young Mistress Mary they seldom
-saw eye to eye. Aunt Annie did not disguise her opinion
-that Aunty Harriet was inclined to take too much upon
-herself, and Aunty Harriet had no difficulty in returning
-the compliment.</p>
-
-<p>But Harriet had great common sense, and she was
-a woman of action. She was not the one tamely to
-accept the decree about schools of the better sort, but
-began to make researches of her own into the subject.
-She was very hard to please, both in regard to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-style of the school and the condition of the scholars,
-and when at last one had been found which met the
-case, there arose the difficulties Aunt Annie had predicted.
-A child of parentage unknown, adopted by the
-family of a police constable, did not commend herself
-to the Misses Lippincott of Broadwood House Academy.
-To Aunty Harriet this seemed a great pity; the school
-presided over by those ladies was exactly suitable. Its
-tone was high but not pretentious; the small daughters
-and the smaller sons of Laxton’s leading tradesmen
-mingled with those of its professional classes, and its
-reputation was so good that Aunty Harriet, after a discreet
-interview with the elder Miss Lippincott, a bishop’s
-daughter and a university graduate, set her mind upon it.</p>
-
-<p>Howbeit, the austere Miss Lippincott showed no inclination
-to receive the adopted child of a police constable
-as a pupil at Broadwood House Academy. This was not
-conveyed to Miss Harriet Sanderson in so many words,
-but in the course of the next day she received a letter,
-delicately-worded, to that effect. However, she did not
-give in, as smaller and weaker people might have done,
-but she put her pride in her pocket and, looking the
-facts in the face, went to take counsel at Bowley.</p>
-
-<p>“What did I tell you, my dear!” said Aunt Annie.
-To refrain from that observation would have been superhuman.
-But the observation duly made, the old lady
-also revealed the divine gift of common sense. From
-all that she had heard the establishment of the Misses
-Lippincott was immensely desirable. Moreover, she
-clearly remembered the Bishop, their late father, coming
-to spend the week-end at the real Bowley, and hearing
-him preach a singularly moving sermon in the little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-parish church. Small wonder, then, that the tone of
-Broadwood House Academy was “exactly right” in every
-human particular; besides, Aunt Annie had met and
-approved Miss Priscilla Lippincott on two occasions.
-Therefore, the old lady promised Aunty Harriet that she
-herself would see what could be done in the matter.</p>
-
-<p>The first thing Aunt Annie did was to induce the
-Mayoress, Mrs. Alderman Bradbury, to say a word on
-the child’s behalf. She promptly followed up this piece
-of strategy by ordering her state chariot to drive Mistress
-Mary and herself to Broadwood House Academy.</p>
-
-<p>The child was looking her best. Her carefully-brushed
-tresses shone like woven sunbeams, her slight, trim form
-was clothed with taste and elegance, her laughing eyes
-were frankly unabashed by the demure Miss Priscilla,
-nay, even by the august Miss Lippincott herself. The
-effect she made was entirely favorable. Besides, the
-Mayoress had taken the trouble to call the previous afternoon
-in order to speak for her, and Miss Sanderson,
-as the Misses Lippincott knew, was looked up to in Laxton;
-therefore, out of regard for all the circumstances,
-a point was waived and little Miss Kelly was reluctantly
-admitted to Broadwood House Academy.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VI</p>
-
-<p>The Misses Lippincott never had cause to rue their
-temerity. Little Miss Kelly remained in their care until
-she was big Miss Kelly, a brilliant and dashing creature
-with a quite extraordinary length of black stocking.
-Neither Miss Lippincott nor Miss Priscilla ever regretted
-her democratic action. In fact, it was a source of jealous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
-remark, even among the most distinguished scholars of
-Broadwood House Academy, that not one of them could
-wear the black beaver hat with the purple ribbon and its
-gold monogram B. H. A., or the blue ulster with gilt buttons,
-in quite the way that these modish emblems were
-worn by Mary Kelly.</p>
-
-<p>It greatly annoyed Ethel Cliffe, who lived in The
-Park, and was a daughter of Sir Joseph, three times
-Mayor of Laxton, that in looks and popularity she had
-to yield to the offspring of very much humbler parents,
-who lived in quite an obscure part of the borough. But
-it had to be. Year by year the cuckoo that had entered
-the nest grew in beauty and favor, while the legitimate
-denizens of Broadwood House could only bite their lips
-and marvel. In the opinion of Ethel Cliffe and her
-peers, old Dame Nature must be a perfect idiot not to
-know her business a bit better.</p>
-
-<p>It was not that Mary Kelly made enemies. Her
-disposition was open, free, and fearless; her heart was
-gold. Then, too, in most things, she was amazingly
-quick. She never made any bones about reading, writing,
-arithmetic, geography, and so on, she was good at
-freehand drawing, and the use of the globes, in Swedish
-drill and ball games, particularly at hockey, she was
-wonderful, and in music and dancing there was none
-in the school to compare with her. The only things in
-which she did not really excel were plain needlework
-and religious knowledge. These bored her to tears&mdash;except
-that she proudly reserved her tears for matters
-which seemed of more consequence.</p>
-
-<p>As Mary Kelly’s stockings got longer and longer the
-supremacy of Ethel Cliffe grew even less secure. Even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span>
-at Broadwood House Academy it was impossible to subsist
-entirely on your social eminence. Ethel had openly
-sneered at the outsider upon her first intrusion in the
-fold; the only daughter of a very recent knight found it
-hard to breathe the same air as the offspring of a humble
-police constable. But Dame Nature, in her ignorant way,
-bungled the whole thing so miserably, that while Ethel
-was always very near the bottom of the class, Mary
-was generally at the top of it; Ethel was heavy and
-humorless, and inclined to take refuge in her dignity,
-Mary was <i>bon enfant</i>, with very little in the way of dignity
-in which to take refuge. And in proof of that, a
-story was told of her, soon after she passed the age of
-ten, which ran like wildfire throughout Broadwood
-House Academy.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that in the vicinity of Mary’s undistinguished
-home were certain rude boys. Foremost among
-them was Mrs. Connor’s Michael, the youngest and not
-the least vocal of her numerous progeny. And it often
-happened that Michael was <i>en route</i> from his own seat of
-learning, where manners did not appear to be in the curriculum,
-when Mistress Mary was on the way home
-from Broadwood House Academy, where manners undoubtedly
-were. In the opinion of Michael’s mother the
-Connors were quite as good as the Kellys&mdash;very much
-better if it came to that!&mdash;and this tradition had been
-freely imbibed by her youngest hope. The Connors were
-quite as good as the Kellys, Michael was always careful to
-inform his peers, but the haughty beauty of Beaconsfield
-Villas, in her beaver hat and blue ulster with gilt
-buttons did not share that view. She had simply not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-so much as a look for Michael and his friends. This
-aloofness galled them bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>Had she only known such aristocratic indifference
-was rather cruel. For Michael’s one distinction among
-his mates, apart from his skill as a marble-player, which
-was very considerable, was that he lived in the same
-street as Miss Kelly. She was out and away the most
-wonderful creature ever seen in that part of Laxton.
-It was hard to forgive her for carrying her head in the
-way she did, yet it somehow added still greater piquancy
-to a personality that simply haunted the manly bosoms of
-the neighborhood. But her aloofness was felt to be such
-a reflection upon Michael himself, that at last that warrior
-was moved to a desperate course.</p>
-
-<p>He took the extreme measure of offering Miss Kelly
-his best blood alley. But it was in vain; Miss Kelly
-would have none of his best blood alley, or of its owner.
-Michael then decided upon war.</p>
-
-<p>In discussing the Kellys on the domestic hearth,
-he had heard his mother cast grave doubts upon the
-ancestry of their so-called daughter. Therefore, the
-spirit of revenge, rankling in Michael’s tormented breast,
-urged him to adopt a certain rhyme, current at the time,
-for the chastening of this haughty charmer. Together
-with a few chosen braves he lay in ambush for her as
-she wended her proud way home from Broadwood
-House Academy. As soon as Mary Kelly hove in sight
-round the corner of Grove Street, S.E., these heroes
-burst into song:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“I am Mary Plantagenet.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">What would imagine it?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Eyes full of liquid fire,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Hair bright as jet.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No one knows my history</div>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">I am wrapt in mystery</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I am the she-ro</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Of a penny novelette.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the occasion of the first performance, Miss Kelly
-did not deign to take the slightest notice. But after
-it had been repeated a number of times with increasing
-<i>réclame</i>, it grew more than she could brook. One
-never-to-be-forgotten Friday evening, in the fall of the
-year, she suddenly handed her satchel of books to her
-friend, Rose Pierce, and with decks cleared for action
-and the flame of battle in her eyes, bore down upon the
-foe. Michael Conner afterwards took his book oath to
-the effect that he was not a coward. But the beaver hat,
-the purple ribbon, the blue ulster and the gilt buttons
-put the fear of God into him very surely. He ran. Alas,
-he was a stocky youth, not exactly an Ormonde, even in
-his best paces, whereas Mary Plantagenet, black stockings
-and all, moved like a thoroughbred. She chased him
-remorselessly the whole length of Longmore Street,
-through the Quadrant, finally cornered him in a blind
-alley in which he had the bad judgment to seek refuge,
-and soundly boxed his ears.</p>
-
-<p>As far as Mary Kelly was concerned the incident was
-closed from that moment. Michael Connor very wisely
-decided to close it also. He returned to his marble-playing
-a chastened boy. But Rose Pierce, the daughter
-of Laxton’s leading physician, told the story breathlessly
-at Broadwood House Academy on the following morning.
-All agreed that the prestige of the school had been
-seriously impaired, but Miss Kelly was Mary Plantagenet
-from that time on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VII</p>
-
-<p>By the time Mary was fourteen, Broadwood House
-Academy had taught her most of what it knew. Then
-arose the question of her future. The Kellys were
-people in humble circumstances, and it was felt that the
-child must be put in the way of getting a living. Eliza
-suggested a shop, Aunt Annie shorthand and typewriting,
-as she was so quick at her books, but Aunty Harriet
-vetoed them promptly. And as year by year that autocrat&mdash;promoted
-since the Duke’s breakdown in health
-to the very important post of housekeeper at Bridport
-House, Mayfair&mdash;had supported the operations of a
-strong will with an active power of the purse, she
-carried the day as usual. Mary must be a hospital nurse.</p>
-
-<p>To this scheme, however, there was one serious drawback.
-No hospital would admit her for training until she
-was twenty-one. The problem now was, what she should
-do in the meantime. In order to meet it the Misses Lippincott
-allowed her to stay on as a special pupil at Broadwood
-House. Paying no fees, she gave a hand with the
-younger children, and was able to continue the study of
-music, for which she showed a special aptitude.</p>
-
-<p>For a time this plan answered very well. The Misses
-Lippincott had a great regard for Mary. In every way
-she was a credit to the school. Her natural gifts were
-of so high an order that these ladies felt that a career
-was open to her. There was nothing she might not
-achieve if she set her mind upon it, always excepting
-plain needlework and religious knowledge, and perhaps
-freehand drawing, in which she was a little disappointing
-also. Brimming with vitality and the joy of life and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span>
-yet with her gay enthusiasm was now coming to be
-mingled a certain ambition.</p>
-
-<p>As month by month she grew into a creature of charm
-and magnetism, she seemed to learn the power within
-herself. But that discovery brought the knowledge that
-she was a bird in a cage. The daily round began to pall.
-A rare spirit had perceived bars. Broadwood House
-Academy was dear to her, but she now craved a larger,
-a diviner air.</p>
-
-<p>It chanced that she was to be put in the way of her
-desire. Once a week there came to the school a Miss
-Waddington, to give lessons in dancing. A pupil of the
-famous Madame Lemaire, of Park Street, Chelsea, this
-lady was an accomplished, as well as a very knowledgeable
-person. From the first she had been greatly attracted
-by Mary Kelly. An instructed eye saw at once
-that the girl had personality. Not only was it expressed
-in form and feature, it was in her outlook, her ideas.
-There was a rhythm in all that she did, a poetry in the
-smallest of her actions.</p>
-
-<p>This girl was like no other. And Miss Waddington
-grew so much impressed that at last came the proud day,
-when by permission of the Misses Lippincott, Mary was
-taken to Park Street to the academy, in order that her
-gifts might be assessed by “Madame.”</p>
-
-<p>The opinion of that famous lady, promulgated in due
-course, caused a nine days’ wonder at Broadwood House.
-Madame Lemaire, it seemed, had been so much smitten
-by the lithe charm of young Miss Kelly, that she offered
-to take her in at Park Street and train her free of
-charge for three years.</p>
-
-<p>At once the girl grew wild to take her chance. It<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span>
-meant escape from a life that had already begun to cast
-long shadows. But her home people saw the thing in
-a very different light. In their opinion there was a
-wide gulf between the respectability of Broadwood
-House and the licentious freedom of Chelsea. Joe and
-Eliza were at one with Aunt Annie and Aunty Harriet
-in saying “No” to the proposal.</p>
-
-<p>Mistress Mary, however, was now rising sixteen with
-a rapidly developing character of her own. Therefore
-she did not let the strength of opposition daunt her.
-She set her mind firmly upon Park Street and Madame
-Lemaire; and very soon, to the intense surprise and
-chagrin of “her relations,” she had contrived to get the
-Misses Lippincott on her side.</p>
-
-<p>Very luckily for Mary, those ladies were open-minded
-and worldly wise. They saw that the career of a highly-trained
-dancer had prospects far beyond those of a half-educated
-schoolmistress. Mary was rapidly becoming an
-asset of Broadwood House, but the ladies, although perhaps
-a little dubious, allowed themselves to be overpersuaded
-by Miss Waddington and the girl herself.</p>
-
-<p>There followed a pretty to-do. Aunt Annie was horrified.
-Such a career, with all deference to the Misses
-Lippincott, hardly sounded respectable. As for Aunty
-Harriet, with her usual energy, she made first-hand inquiries
-in regard to Madame Lemaire. She found that
-the name of that lady stood high in her profession. But
-alas! one thing leads to another. Aunty Harriet, who
-had a shrewd knack of taking long views, had already
-espied the cloven hoof of the theater. It seemed inevitable
-that such a girl as Mary should drift towards it.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-And of that sinister institution Aunty Harriet had a
-pious horror.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore she opposed Park Street sternly. But the
-girl fully knew her own mind and meant from the first
-to have her way. And she played her cards so well that
-she got it somehow. No doubt it was judicious aid from
-an influential quarter that finally carried the day. Be
-that as it may, in spite of all sorts of gloomy prophecies,
-Mary was able to accept an offer which was to change
-completely the current of her life.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VIII</p>
-
-<p>The move to Chelsea closed an epoch. At once Mary
-found herself in a new and fascinating world. Part of
-the arrangement with Madame Lemaire was that she
-should “live in” at Park Street, and have freedom to
-take a fourpenny ’bus on Sundays to Beaconsfield Villas.
-This was greatly to Mary’s liking. Chelsea, as she
-soon discovered, had an air more rarefied than Laxton;
-somehow it had a magic which opened up new vistas.
-She had been by no means unhappy at Broadwood
-House, her foster-parents had treated her with every
-kindness, but she could not help feeling that by comparison
-with the new life, the old one was rather deadly.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, it would have been black ingratitude to
-admit anything of the kind. Still, the fact was there.
-Park Street had a freedom, a gayety, a careless bonhomie
-far removed from the austerity of Broadwood House.
-Her life had been enlarged. The hours were long, the
-work was hard, but her heart was in it, and the novel
-charm of her surroundings was a perpetual delight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span></p>
-
-<p>A month of Park Street brought more knowledge
-of the world than a lustrum of Broadwood House.
-Madame Lemaire’s establishment was a famous one,
-in fact the resort of fashion; to the perceptive Mary the
-people with whom she had now to rub shoulders had
-real educational value.</p>
-
-<p>The girl was one of a number of articled pupils, who
-were taught dancing in order to teach it again. With all
-of these she got on well. Immensely likeable herself,
-she had an instinct for liking others. And she was now
-among a rather picked lot, a little Bohemian perhaps in
-the general range of their ideas, but friendly, amusing,
-and at heart “good sorts.” Madame knew her business
-thoroughly. She seldom erred as to the character and
-capacity of those whom she chose to help her in return
-for a valuable training.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the girls who passed through her hands found
-their way on to the stage. Distinguished names were
-among them. Indeed, the atmosphere of Park Street
-was semi-theatrical. Dancing, elocution, singing, physical
-culture, and fencing were the subjects taught at
-Madame Lemaire’s academy.</p>
-
-<p>Mary remained nearly three years at Park Street. In
-that time she came on amazingly. Awake from the first
-to a knowledge of her gifts, she was secretly determined
-to use them in the carving out of a career. Broadwood
-House had sown the seed of ambition; under the able
-tutelage of Madame Lemaire it was to bear fruit. Stimulated
-by the outlook of her new friends, soon she began
-to feel the lure of a larger life. She craved for self-expression
-through the emotions, and all her energies
-were bent upon the satisfaction of a vital need.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the early stages she owed much to Madame Lemaire,
-who approved her ambition to the full. Here was
-a talent, and that lady did all in her power to fit a brilliant
-pupil for the field best suited to it. Unknown to Aunty
-Harriet, who still cherished the idea of a hospital at the
-age of twenty-one, unknown to Aunt Annie, who would
-have been horrified, unknown to Beaconsfield Villas,
-Mary with the future always before her, set to work
-under the ægis of Madame to make her dreams come
-true.</p>
-
-<p>After many diligent months, in the course of which a
-singularly dainty pair of feet were reënforced by a very
-serviceable soprano, there came the day when she was
-given her chance. A theatrical manager, who made a
-point of attending the annual display of Madame’s pupils
-at the Terpsichorean Hall, was so struck by her abilities
-that he offered her an engagement. It was true that it
-was merely to understudy in the provinces a small part
-in a musical comedy. But it was a beginning, if an humble
-one, and its acceptance was strongly advised. It meant
-the opening of the magic door at which so many are
-doomed to knock in vain. This girl should go far; but
-if the new life proved too hard, Madame would be more
-than willing for her to return to Park Street as a member
-of her staff.</p>
-
-<p>Alarums and excursions followed. Before a decision
-could be made the girl felt in honor bound to consult
-godmother Harriet. So intensely had that lady the welfare
-of Mary at heart, that she never failed to visit
-Park Street once a week when in London. There was
-a very real bond of sympathy between them, which time
-had deepened. Yet hitherto Mary had not ventured<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span>
-to disclose the scope and nature of her plans. Alas!
-she had now to launch a bolt from the blue.</p>
-
-<p>The blow fell one Wednesday afternoon when Aunty
-Harriet came as usual to drink a weekly cup of tea at
-Park Street with her adopted niece. Aunty Harriet,
-although she prided herself upon being a woman of the
-world, was unable to entertain such an idea for a moment.
-Years ago it had been decided that Mary was to
-be a hospital nurse. But Mary, now a strong-willed
-creature of eighteen had made her own decision. For
-many a month she had been working hard, unknown to
-her friends, in order to seize the chance when it came.
-Moreover, she felt within herself that she had found her
-true vocation.</p>
-
-<p>Aunty Harriet took a high tone. Three years before
-she had met defeat at the hands of this headstrong young
-woman in alliance with the Misses Lippincott. In secret,
-and for a reason only known to herself, she had never
-ceased to deplore that fact. She made up her mind that
-she would not be overcome a second time. But she was
-quite unable to shake the girl’s determination. And there
-was Madame Lemaire to reckon with. Indeed, that
-worldly-wise person seconded her clever pupil in the
-way the Broadwood House ladies had. Nor was it luck
-altogether that for a second time brought the girl such
-powerful backing when she needed it most. Behind the
-engaging air of simple frankness was a will that nothing
-could shake.</p>
-
-<p>The end of the matter was that two powerful natures
-came perilously near the point of estrangement. Both
-had fully made up their minds. That memorable Wednesday
-afternoon saw a veritable passage of arms, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
-course of which Mary, her back to the wall, at last threw
-down the gage of battle.</p>
-
-<p>Her blunt refusal to submit to dictation came as a
-shock to Harriet, whose distress seemed out of all proportion
-to its cause. But to her the project was so
-demoralizing that she fought against it tooth and nail.
-She enlisted Aunt Annie, now very infirm and less active
-as a power, and the girl’s home people at Beaconsfield
-Villas. But all opposition was vain. The young Amazon
-had cast the die for better or for worse. To Harriet’s
-consternation she took the manager’s offer. Disaster
-was predicted. There were heavy hearts in Laxton, but
-the heaviest of all was at Bridport House, Mayfair.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-FLOWING WATER</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">O</span>n</span> a spring afternoon, Mary at ease, novel in lap,
-let her mind flow over the years in their passing.
-Four had gone by since she had defied
-her family, in order to embrace a career, which in their
-view was full of peril. But in spite of that, so far she
-had escaped disaster. And fortune had been amazingly
-kind in the meantime.</p>
-
-<p>On the table near Mary’s elbow were five cups on a
-tray, and opposite, also at ease, with her hands behind
-her shrewd head, was Milly Wren. Mary had just begun
-to share a very comfortable flat with Milly and Milly’s
-mother.</p>
-
-<p>Milly herself, in Mary’s opinion, was more than
-worthy of her surroundings. Loyal, sympathetic, full
-of courage, she had served a far longer apprenticeship
-to success than Mary had. She had “made good” in the
-face of heavy odds.</p>
-
-<p>Milly had not a great talent. Force of character and
-singleness of aim had brought her to the top, and only
-these, as she well knew, would keep her there. But with
-Mary it was a different story. All sorts of fairies had
-attended her birth. She had every gift for the career<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-she had chosen, moreover, she had them in abundance.
-Milly, who had gone up the ladder a step at a time, would
-have been more than human had she not envied her
-friend the qualities she wore with the indifference of a
-regular royal queen.</p>
-
-<p>The clock on the chimney-piece struck four.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m feeling quite excited,” Milly suddenly remarked.</p>
-
-<p>From the depths of the opposite chair came the note
-which for six months now had cast a spell upon London.</p>
-
-<p>“He mustn’t know that,” laughed Mary. “Dignity,
-my child, touched with hauteur, is the prescription for a
-marquis. At least that’s according to the book of the
-words.” And she gayly waved the novel she had neglected
-for nearly an hour.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Sonny,” said Milly Wren, “I wasn’t thinking of
-<i>him</i>. I was thinking of the friend he is bringing, who
-is simply dying to know you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary knew this was quite true, for that was Milly’s
-way.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is he!” If the tone was disdain, its sting was
-masked by gentle irony and humor. These airs and
-graces didn’t make enemies, they so frankly belonged
-to the wonderful Mary Lawrence&mdash;her name in the
-theater. That which might have been mere petulance in
-a nature thinner of texture, became with her a half-royal
-impatience for the more trivial aspects of the
-human comedy.</p>
-
-<p>“But I want to see him,” persisted Milly. “Sonny
-thinks no end of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’m sure he’s nice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you think so?” Milly was a little intrigued
-by the warmth of the words.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Because Lord Wrexham is charming.”</p>
-
-<p>Milly laughed. The naïve admiration was unexpected,
-the slightly too respectful air was puzzling. Milly herself
-was so <i>blasé</i> in regard to the peerage that such an
-attitude of mind seemed almost provincial. Yet she
-would have been the first to own that it was the only
-thing about her enigmatic friend which suggested anything
-of the kind.</p>
-
-<p>“Sonny says he raves about you.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s <i>his funeral</i>.” The laugh was honestly gay. “He’ll
-be very disappointed, poor lad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t fish.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never fish in shallow waters, Miss Wren.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are the most shameless angler I know. But
-you do it so beautifully that people don’t realize what
-you are at.”</p>
-
-<p>“Unconsciously&mdash;say unconsciously,” came a flash
-from the opposite chair.</p>
-
-<p>“So I used to think. Before I really knew you I
-thought everything you said and did just happened so.
-But now I am not quite sure that you have not thought
-everything out beforehand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t make me out a horror.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anyway you are much the cleverest creature I have
-ever met. You are so deep that there is no fathoming
-you. Somehow you are not the least ordinary in anything.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary abruptly brought the conversation back to
-Sonny and his friend. The latter, it seemed, had first
-gazed on the famous Miss Lawrence in New York, at
-the Pumpernickel Theater, the previous year.</p>
-
-<p>“An American?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Milly. “But he’s seen a lot of life out
-West.”</p>
-
-<p>Before other questions could rise to Mary’s lips, Mrs.
-Wren came in. Milly’s mother was an elderly lady who
-had been on the stage. In the first flight of her
-profession, life had given her many a shrewd knock,
-but in the process she had picked up a considerable
-knowledge of the world and its ways. She lived for
-Milly, in whom her every thought was centered, for in
-the daughter the mother lived again. Intensely ambitious
-for her, Mrs. Wren was a little inclined to resent
-the intrusion within the nest of a bird of such dazzling
-plumage as Mary Lawrence. At the same time that
-honest woman well knew that her daughter had more
-to gain than she had to lose by sharing a roof with such
-a supremely attractive stable companion.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wren found it very difficult to place Mary
-Lawrence. In ideas and outlook, in the face she showed
-to the world, she was far from being a typical member
-of her calling as the good lady knew it. As Mrs. Wren
-reckoned success, this girl had won it on two continents
-almost too abundantly, but she seemed to hold it very
-cheap. Perhaps it had been gained too easily. Milly’s
-mother, rather jealous, rather ambitious as she was,
-could hardly find it in her heart to say it was undeserved,
-but Mary Lawrence took the high gifts of fortune so
-much for granted, almost as if they were a birthright,
-that the mother of her friend, remembering the long
-years of her own thornily-crowned servitude, and Milly’s
-hard struggle “to arrive,” could not help a feeling of
-secret envy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span></p>
-
-<p>“His lordship coming to tea?” said Mrs. Wren, with
-a demure glance at the five cups on the tray.</p>
-
-<p>None knew so well as she that his lordship was coming
-to tea. She had made elaborate preparations in toilette
-and confectionery in order to receive him. But the
-phrase rose so histrionically to her lips that she simply
-couldn’t resist it. Somehow it made such a perfect
-entrance, for Milly’s mother carried a sense of the
-theater into private life.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been heartless of Milly, who belonged
-to another generation, to have uttered the words on her
-tongue. And those words were, “You know perfectly
-well that Sonny is coming.”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he was,” Milly’s reply was given with a
-patient smile that concealed an infinity of boredom.
-Her mother, fussy, trite, rather exasperating, had never
-quite learned amid all her jousts with the world, to
-acquire the golden mean. There were times when she
-sorely tried her clever and ambitious daughter, whose
-patience was little short of angelic.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the name of the friend he is bringing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dinneford.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not another lord?” The tone of Mrs. Wren had
-a tiny note of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>“A rich commoner,” said Milly with a laugh. “At
-least Sonny says he will be one of the richest men in
-England when his uncle dies. His uncle, I believe, is a
-great swell.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t doubt it, dear,” said Mrs. Wren.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>An electric bell was heard to buzz.</p>
-
-<p>“They are here,” said Mrs. Wren in a tone with a
-thrill in it.</p>
-
-<p>A neat parlor maid announced “Lord Wrexham, Mr.
-Dinneford,” and two stalwart young men entered cheerily.
-They were hearty upstanding fellows, curiously
-alike in manner, appearance, dress, yet in the thousand
-and one subtleties of character immutably different.
-But this was not a moment for the fine shades. They
-came into the room unaffectedly, without shyness, and
-warmly took the hands of welcome that were offered
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Wrexham, a subaltern of the Pinks of three years’
-standing, was an attractive but rather irresolute young
-man. He knew that he was perilously near forbidden
-ground. If not exactly in the toils of an infatuation,
-the charms of Milly were growing day by day upon
-an impressionable mind. Fully content as yet to live
-in the moment, a wiser young man might have begun
-to pay the future some little attention.</p>
-
-<p>As for the lively, headstrong, unconventional Jack
-Dinneford, at present at a loose end in London, to whom
-Wrexham himself had been appointed as a sort of unofficial
-bear-leader by the express desire of Bridport
-House, that warrior was on a voyage of discovery. In
-common with half the males of his age in the metropolis
-he was already in the thrall of the wonderful Princess
-Bedalia. In the opinion of connoisseurs she was the
-only one of her kind; for the past two hundred nights
-she had played “to capacity” at the Frivolity Theater,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-and even Jack Dinneford, who in one way or another
-had seen a goodish bit of the Old World and the New,
-could not repress an exquisite little thrill as her highness
-rose with rare politeness to receive him.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s even more stunning than I guessed,” was the
-thought in Jack’s mind at the moment of presentation.
-He could almost feel the magnetism in her finger tips.
-She was so alive in every nerve that it would have called
-for no great power of imagination to detect vibration
-all round her.</p>
-
-<p>“I feel greatly honored in meeting you,” said the
-young man with transparent honesty. He was no
-subscriber evidently to the maxim, “Language was given
-us to conceal our thoughts.” Somehow she couldn’t help
-liking him for it.</p>
-
-<p>“The honor is mine.” The response was so ready, the
-humor behind it so genuine, that they both laughed
-whole-heartedly and became friends on the spot. There
-was no nonsense about Princess Bedalia, and the same
-applied to the brown-faced clear-eyed owner of the
-fanciful scarf pin.</p>
-
-<p>The neat parlor maid brought tea. Wrexham, after
-a little amiable chaffing of Mrs. Wren, whom he had
-met on at least six occasions, provided Milly with tea
-and a macaroon, took the like for himself, and sat beside
-her without a care in the wide world. She was
-forbidden fruit; thus to frail humanity in its present
-phase she conveyed an idea of Paradise. Such a view
-was quite absurd, allowing even for the fact that Milly
-was an engaging creature, with a good heart, a ready
-tongue, a rather special kind of prettiness, and a particularly
-shrewd head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jack Dinneford on the opposite sofa had stronger
-warrant for his emotions. This girl whom he had first
-seen in New York before the news of a great inheritance
-had come to him, whom he had since viewed ten times
-from the stalls of the Frivolity Theater, was a personality.
-There was no doubt about that. And as he discovered
-at once their minds marched together. They
-saw men and events at the same angle. A phrase of
-either would draw forth an instant counterpart; in five
-minutes they had turned the whole universe into mockery,
-but without letting go of the fact that they were
-complete strangers colloguing for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wren withdrew presently on the pretext that
-she had letters to write. A very pleasant hour quickly
-sped. Each of these four people was in the mood to
-enjoy. Life in spite of its hazards, was no bad thing
-at the moment. Wrexham, a thorough gentleman, was
-an immensely likeable young man. And while he basked
-in present happiness a certain resolution began to take
-shape in his mind.</p>
-
-<p>As for Jack Dinneford at the other side of the room,
-his thoughts followed a humbler course. But he was
-an elemental, a very dangerous fellow if once he began
-to play with ideas. At present he suffered from the
-drawback of being no more than the nephew of his uncle;
-therefore his sensations were not exactly those of
-Wrexham, who was a natural caster of the handkerchief.
-But in this fatal hour Jack was heavily smitten.</p>
-
-<p>He had met few girls in his twenty-four years of
-existence. In his naïf way he confessed as much to Miss
-Lawrence. She was amused by the confession and led
-him to make others. This was easy because he liked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-talking about himself, that is to say, with such a girl
-as Mary Lawrence inciting him humorously to reveal
-the piquant details of a life not without its adventures, he
-would have had to be much less primitive than he was
-to have resisted the lure of the charmer.</p>
-
-<p>She was unaffectedly interested. She differed from
-Mr. Dinneford inasmuch as she had met many young
-men. Therefore, her heart was not worn on her sleeve
-for daws to peck at. But he was a new type, and she
-confessed gayly to Milly as soon as he had gone, she
-found him very amusing.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>So much happened in the crowded month that followed,
-that at London Bridge the Thames might be
-said to be in spate. The two young men were often
-at the theater, and now and again Mary and Milly,
-chaperoned by Mrs. Wren, would accept an invitation
-to supper at a restaurant. Then there were the happy
-hours these four people were able to snatch from their
-various duties, which they spent under the trees in the
-Park. These were golden days indeed, but&mdash;the shadow
-of the policeman could already be seen creeping up.
-The senior subaltern had been constrained one fine
-morning to take Wrexham so far into his confidence as
-to inform him with brutal precision, that if a man in
-the Household Cavalry marries an actress, he leaves the
-regiment.</p>
-
-<p>The young man was intensely annoyed. Wisdom was
-not his long suit, and although an excellent fellow
-according to his lights, right at the back was the arrogance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span>
-of old marquisate. His answer to the senior subaltern
-was to arrange a most agreeable up-river excursion
-for the following Sunday. On returning late
-in the evening to the flat, Milly was in rather a flutter.</p>
-
-<p>Mary, who had been one of the merry party, was
-troubled. She had certain instincts which went very
-deep, and these warned her of breakers ahead. She
-had a great regard for Milly, and the more she knew
-of Wrexham the better she liked him. But she saw
-quite clearly that difficulties must arise if the thing went
-on, and that very powerful opposition would have to
-be faced in several quarters.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, she had now her own problem to meet;
-Jack had begun to force the pace. And Mary, who
-had a sort of sixth sense in these matters, had already
-felt this to be an inconvenience. From the first she
-had found him delightful. Day by day this feeling had
-grown. An original, with a strong will and a keen sense
-of humor, he differed from his friend Wrexham inasmuch
-that he knew his own mind. He returned from the
-river fully determined to marry Mary Lawrence.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps this heroic resolve may have been forced
-upon him by the knowledge of other Richmonds in
-the field. Mary was famous and admired. It savored
-of presumption for such a one as himself, in receipt
-of a modest two thousand a year from his kinsman, the
-Duke, to butt in where men far richer were content to
-walk delicately. But he was “next in” at Bridport
-House, he was heir to a great name, therefore, at the
-lowest estimate, he was a quite considerable <i>parti</i>. This
-fact must stand his excuse, although he was far too<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-astute to make it one in the difficult game he was about
-to play.</p>
-
-<p>Jack was not afflicted with subtlety in any form, he
-was not even a close observer, but he understood well
-enough that it was going to be a man’s work to persuade
-Mary Lawrence to marry him. She had an immense
-independence, to which, of course, she was fully entitled,
-a wide field of choice, and under the delightfully
-amusing give-and-take which endeared her to Bohemia
-was a fastidious reserve which somehow hinted at
-other standards. Even allowing for a lover’s partiality
-this girl was to cut to a pattern far more imposing than
-Milly Wren. Her qualities were positive, whereas Milly
-had prettiness merely, a warm heart, a factitious charm.
-However, as soon as this sportsman had made up his
-mind to tackle the stiffest fence that a Nimrod has to
-face, he decided at once that the hour had come to
-harden his heart and go at the post and rails in style.</p>
-
-<p>The next evening, as he strolled with Mary under the
-trees, he may have been thinking in metaphor, when he
-let his eyes dwell on the riders in the Row.</p>
-
-<p>“How jolly they look!” he said. And then at the
-instance of a concrete thought&mdash;“By Jove, an idea!
-Tomorrow morning, if I job a couple of gees, will you
-come for a ride?”</p>
-
-<p>The response was a ready one. “I should love to,
-if you are not afraid to be seen with an absolute duffer.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a bargain. But they may be screws, as there
-doesn’t seem enough decent ones to go round at this
-time of the year.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing about horses,” was the laughing
-reply, “except just enough not to look a hired horse<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-in the knees. And the worse my mount the better for
-me, at least it reduces my chance of biting the tan.”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect you are a good deal better than you admit.”</p>
-
-<p>She was woman enough to ask why he should think
-so.</p>
-
-<p>“You have the look of a goer,” he said, as his eye
-sought involuntarily the long slender line of a frame
-all suppleness, delicacy, and power.</p>
-
-<p>“Wait till tomorrow. In the meantime I warn you
-that you’re almost certain to be disgraced in the sight
-of the town.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s risk it anyway,” said the young man delightedly.</p>
-
-<p>In a very few minutes, however, Mary seriously
-regretted a rash promise. They had only gone a few
-yards farther, Jack still inclined to exult at the pact into
-which he had lured her, when both were brought up
-short by a sudden clear “Hello!” from the other side
-of the rails.</p>
-
-<p>Jack had been hailed by a couple of long, lean young
-women with mouse-colored hair, on a couple of long,
-lean mouse-colored horses. They were followed at a
-respectful distance by a very smart groom on a good-looking
-chestnut. The set of the close-fitting black
-habits and the absolute ease of the wearers denoted the
-expert horse-woman.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Madge&mdash;hello, Blanche!” The casual greeting
-was punctuated by a wave, equally casual, of the
-young man’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>As the two riders went slowly by they let their eyes
-rest upon Mary. The look she received did not amount
-to a stare, but it had a cool impertinence which somehow
-roused her fighting instinct. Unconsciously she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-gave it back. On both sides was a frank curiosity
-discreetly veiled, but the honors, if honors there were
-in the matter, were with the occupants of the saddle.
-Somehow that seemed so clearly to have been the place
-for generations of these lean young women with their
-rigidity of line, their large noses, their cool appraising
-air of which they were wholly unconscious.</p>
-
-<p>Who are <i>they</i>? was their reaction upon Mary Lawrence.</p>
-
-<p>Who is <i>she</i>? was her reaction upon these horsewomen.</p>
-
-<p>“A couple of my cousins.” The young man carelessly
-answered a question that Mary was too proud to ask.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>Mary’s riding had been confined to a few lessons
-shared with Milly at the Brompton School of Equitation,
-and Milly was urged to make a third on the morrow.
-Mrs. Wren felt it to be the due of the proprieties that
-she should do so, but Milly herself, apart from the fact
-that she was shy of appearing in the Row, was quite convinced
-that it would not be the act of “a sport” to overlook
-the ancient maxim, “Two are company, three
-a crowd.” Therefore the invitation was declined. And
-this discreet action on the part of Milly gave Fate the
-opportunity for which it had seemed to be looking for
-some little time past.</p>
-
-<p>It was about twenty minutes to eleven in the forenoon
-of a perfect first of June that Jack Dinneford rode
-up gayly to the flat in Broad Place, leading a horse
-very likely-looking, but warranted quiet. It was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span>
-fair presumption that the guarantee covered the fact
-of its disposition, since it had made the perilous journey
-from the jobmaster’s, three doors out of Park Lane,
-and across the No Man’s Land yclept Hyde Park
-Corner, that terrible and trappy maze, without a suspicion
-of mental stress.</p>
-
-<p>Jack’s best hunting voice ascended to an open window
-of the second story. The complete horsewoman, in
-every detail immaculate, came on to the little balcony
-of Number 16, Victoria Mansions.</p>
-
-<p>“What a gorgeous day!”</p>
-
-<p>“A ripper!”</p>
-
-<p>If excitement there was on the side of either, self-mastery
-concealed it. Yet an inconvenient pressure of
-emotion was shared by both just then. In spite of a liberal
-share of self-confidence and a will under strong
-control Mary could hardly refrain from the hope that
-she was not going to make a perfect fool of herself.
-As soon as she beheld the upstanding chestnut below
-with its slender legs and thin tail, she winged an involuntary
-prayer to Allah that there were no tricks in
-its repertory unbecoming a horse and a gentleman.
-As for Jack, the presence of all the horses in the world
-would not have excited him. It was not in him to be
-excited by things of that kind, that is to say, it was
-part of his religion not to be excited by them; all the
-same there was a genuine, nay, almost terrible thrill in
-his heart this morning.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of a rather wakeful night he had made
-up his mind “to come to the ’osses” in sober verity.
-To the best of his present information the gods, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-absence of the unforeseen, would discuss the matter
-privately about twelve o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>“Blanche and Marjorie will have something to look
-at,” was the proud thought in the mind of the young
-man as the complete Diana, fit to greet Aurora and her
-courses, emerged from the Otis elevator and took the
-front of Broad Place with beauty.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish these clothes were a little less smart, and not
-quite so new,” was the first thought in the mind of
-Diana. “I am sure they are both of them ‘Cats,’” was
-the thought which followed close upon its heels. Until
-that hour it had never been her lot to harbor such vain
-companions. This gay spirit to whom the fairies had
-been kind had always seemed to breathe a larger, a
-diviner air. Such self-consciousness shamed her; but
-after all <i>those two</i> with their old habits and their odd
-perfection were more to blame than she.</p>
-
-<p>Truth to tell, in the last seventeen hours a subtle,
-rather horrid change had taken place in her. Up till
-six o’clock the previous evening she had always been
-nobly sure of herself, regally self-secure. Always when
-she had measured herself against others of her age
-and sex she had had a feeling of having been born to the
-purple. Somewhere, deep down, she had seemed to
-have illimitable reserves to draw upon when the creatures
-of her own orbit had forced her to a reluctant
-comparison. In all her dealings with her peers, she had
-felt that she had a great deal in hand. But Marjorie
-and Blanche, whoever Marjorie and Blanche might be,
-had seemed to alter all that with a glance of their
-ironical eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Jack fixed her in the saddle of the tall horse and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-lengthened her stirrup with quite a professional air,
-while Milly and her mother watched the proceedings
-in a rather thrilled silence from the balcony of Number
-Sixteen. Their minds were dominated by a single
-thought, which, however, bore one aspect in the mind
-of Mrs. Wren, another in the mind of the faithful Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“She is <i>set</i> on marrying him?”&mdash;Mrs. Wren.</p>
-
-<p>“He is so nice, I hope he won’t disappoint her?”&mdash;Milly
-the faithful.</p>
-
-<p>The cavalcade started. As if no such people as
-Marjorie and Blanche existed in the world, Mary waved
-the yellow-gloved hand of an excited schoolgirl to the
-balcony of Victoria Mansions. Jack accompanied it
-with an upward glance and a gravely-lifted hat.</p>
-
-<p>In the maelstrom of promiscuous vehicles which
-makes Knightsbridge a thoroughfare inimical to man,
-Jack took charge of the good-looking hireling. With
-solemn care he piloted the upstanding one and his rather
-anxious rider into the calm of Albert Gate.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you are comfortable,” he found time to say;
-moreover, he found time to say it so nicely and sincerely,
-almost as if his only hope of happiness, here and hereafter,
-depended upon the answer, that the answer came
-promptly in the form of a gay “Yes,” although had she
-been quite honest she would have said she had never
-felt less comfortable in her life. Her horse was such a
-mountain of a fellow, that she might have been perched
-on the top of a very old-fashioned velocipede. Then the
-saddle was very different from the one at the riding
-school. It had much less room and fewer <i>points d’appui</i>
-to offer. As soon as her knee tried to grip the pommel
-she knew that she must not hope to get friends with it.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-She had embarked on a very rash adventure. And if
-she didn’t make a sorry exhibition of herself in the eyes
-of All London, including <i>those two</i>, she would have
-cause to thank her private stars, who, to give them
-their due, had certainly looked after her very well so far.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s very sporting of her,” said Expert Knowledge
-to Jack Dinneford.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope the gee won’t play the fool,” said Jack Dinneford
-to Expert Knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had they entered the Row, when Providence,
-of <i>malice prepense</i>, as it seemed, threw them right across
-the path of the enemy. Cousin Marjorie and Cousin
-Blanche, walking their horses slowly along by the rails,
-were within a very few yards. Moreover, they were
-coming towards them. Mary, aided by the sixth sense
-given to woman, was aware of a subtle intensity of gaze
-upon her, even before she could trace the source of its
-origin. She could feel it upon her&mdash;upon her and everything
-that was hers, from the crown of her rather too
-modish hat to the tip of her tall friend’s fetlock.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Jack,” said a clear, strong voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” the tone of Jack was amazingly casual&mdash;“here
-you are again.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment’s maneuvering, in the course of
-which three pairs of feminine eyes met in challenge,
-and then Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie, smart
-groom and all, passed on without offering a chance of
-coming to closer quarters. Their tactics had been calculated
-so nicely that it was impossible to say whether<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span>
-discourtesy was or was not intended. But there was a
-subtle air about these ironically self-confident young
-women which prevented Mary from giving them the
-benefit of the doubt.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment she felt inclined to rage within. And
-then she bit her lip and laughed. A moment later a
-sudden peck of the tall horse told her that it would be
-wise for the present to give him an undivided mind.
-Soon, however, Cousin Marjorie and Cousin Blanche
-were forgotten in the delights and the perils of the
-discreet canter into which she found herself launched.
-It was a perfect morning for the Row. The play of
-the sun on the bright leaves, the power of its rays
-softened by a breeze from the east, the sense of rapid
-motion, the kaleidoscope of swiftly changing figures
-through which they passed, filled her with a zest of life,
-a feeling of high romance which left no room for smaller
-and meaner affairs. And the stride of the tall horse,
-as soon as she got used to it, was such a thing of delight
-in itself, that she even forgot the strange saddle and
-her general fears.</p>
-
-<p>They rode for an enchanted hour. And somehow, in
-the course of it, the life forces became more insurgent.
-Somehow they deepened, expanded, grew more imperious.
-Jack was a real out-of-doors man, who believed that
-hunting, shooting, field sports, and fresh air were the
-highest good. His look of lordly health, mingled with
-a charmingly delicate protectiveness, appealed to her in a
-very special way. For some weeks she had known that she
-was beginning to like him perilously much. But it was
-not until she had returned rather tired and rather hot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-to Victoria Mansions, had had a delicious bath, and a
-very good luncheon indeed that she began at last to
-realize that she was fairly up against the acute problem
-of Jack Dinneford.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-BRIDPORT HOUSE</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>n</span> the meantime Cousin Marjorie and Cousin
-Blanche enjoyed their ride very much. It was the
-one thing they really did enjoy in London.</p>
-
-<p>They were two ordinary young women, yet even so
-late in the Old World’s history as the year 1913, their
-own private cosmos could not quite make up its mind
-to regard them in that light. Cousin Marjorie and
-Cousin Blanche had surprisingly little to say for themselves.
-They were modest, unassuming girls, without
-views or ideas, very proper, very dull, absurdly conventional;
-in the eyes of some people as plain as the proverbial
-pikestaff, passably good-looking in the sight of
-others; in fact, a more commonplace pair of young women
-would have been hard to find anywhere, yet deep in the
-hearts of the Ladies Dinneford was the sure faith that
-the world at large did not subscribe to any such opinion.</p>
-
-<p>It was not merely that they rode rather well. They
-passed other members of their sex in the Row that
-morning who rode quite as well as themselves. No,
-proficiency in the saddle, the one accomplishment they
-could boast, of which they were unaffectedly modest, was
-far from explaining the particular angle at which the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-world chose to view them. Not that in any way they
-were fêted or acclaimed. As far as the vast majority
-of their fellow-creatures were concerned they were not
-people to look at twice. But here and there a glance
-of recognition or curiosity would greet them, winged by
-a smile, now of mere interest, now of an irony faintly
-perceptible.</p>
-
-<p>Life had been very kind to Cousin Marjorie and
-Cousin Blanche, yet they did not look conspicuously
-happy. With both hands it had lavished upon them its
-material best, but the gifts of fortune were taken as
-a matter of mere personal right. Providence owed it
-to the order of things they stood for. Far from being
-grateful, they were a little bored by its attentions.
-Moreover, these young women had not learned to regard
-people to whom the fairies had been less kind with either
-insight or sympathy. Their judgments were objective,
-therefore they were a little hard, a little lacking in tolerance.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>“The stage!” said Marjorie with a straight-lipped smile,
-a rather famous part of her importance.</p>
-
-<p>“You think so?” said Blanche sleepily. But she was
-not at all sleepy, else she would not have been able to
-handle the Tiger, a recent purchase, in the way she was
-doing at the moment.</p>
-
-<p>“No mistaking it, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-looking, though,” lisped the somnolent Blanche,
-giving the Tiger a very shrewd kick with a roweled heel.
-“Reminds me of some one.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tiger, worried by a bit that he didn’t like, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-greatly affronted by the heel of his new mistress, which
-he liked still less, then began to behave in a way which
-for some little time quite forbade any further discussion
-of the subject.</p>
-
-<p>For the rest of the morning, however, it was never
-far from the minds of these ladies. Two or three times
-they caught sight in the distance of Jack and his charge.
-A striking-looking girl, but she didn’t in the least know
-how to ride. And somehow from that fact Blanche and
-Marjorie seemed to draw spiritual consolation.</p>
-
-<p>At twelve o’clock they left the Park. The policeman
-at the gate pulled himself together and regarded them
-respectfully. An elderly lady in a high-hung barouche
-of prehistoric design, drawn by a superb pair of horses
-and surmounted by a romantic-looking coachman and
-footman, called out to them in a remarkably strident
-voice as they passed her, “I am coming to luncheon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bother!” said Marjorie to Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>“Bother!” said Blanche to Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p>They went along Park Lane, as far as Mount Street,
-turned up that bleak thoroughfare, took the second turning
-to the right, and finally entered the courtyard of the
-imposing residence known as Bridport House. Before
-its solemn portals they dismounted with the help of the
-smart groom. In the act of doing so they encountered
-a tall, rather distinguished-looking man, who was coming
-down the steps. He was about forty-two, clean-shaven,
-with sandy hair; and his clothes had an air of such
-extreme correctness as to suggest that they had been
-donned for a special occasion.</p>
-
-<p>The departing visitor bowed elaborately to the two
-ladies, but each returned the greeting with an abbreviated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
-nod, backed by an intent smile peculiarly her own.
-There might be courtesy carried to the verge of homage
-on the one side, but on the other was an aloofness cold
-and quizzical.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Blanche and Marjorie had gained the
-ample precincts of Bridport House each looked demurely
-at the other, and then yielded a laugh, which seemed to
-mean a great deal more than it expressed.</p>
-
-<p>“Been to see papa, I suppose,” said Blanche, as she
-waddled duck fashion towards a white marble staircase
-of grandiose design, whose cinquecento air could not
-save it from a slight suspicion of the rococo.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear!” came Marjorie’s crescendo.</p>
-
-<p>Again they looked at each other, again their laughter
-snarled and crackled not unpleasantly.</p>
-
-<p>At one o’clock luncheon was announced. Ten minutes
-later a well-bathed and carefully re-clothed Marjorie
-and a Blanche to match entered an enormous dining-room,
-which, in spite of its profusion of servants in
-livery, had the air of a crypt.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, father. Very pleasant to see you
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>Each word of Blanche was charmingly punctuated by
-a little pause, which might have been taken for filial
-regard by those who heard it. But the rather acid-looking
-gentleman, who sat at the head of the table,
-with a face like a cameo a little out of drawing, and a
-bowl of arrowroot in front of him, paid such slight
-attention to Blanche that she might not have spoken
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Aunt Charlotte,” said Marjorie coolly,
-taking up her own cue. She surveyed the other occupants<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-of the table with a quietly ironical eye. And then
-as she seated herself at her leisure, as far as she could
-get from the object of her remarks, she proceeded in the
-peculiar but remarkably agreeable voice which she had
-in common with her father and sisters: “Odd we should
-run into you coming out of the Park.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why odd?” said Aunt Charlotte, an elderly, large-featured
-blonde, whose theory of life was as far as possible
-not to cherish illusions on any subject. “I always
-go in at twelve, you always come out at twelve. Nothing
-odd about it. Thank you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” meant, “Yes, I will take claret.” It
-also meant, “Get on with your luncheon, Marjorie, and
-don’t be absurd. Life is too complicated nowadays for
-such small talk as yours to interest an intelligent person.”</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Charlotte, if not consciously rude, was by nature
-exceedingly dominant. For twenty-five years, in one
-way or another, Bridport House had known her yoke.
-She was the Duke’s only surviving sister, and she lived
-in Hill Street, among the dowagers. Her status was <i>nil</i>,
-but her love of power was so great that she had gained
-an uncomfortable ascendancy in the family councils.
-While free to admire Aunt Charlotte’s wisdom, which
-was supposed to be boundless, the Dinneford ladies dislike
-her in the marrow of their bones. But Fate had
-played against them. Their father had been left a
-widower with a young family, and from the hour of his
-loss his sister had taken upon herself to mother it. She
-had done so to her own satisfaction, but the objects of
-her regard bore her no gratitude. From Sarah,
-who was thirty-nine, to Marjorie, who was twenty-eight,
-they were ever ready to try a fall with Aunt Charlotte.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span></p>
-
-<p>As for their father, he had an active dislike of her.
-He had cause, no doubt. More than once he had tried
-to break the spell of her dominion, but somehow it had
-always proved too strong for him. It was not that he
-was a weak man altogether, but there is a type born to
-female tyranny, an affair of the stars, of human destiny.
-Charlotte despised her brother. In her view he was a
-lath painted to look like iron, but insight into character
-was not her strength. She owed her position in the
-family to dynamic power, to force of will; but in her
-own mind it was always ascribed to the fact that she
-acted invariably from the highest motives.</p>
-
-<p>“Muriel not here,” said the conversational Marjorie,
-looking across the table to Sarah.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone to the East End, I believe, to one of her committees.”</p>
-
-<p>It would have been nearer the truth for the eldest
-flower, who was dealing with a recalcitrant fragment of
-lobster in a masterful manner, to have said that Muriel
-had gone to luncheon at Hayes with the Penarths. But
-Sarah, who did not approve of Muriel, and still less of
-the Penarths, was content with a general statement whose
-flagrant inaccuracy somehow crystallized her attitude
-towards them both. Muriel had become frankly impossible.
-The higher expediency could no longer take her
-seriously.</p>
-
-<p>But there are degrees of wisdom, even among the elect.
-Sarah’s place was assured at Minerva’s Court, but Marjorie
-and Blanche were wiser perhaps in matters equine
-than in other things. Where angels feared to tread
-Blanche, at any rate, for reasons of her own, had sometimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-been known to butt in. A classical instance was
-about to be furnished.</p>
-
-<p>“Do tell me.” Blanche suddenly looked Sarah
-straight in the eyes. “Has Sir Dugald been to see
-father?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a long moment’s pause in which Sarah
-maintained a stranglehold upon the lobster, while Lady
-Wargrave and the Duke, who knew they were being
-“ragged” by a past mistress in the art, glared daggers
-down the table.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe so,” said Sarah in an exceedingly dry voice,
-followed by a hardly perceptible glance at the servants.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>Over the coffee cups, in the solemn privacy of the
-blue drawing-room, the Dinneford ladies grew a little
-less laconic. They were in a perfect hurricane of great
-events. Even they, who seldom use two words if one
-would suffice, had to make some concession to the pressure
-of history.</p>
-
-<p>“His mother, I understand,” said Aunt Charlotte, seating
-herself massively in the center of her floridly
-Victorian picture, “kept the village shop at Ardnaleuchan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ve bought bull’s-eye peppermints of her,” said
-Sarah, with a touch of acid humor which somehow
-became her quite well.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s so serious”&mdash;Lady Wargrave stirred her
-coffee. “Still he’s been given the Home Office&mdash;so she
-thinks she moves with the times, no doubt.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Has</i> been given the Home Office?” said Blanche,
-suddenly achieving an air of intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>“The papers say so,” said Sarah dryly. “But I don’t
-think that excuses him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or Muriel,” interpolated Aunt Charlotte with venom.
-“What did your father say to the man?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was deplorably rude, I believe&mdash;even for father.
-He said the man had the hide of a rhinoceros, so obviously
-he had tested it.”</p>
-
-<p>“All very amazing. It is charity to assume that Muriel
-is out of her mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“One can’t be sure,” said Sarah weightily. “She says
-he has such a good head that one day he <i>must</i> be Prime
-Minister. After all, she will be a Prime Minister’s
-wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“But a Radical Prime Minister’s wife!”</p>
-
-<p>“He may rat,” said Sarah, with judicious optimism.</p>
-
-<p>“He may,” said Lady Wargrave, looking down her
-long nose. “But there never was a matter in which I
-felt less hopeful. What does your father think?”</p>
-
-<p>“The man’s a red rag. Don’t you remember the
-shameful way he attacked poor father on the Land
-Question two years ago? What was it he called him in
-the House of Commons?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘The Great Panjandrum, with little round button on
-top,’” quoted the solemn Marjorie, whose chief social
-asset was an amazing memory.</p>
-
-<p>“And after that he dares to come here!” Aunt Charlotte
-quivered majestically. “Didn’t your father kick
-him downstairs?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he would have done&mdash;but for his infirmity,”
-said Sarah judicially.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I had forgotten his gout, poor man. At least, I
-hope he ordered the servants to throw the creature into
-the street.”</p>
-
-<p>“One hardly does that, does one?&mdash;with his Majesty’s
-Secretaries of State,” said Blanche, whose sleepy voice
-had an odd precision which made each word bite like an
-acid.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Charlotte hooded her eyes like a cobra to look
-at Blanche. But she didn’t say anything. Only experts
-could handle Blanche, and even these must abide the
-whim of the goddess opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>“After all, why fuss?” continued Blanche with a muted
-laugh which had the power of annoying all the other
-ladies extremely. “If one has to marry one might as
-well marry a Prime Minister.”</p>
-
-<p>This was such a sublime expression of the obvious,
-that even Lady Wargrave, who contested everything on
-principle, was dumb before it. Blanche was therefore
-able to retire in perfect order to the comatose, her natural
-state. But in the next moment she reëmerged, so that
-a little private thunderbolt she had been diligently nursing
-through the whole luncheon might shake the rather
-strained peace of the blue drawing-room. She was quite
-sure that it would be a pleasure to launch it when the
-moment came. A sudden pause in the great topic of
-Muriel’s <i>affaire</i> told her it had now arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“We saw Jack riding with that girl.” So sleepy was
-the voice of Blanche as it made this announcement that
-it seemed a wonder she could keep awake.</p>
-
-<p>“What girl?” Aunt Charlotte walked straight into
-Blanche’s little trap.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you <i>didn’t</i> know.” Blanche suppressed a yawn.
-“It’s a rather long story.”</p>
-
-<p>Still it had to be told. And Blanche, just able to keep
-awake, told it circumstantially. The Tenderfoot&mdash;the
-heir’s own name for himself, which Blanche made a point
-of using in conversation with Aunt Charlotte because
-that lady considered it vulgar&mdash;had been seen at the
-Savoy with a girl, he had been seen in the Park with a
-girl, he had been seen motoring with a girl; in fact, he
-had been going about with a girl for several weeks.</p>
-
-<p>“And you never told <i>me</i>,” said Lady Wargrave with
-the air of a tragedy queen. She looked from Blanche
-to Sarah, from Sarah to Marjorie. A light of sour
-sarcasm in the eye of the eldest flower was all the comfort
-she took from the survey.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is the girl? Tell me.”</p>
-
-<p>Blanche inclined to think an actress. But she was not
-sure.</p>
-
-<p>“Inquiries will have to be made at once.” Already
-Aunt Charlotte was a caldron of energy. “Steps will
-have to be taken. It is the first I have heard of it. But
-I feel I ought to have been told sooner.”</p>
-
-<p>Blanche fearlessly asked why.</p>
-
-<p>“Why!” Aunt Charlotte gave a little snort. At such
-a moment mere words were futile. Then she said,
-“I shall go at once to your father.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what can <i>he</i> do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do?” Aunt Charlotte gave a second little snort.
-Mere words again revealed their limitations.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?” Blanche placidly pursued the Socratic
-method, to the increasing fury of Aunt Charlotte.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He can tell him what he thinks of him and threaten
-to cut off supplies.”</p>
-
-<p>“Much he’ll care for that!” The cynicism of Blanche
-revolted Aunt Charlotte.</p>
-
-<p>That lady, whose forte, after all, was plain common sense,
-knew that Blanche was right. But in spite of
-that knowledge, the resolute energy which made her so
-much disliked impelled her to go at once to lay the
-matter before the head of the house.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave found her brother in the smaller
-library, long dedicated by custom to his sole use. It was
-one of the less pretentious and therefore least uncomfortable
-rooms in a house altogether too large to be
-decently habitable.</p>
-
-<p>For many years the Duke had been at the mercy of a
-painful malady which had taken all the pleasure out of
-his life. He was nearly seventy now, a man strikingly
-handsome in spite of a sufferer’s mouth and eyes weary
-with pain and cynicism. When his sister entered the
-room she found him deployed on an invalid chair, the
-<i>Quarterly Review</i> on a book-rest in front of him, and a
-wineglass containing medicine at his elbow. And to
-Lady Wargrave’s clear annoyance, a tall, gray-haired,
-rather austere-looking, but decidedly handsome woman,
-stood by the Adam chimney-piece, a bottle in one hand,
-a teaspoon in the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you will be kind enough to leave us, Mrs.
-Sanderson,” said Lady Wargrave, in a tone which
-sounded needlessly elaborate.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Sanderson, without so much as a temporary
-relaxation of muscle of her strong face, withdrew at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-once very silently from the room. The bottle and the
-teaspoon went with her.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the door had closed Lady Wargrave said,
-“Johnnie, once more I feel bound to protest against the
-presence of the housekeeper in the library. If the state
-of your health really calls for such attention I will
-engage a trained nurse.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke took up the <i>Quarterly Review</i> with an air
-of stolid indifference.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll get one at once,” she persisted. “There’s a
-capable person who nursed Mary Devizes.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke seemed unwilling to discuss the question,
-but at last, yielding to pressure, he said in a tone of dry
-exasperation:</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Sanderson is quite capable of looking after me.
-She understands my ways, I understand hers.”</p>
-
-<p>“No one doubts her competence.” The rejoinder was
-tart and hostile. “But that is hardly the point. The
-library is not the place for the housekeeper.”</p>
-
-<p>“I choose to have her here. In any case it is entirely
-my affair.”</p>
-
-<p>“People talk.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s an old quarrel, my friend.” Growing asperity
-was in the voice of Charlotte. “You know my views
-on the subject of Mrs. Sanderson. We none of us like
-the woman. Considering the position she holds she has
-always taken far too much upon herself.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke shook his head. “I must be the judge of
-that,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“But surely it is a matter for the women of your
-family.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span></p>
-
-<p>“With all submission, it’s a matter for me. I find the
-present arrangement entirely satisfactory, and I don’t
-recognize the right of anyone to interfere.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke’s tone grated like a file upon his sister’s
-ear. This was an ancient quarrel that in one form or
-another had been going on for very many years. The
-housekeeper at Buntisford and more recently at Bridport
-House had been a thorn in the flesh of Charlotte almost
-from the day her sister-in-law died, but the Duke had
-always been Mrs. Sanderson’s champion. Time and
-again her overthrow had been decided upon by the ladies
-of the Family, but up till now the perverse determination
-of his Grace had proved too much for them and all
-their careful schemes.</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the usual impasse. Therefore, for
-the time being, Charlotte had once more to swallow her
-feelings. Besides, other matters were in the air, matters
-of an interest more vital if of a nature less permanent.</p>
-
-<p>As a preliminary it was necessary to glance at Muriel
-and her vagaries, before coming to grips with the even
-more momentous affair which had just been brought to
-Lady Wargrave’s notice. In answer to his sister’s,
-“What have you said to Maclean?” the Duke, who
-had swallowed most of the formulas and had digested
-them pretty thoroughly, expressed himself characteristically.</p>
-
-<p>“I told him that before I could even begin to consider
-the question he would have to rat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was that wise?” said Charlotte, frowning. “Why
-commit oneself to the possibility of having to take the
-man seriously?”</p>
-
-<p>Her brother laughed. “He’s a very sharp fellow. A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>
-long Scotch head, abominably full of brains. If we could
-get him on our side perhaps he might pull us together.”</p>
-
-<p>“You know, of course, that his mother kept the village
-shop at Ardnaleuchan?”</p>
-
-<p>“So he tells me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you like the prospect of such a son-in-law?”</p>
-
-<p>“Frankly, Charlotte, I don’t. A tiresome business at
-the best of it. But there it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ought one to treat it so coolly?”</p>
-
-<p>His Grace laid the <i>Quarterly Review</i> on the book-rest
-and plucked a little peevishly at the tuft of hair on
-his chin.</p>
-
-<p>“The times are changing, you see. We are on the
-eve of strange things. Still, I took the liberty of telling
-him that as long as he remained a Radical and went up
-and down the country blackguarding me and mine, I
-should refuse to know him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what said our fine gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was amused. Whether he takes the hint remains
-to be seen. In any event it commits us to nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte shook a dubious head. “You’re shaping for
-a compromise, my friend. And in my view this is not
-a case for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“If she is set on marrying the brute what’s going to
-stop her?”</p>
-
-<p>The question was meant for a poser and a poser it
-proved. Somehow it left no ground for argument.
-Therefore, without further preface or apology, Lady
-Wargrave turned to a matter of even more vital consequence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>By an odd chain of events, Jack Dinneford was heir
-apparent to the dukedom of Bridport. In the course
-of a brief twelve months two intervening lives had
-petered out. One had been Lyme, the Duke’s only
-surviving son, who at the age of thirty-five had been
-killed in a shooting accident&mdash;a younger son, never a
-good life, had died some years earlier&mdash;the other had
-been the Duke’s younger brother, who six months ago
-had died without male issue. The succession in consequence
-would now have to pass to an obscure and rather
-neglected branch of the family, represented by a young
-man of twenty-four, the son of a Norfolk parson.</p>
-
-<p>Jack’s father, at the time of his death, had held a
-family living. A retiring, scholarly man, he had never
-courted the favors of the great, and the great, little
-suspecting that their vicarious splendors might one day
-be his, had paid him little attention. Blessed with
-progeny of the usual clerical abundance and without
-means apart from his stipend, the incumbent of Wickley-on-the-Wold
-had been hard set to educate his children
-in a manner becoming their august lineage. Even Jack,
-the eldest of five, had to be content with four years at
-one of the smaller public schools. It was true that
-afterwards he had the option of Oxford or Sandhurst,
-but by the time the young man had reached the age of
-nineteen he had somehow acquired an independence of
-character which did not take kindly to either.</p>
-
-<p>One fine day, with a spare suit of clothes and a
-hundred pounds or so in his pocket, he set out in the
-most casual way to see the world, and to make his fortune.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-He went to Liverpool, shipped before the mast
-as an ordinary seaman for the sake of the experience,
-and made the voyage round the Horn to San Francisco.
-For the next two years he prospected up and down the
-Americas earning a living, picking up ideas, and enlarging
-his outlook by association with all sorts and conditions
-of men, and finally invested all the capital he could
-scrape together in a business in Vancouver.</p>
-
-<p>After eighteen months of the new life came the news
-of his father’s death. The brothers and sisters it seemed
-were rather better provided for than there had been
-reason to expect. At any rate, Mabel and Iris would
-have a roof over their heads, Bill had passed into Sandhurst,
-and Frank was at Cambridge. Therefore Jack,
-little guessing what Fate had in store, decided to stay
-as he was, in the hope that in a few years he would have
-made his pile. He had a taste for hard work, and the
-new land offered opportunities denied by the old.</p>
-
-<p>Some months later he received an urgent summons
-to return home. He had suddenly and unexpectedly
-become next of kin to the Duke of Bridport. The news
-was little to the young man’s taste. He was very loth to
-give up a growing business for a life of parasitic idleness
-under the ægis of the titular great. But the circumstances
-seemed to make it imperative. The powers that
-were had not the slightest doubt that it was his bounden
-duty to go into training at once. He must fit himself
-for the dizzy eminence to which it had pleased Providence
-to call him.</p>
-
-<p>Sadly enough the tiro sold out, returned to England,
-and in due course reported himself at Bridport House.
-It was the first time he had been there. He was such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-a distant kinsman that he had never taken the ducal
-connection seriously.</p>
-
-<p>The family’s reception of the Tenderfoot&mdash;his own
-humorous name for himself&mdash;amused him considerably,
-yet at the same time it filled him with a subtle annoyance.
-Five fruitful years out West had made him an iconoclast.
-He saw with awakened eyes the arid and sterile pomposities
-which were doing their best to put the old land
-out of the race. Bridport House was going to spell
-boredom and worse for Jack Dinneford.</p>
-
-<p>Still the Duke, as became a man of the world, soon got
-to the root of the trouble, and having the welfare of
-a time-honored institution at heart, was at pains to deal
-with the novice tactfully. All the same, he was far
-from being pleased by the tricks of Providence. But
-he made the young man an allowance of two thousand a
-year, and exhorted him not to get into mischief; and the
-Dinneford ladies, who were prepared to be kind to the
-Tenderfoot and to be more amused by his “originality”
-than they confessed to each other, chose some rooms for
-him in Arlington Street, looked after his general welfare,
-and began to make plans for the future of Bridport
-House. Aunt Charlotte took him at once under an ungracious
-wing, and found him a bear-leader in the person
-of her nephew Wrexham, a subaltern of the Pinks, a
-picturesque young man, reputed a paragon of all the
-Christian virtues, and a martyr to a sense of duty.</p>
-
-<p>From this model of discretion the tiro soon received a
-hint. Cousin Sarah owned to thirty-eight in the glare
-of Debrett, Cousin Muriel had other views apparently,
-but there remained Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-heir could take his choice, but the ukase had gone
-forth that one of them it must be.</p>
-
-<p>The Tenderfoot did not feel in a marrying mood just
-then, but he had chivalry enough not to say so to his
-mentor, who as the messenger of Eros began to disclose
-quite a pretty turn of humor. It was not seemly to offer
-advice in such a delicate matter, but Blanche was a
-nailer to hounds, although she never kept awake after
-dinner, while Marjorie’s sphere was church decoration in
-times of festival, in the course of which she generally
-had an <i>affaire</i> with a curate.</p>
-
-<p>Face to face with a problem which in one way or
-another was kept ever before his eyes, the poor Tenderfoot
-seemed to feel that if wive he must in the charmèd
-circle, and the relentless Wrexham assured him that it
-was a solemn duty, perhaps there was most to be said
-for Cousin Marjorie. She was not supremely attractive
-it was true. The Dinneford girls, one and all, were
-famous up and down the island for a resolute absence of
-charm. And the Dinneford frontispiece, imposing
-enough in the male, when rendered in terms of the female
-somehow seemed to lack poetry. Still Cousin Marjorie
-was not yet thirty and her general health was excellent.</p>
-
-<p>The heir had now been settled in Arlington Street six
-months. And with nothing in the world to do but learn
-to live a life which threatened to bore him exceedingly,
-time began to hang upon his hands. Moreover, the
-prospect of having presently to lead Cousin Marjorie to
-the altar merely increased a sense of malaise. Here
-was an arbitrary deepening of the tones of a picture
-which heaven knew was dark enough already. For a
-modern and virile young man, life at Bridport House<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
-would only be tolerable under very happy conditions.
-To be yoked, willy-nilly, to one of its native denizens
-for the rest of one’s days, seemed a hardship almost
-too great to be borne.</p>
-
-<p>While the Tenderfoot was in this frame of mind,
-which inclined him to temporize, he decided to put off
-the dark hour as long as he could. And then suddenly,
-while still besieged by doubt, the hypnotic Princess
-Bedalia swam into his ken.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>“It was bound to happen,” said Lady Wargrave.
-“That young man has far too much time on his hands.
-A thousand pities he didn’t go into the army.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too old, too old.” Her brother frowned portentously.
-“This promises to be a very tiresome business.
-Charlotte, I must really ask you to lose no time in
-seeing that the fellow marries.”</p>
-
-<p>It was now Charlotte’s turn to frown. And this she
-did as a prelude to a frankness which verged upon the
-brutal.</p>
-
-<p>“All very well, my friend, but perhaps you’ll tell me
-how it’s to be done. Neither Marjorie nor Blanche has
-the least power of attraction. They’re hopeless. And
-please remember this young man has been five years in
-America.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would to God he had stayed there!”</p>
-
-<p>The futile outburst of his Grace set Charlotte glowering
-like a sibyl. She was constrained to own that it was
-all intensely annoying. He was a common young man.
-He had none of the Dinneford feeling about things.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Quite so, Charlotte.” The ducal irritation was growing
-steadily. “But don’t rub it in. That won’t help
-us. Let us think constructively. You see the trouble
-is that this fellow has a rather democratic outlook.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’m afraid there’s no remedy,” said Charlotte,
-“unless the girls have the brains to help us, which, of
-course, they haven’t.”</p>
-
-<p>His Grace became more thunderous. “Let us hope
-he’ll have the good feeling to try to look at things as we
-do,” he said after a rather arid pause.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure that we’ve a right to expect it,” was the
-frank rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“His branch of the family has no particular cause to
-be grateful to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our father gave his father a living, didn’t he?” said
-the Duke sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but nothing else&mdash;unless it was a day’s shooting
-now and again, which he didn’t accept.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see what else he could have given him.”</p>
-
-<p>“An eye ought to have been kept on this young man.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can depend upon it, Charlotte, many things
-would have been ordered differently had there been
-reason to suppose that this confounded fellow would be
-next in here. As it is we have to make the best of a
-sorry business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry enough,” Charlotte admitted. “There I am
-with you. But I’ll have inquiries made about this chorus
-girl. And in the meantime, Johnnie, perhaps you will
-speak to him firmly and quietly without losing your
-temper.”</p>
-
-<p>“And my last word to you, Charlotte,” countered his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</span>
-Grace, “is to see that he loses no time in marrying.”</p>
-
-<p>“Easy, my friend, to issue a ukase.” And the redoubtable
-Charlotte smiled grimly.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VI</p>
-
-<p>Soon after four the same afternoon Jack returned
-to Broad Place in the garb of civilization. He was in
-great heart. Milly had some good-natured chaff to offer
-as to Mary’s need of sticking plaster. But the young
-man turned this persiflage aside with such a serious air
-that the quick-witted Milly knew it for an omen. Having
-learned the set of the wind she soon found a pretext for
-leaving them together.</p>
-
-<p>Milly’s sense of a coming event, which her sudden
-flight from the room had seemed to make the more
-inevitable, was shared by Mary. Somehow she felt that
-the moment of moments had come. This thing had
-to be. But as a hand brown and virile quietly took hers
-in a strong grip, she began almost bitterly to deplore the
-whole business. And yet, when all was said, she was
-absolutely thrilled. He was so truly a man that a girl,
-no matter what her talent and quality, could hardly
-refrain from pride in his homage.</p>
-
-<p>There was no beating about the bush.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you marry me?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>She grew crimson. How she had dreaded that long
-foreseen question! Days ago common sense and worldly
-prudence had coldly informed her that there could only
-be one possible answer. The case of Milly herself had
-furnished a sinister parallel. And the sensitive, perhaps
-over-sensitive pride of one who had begun at the bottom
-of the ladder, revolted from all the ensuing complications.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</span>
-Such a situation seemed now to involve her in
-mysteries far down within, at the very core of being&mdash;mysteries
-she had hardly been aware of until that
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>Again the question. She looked away, quite unable
-just then to meet his eyes. Her will was strong, her
-determination clear, but in spite of herself a deadly feeling
-crept upon her that she was a bird in a snare.
-Certain imponderables were in the room. The life
-forces were calling to each other; there was a curious
-magnetism in the very air they breathed.</p>
-
-<p>She had meant and intended “No,” but every instant
-made that little word more difficult to utter. A dominant
-nature had stolen the keys of her heart before she knew
-it. And as she fought against the inevitable, a subtle
-trick of the ape on the chain in the human breast,
-weighed the scales unfairly. Cousin Blanche and Cousin
-Marjorie were flung oddly, irrelevantly, fantastically,
-upon the curtain of her mind. The challenge of their
-ironical eyes was like a knife in the flesh. And then
-that private, particular devil, of whose existence, until
-that moment, she had been unaware, suddenly forced her
-to take up the gage those eyes had flung.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VII</p>
-
-<p>“Do tell me!” cried Milly the breathless.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of a lone, troubled Mary in the little sitting-room,
-the look on her face as she twisted a handkerchief
-into knots and coils had been too much for Milly. She
-was a downright person and the silence of Mary was
-so trying to a forthcoming nature that the query at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
-tip of Milly’s tongue seemed likely to burn a hole in it.</p>
-
-<p>“Has he&mdash;have you&mdash;did he&mdash;&mdash;?” The demand was
-indelicate, but it sprang from the depths as Milly
-measured them. Suddenly she saw tears.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so glad, I am so <i>very</i> glad!”</p>
-
-<p>Mary smiled, but the look in her eyes had the power
-to startle the affectionate Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“He is the luckiest man I know, but he is such a dear
-that he deserves to be.” It was a peculiarity of Mary’s
-that she didn’t like kissing, but Milly in a burst of loyal
-affection was guilty of a sudden swoop upon her friend.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t,” said Mary, in a voice from which all the
-accustomed gayety was gone.</p>
-
-<p>Milly gazed in consternation.</p>
-
-<p>“You&mdash;you have not refused him?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” And then there came a sudden flame. “I’m
-a selfish, egotistical wretch.”</p>
-
-<p>“As long as you have not refused him,” said Milly,
-breathing again. “All the same, I call you a very odd
-girl.”</p>
-
-<p>But Mary was troubled, Milly perplexed.</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to be the happiest creature alive. What’s
-the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m thinking of his friends.”</p>
-
-<p>“If they choose to be stupid, it’s their own lookout.”</p>
-
-<p>“It mayn’t be stupidity,” said Mary, giving her handkerchief
-a bite. “I know nothing about him, except&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Except?”</p>
-
-<p>“That he’s above me socially.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t worry about that if I were you,” said
-Milly robustly. “If they like to be snobs it’s their own
-funeral.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span></p>
-
-<p>But Mary, having burned her boats, was afflicted now
-by Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie. They were
-looking down upon her from their tall horses. It was
-not that she feared them in the least, but she knew that
-lurking somewhere in an oddly constituted mind was a
-certain awe of the things for which they stood.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t explain my feelings,” said Mary. “I only
-know they are horribly real. I feel there’s a gulf between
-Jack and me&mdash;and a word won’t bridge it.” And
-her voice trailed off miserably.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s weak,” said Milly severely. “I know what
-you mean, but you exaggerate the difference absurdly.
-Sonny is miles above me socially, but I’ll make him as
-good a wife as any of his own push, see if I don’t&mdash;if
-he gives me the chance! And in some ways I can make
-him a better.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I began right down there.” Milly pointed
-to the carpet. “I know the value of things, I shall be
-able to see that no one takes advantage of him, whereas
-a girl who has been spoon-fed all her life couldn’t do
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>The honest Mary had to allow that there was something
-to be said for the point of view, yet she would not admit
-that it covered all the facts of the case.</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t suppose my ideas have anything to do
-with you and Lord Wrexham.” Her gravity made Milly
-feel quite annoyed. “I am merely thinking of myself.
-And there’s something in me, for which I can’t account,
-which says that it may be wrong, it may be wickedly
-wrong, for me to marry Jack.”</p>
-
-<p>“It certainly will be if that’s how you look at it,” said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-Milly scornfully. “Why not make the most of your
-luck? I’m sure it’s right. After all Providence knows
-better than anybody. And Jack knows he’s got to be
-a duke.”</p>
-
-<p>“Got to be what?” Mary jumped out of her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t know?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, I didn’t.” She was simply aghast. In a
-state of excitement which quite baffled Milly, she paced
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>odd</i> creature!” The mantle of the arch dissembler
-had now descended upon Milly.</p>
-
-<p>Truth to tell, she and her mother had had a shrewd
-suspicion of Mary’s ignorance. They had learned from
-Wrexham that Jack Dinneford, owing to a series of
-deaths in a great family, had quite unexpectedly become
-the next-of-kin to the Duke of Bridport. Such a
-prospect was so little to the young man’s taste that as
-far as he could he always made a point of keeping the
-skeleton out of sight. Rightly or wrongly he had not
-said a word to Mary on the subject, and she with a
-pride a little overstrained, no doubt, had allowed herself
-no curiosity in regard to his worldly status. For whatever
-it might be it was obviously far removed from that
-of a girl of no family who had to get her own living as
-well as she could.</p>
-
-<p>The news was stunning. As Mary walked about the
-room the look on her face was almost tragic.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you ought to have told me,” she said at last.</p>
-
-<p>“We thought you knew,” was Milly’s reply. This
-was a deliberate story. Mrs. Wren and herself in discussing
-the romantic news had concluded the exact opposite.
-But out of a true regard for Mary’s welfare, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
-they conceived it, they had decided to let her find out for
-herself. She was such an odd girl in certain ways that
-mother and daughter felt that the real truth about Jack
-Dinneford might easily prove his overthrow. Thus with
-a chaste conscience Milly now lied royally.</p>
-
-<p>Mary, alas! was so resentful of the <i>coup</i> of fortune
-and her friends, that for a moment she was tempted to
-fix a quarrel on Milly. But Milly’s cunning was too
-much for her. She stuck to the simple statement that
-she thought she knew. There was no gainsaying it.
-And if blame there was in the matter it surely lay at
-the door of her own proud self.</p>
-
-<p>Mary was still in the throes of an unwelcome discovery
-when Mrs. Wren came into the room. The
-appearance of that lady seemed to add fuel to the flame.
-Her felicitations, a little overwhelming in their exuberance,
-were in nowise damped by the girl’s dejection. To
-Mrs. Wren such an attitude of mind was not merely
-unreasonable, it was unchristian. To call in question
-the highest gifts of Providence betrayed a kink in a
-charming character.</p>
-
-<p>“Fancy, my dear&mdash;a duchess. You’ll be next in rank
-to royalty.”</p>
-
-<p>It was so hard for the victim to smother the tempest
-within that for the moment she dare not trust herself
-to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re very naughty,” said Mrs. Wren. “Why, you
-ought to offer up a prayer. You’ve had success too
-easily, the road has been too smooth. If you’d had a
-smaller talent and you’d had an awful struggle to get
-there, you’d know better than to crab your luck.”</p>
-
-<p>A strong will now came to Mary’s aid. And the calm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span>
-force of her answer, when at last she was able to make
-it, astonished Milly and her mother. “That’s one side
-of the case, Mrs. Wren,” she said in a new tone. “But
-there’s another, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is only one side for you, my dear,” said the
-older woman stoutly. “Take your chances while you
-may&mdash;that’s my advice. Your luck may turn. You’ll
-not always be what you are now. Suppose you have
-a bad illness?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m thinking of his side of the case.” The tone
-verged upon sternness.</p>
-
-<p>“You have quite enough to do to think of your own.
-Don’t throw chances away. I have had forty years’
-experience of a very hard profession, and even you top
-sawyers are on very thin ice. And remember, the cards
-never forgive. Girls who have a lone hand to play, mustn’t
-hold their heads too high. If they do they’ll live to
-regret it. And you mustn’t think these swells can’t box
-their own corner. They’ve nothing to learn in looking
-after Number One. A girl of your sort is quite equal
-to any of these drawing-room noodles and Mr. Dinneford
-knows that better than I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s impossible. I can never be as they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t let that worry you. A lot of stuck-up
-dunces that all the world kow-tows to!”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t that I think they are nicer or cleverer or
-wiser than other people. But they are born to certain
-things, they have been bred to them for generations, and
-it surely stands to reason that they are better at their own
-game than a mere outsider can hope to be.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fiddle-de-dee!” said Mrs. Wren. “I hope you are
-not such a goose as to take swelldom at its own valuation.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-It’s all a bluff, my dear. Your humble servant,
-Jane Wren, could have been as good a duchess as the
-best of ’em if she had been given the chance. I don’t
-want to be fulsome, my dear, but I’ll back a girl of your
-brains against Lady Agatha Fitzboodle or any other
-titled snob.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t want to be pitted against anybody!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s nonsense.” Mrs. Wren shook a worldly-wise
-head. “As for being an outsider, a girl can’t be more
-than a lady just as a man can’t be more than a gentleman.
-And if you are a lady and have always gone straight
-you needn’t fear comparison with the highest in the
-land.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary shook a head of sadness and perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“Somehow it doesn’t seem right to mix things in that
-way,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the only way that keeps ’em going,” said Mrs.
-Wren scornfully. “And well they know it. At least
-nature knows it. Look at Wrexham! Do you mean
-to say that his inbred strain wouldn’t be improved by
-Milly? And it’s the same with you and Mr. Dinneford.
-It’s Nature at the back of it all. It’s the call of the
-blood. If these old families keep on intermarrying long
-enough dry rot sets in.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary stood a picture of woe.</p>
-
-<p>“You odd creature!” said Mrs. Wren. “I’ve never
-met a girl with such ideas as yours. I really believe
-you are quite as narrow and as prejudiced as Lady
-Agatha Fitzboodle. To hear you talk one would think
-you believed rank to be a really important matter.”</p>
-
-<p>Incredulous eyes were opened upon the voluble dame.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Of course it is.” But the girl’s solemnity was a
-little too much.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear!” A gust of ribald laughter overwhelmed
-her. “Hasn’t it ever struck you that the so-called aristocracy
-racket is all a bluff?”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely, it can’t be.” The tone was genuine dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“Every word of it, my dear. There’s only one thing
-behind it and that’s money. If Wrexham ever sticks a
-coronet on the head of my Milly and robes her in ermine
-she’ll be the equal of any in the land, just as old Bill
-Brown who was in the last birthday honors is as good a
-peer as the best of ’em now that his soap business has
-brought him into Park Lane. I knew Bill when he
-hadn’t a bob. It’s just a matter of L.S.D. As for the
-frills, they are all my eye and Elizabeth Martin. When
-my Milly gets among them, it won’t take her a week to
-learn all their tricks. They are just so many performing
-dogs.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t understand, you don’t understand!” The
-tone was tragic.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VIII</p>
-
-<p>A night’s reflection convinced the girl that there was
-only one thing to be done. The engagement must end.
-But as she soon found, it was easier to make the resolve
-than to carry it out. To begin with, it was terribly irksome,
-in present circumstances, to give effect to her
-decision and to back it with reasons.</p>
-
-<p>Her début in the Row had been so successful that a
-ride had been arranged for the next morning. But it
-was spoiled completely by the specter now haunting her.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-In what terms could she tell him that she had changed
-her mind? How could she defend a proceeding so
-unwarrantable?</p>
-
-<p>It was not until later in the day, when they took a
-stroll under the trees in the Park, that she forced herself
-to grasp the nettle boldly.</p>
-
-<p>Jack, as she had foreseen, was immeasurably astonished.
-He called, at once, for her reasons. And they
-were terribly difficult to put into words. At last she was
-driven back upon the cardinal fact that he had concealed
-his true position.</p>
-
-<p>He repudiated the charge indignantly. In the first
-place, he had taken it for granted that she knew his position,
-in the second, he always made a point of leaving it
-as much as possible outside his calculations.</p>
-
-<p>“But isn’t that just what one oughtn’t to do?” she
-said, as they took possession of a couple of vacant chairs.</p>
-
-<p>“To me the whole thing’s absurd,” was the rejoinder.
-“It’s only by the merest fluke that I have to succeed to
-the title, and I find it quite impossible to feel about things
-as Bridport House does. The whole business is a great
-bore, and if a way out could be found I’d much rather
-stay as I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“But isn’t that just a wee bit selfish, my dear&mdash;if you
-don’t think me a prig?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you are quite out of sympathy with an antediluvian
-system, if you disbelieve in it, if you hate it in the
-marrow of your bones, where’s the virtue in sacrificing
-yourself in order to maintain it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Noblesse oblige!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but does it? A dukedom, in my view, is just an
-outworn convention, a survival of a darker age.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It stands for something.”</p>
-
-<p>“What does it stand for?&mdash;that’s the point. There’s
-no damned merit about it, you know. Any fool can be
-a duke, and they mostly are.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary, if a little amused, was more than a little
-shocked.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure it’s not right to think that,” she declared
-stoutly. “I would say myself, although one oughtn’t to
-have a say on the subject, that it’s the duty of your sort
-of people to keep things going.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are not my sort of people. I was pitchforked
-among them. And if you don’t believe in them and the
-things it is their duty to keep going what becomes of
-your theory, Miss Scrupulous?”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s Socialism,” said Mary with solemn eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s the common sense of the matter. All this
-centralization of power in the hands of a few hard-shells
-like my Uncle Albert&mdash;he’s not my uncle really&mdash;is very
-bad for the State. He owns one-fifth of Scotland, and
-the only things he ever really takes seriously are his
-meals and his health.”</p>
-
-<p>“He stands for something all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>The young man laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>“I know I’m a prig.” The blushing candor disarmed
-him. “But if one has a great bump of reverence I suppose
-one can’t help exaggerating one’s feelings a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose not,” laughed the young man. And then
-there was a pause. “By jove,” he said at the end of
-it, “you’d be the last word in duchesses.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t get Bridport House to think so.”</p>
-
-<p>“So much the worse for Bridport House. Of course,
-I admit it has other views for me. But the trouble is,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span>
-as always in these close corporations, they haven’t the
-art of seeing things as they are.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary shook a troubled head, but the argument seemed
-to find its way home.</p>
-
-<p>“The truth of the matter is,” he suddenly declared,
-“you are afraid of Bridport House.”</p>
-
-<p>Without shame she confessed that Bridport House
-was bound to be very hostile, and was there not every
-reason for such an attitude? Jack, however, would not
-yield an inch upon that count, or on any other if it came
-to that. He was a primitive creature in whom the call
-of the blood was paramount. Moreover, he was a very
-tenacious fellow. And these arguments of hers, strongly
-urged and boldly stated, did not affect his point of view.
-The ban of Fortune was purely artificial, it could not be
-defended. She was fain, therefore, to carry the war to
-the enemy’s country. But if she gently hinted a change
-of egotism he countered it astutely with the subtler one
-of sentimentalism. Each confessed the other partially
-right, but so far from clearing the air it seemed to make
-the whole matter more complex. The upshot was that
-he called upon her to find a valid reason, otherwise he
-refused point-blank to give her up.</p>
-
-<p>“Just think,” he said, tracing her name on the gravel
-with a walking-stick, “how hollow the whole business is.
-How many of Uncle Albert’s ‘push’ have married American
-wives without a question? And why do they, when
-they wouldn’t think of giving English girls of the same
-class an equal chance? In the first place, for the sake
-of the dollars, in the second, because it is so easy for
-them to shed their relations and forget their origin.”</p>
-
-<p>But so wide was the gulf between their points of view<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
-that mere argument could not hope to bridge it. If she
-was in grim earnest, so was he; moreover she had
-entered into a compact he was determined she should
-fulfill. Before consenting to release her she would have
-to show very good cause at any rate.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, in the give-and-take of conflict, Laxton
-came into her mind. The memory of Beaconsfield
-Villas, the whimsical creatures of another orbit, and the
-childhood which now seemed ages away, fired her with
-a new idea. She would take him to see the humble
-people among whom she had been brought up.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-ALARUMS AND EXCURSIONS</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> flight of time had affected Beaconsfield Villas
-surprisingly little. Laxton itself had deferred to
-Anno Domini in many subtle ways; it had its
-electric trams and motor-buses, and the suburb had
-doubled in size, but no epoch-making changes were visible
-in the front sitting-room of Number Five. In that
-homely interior the cosmic march and profluence was
-simply revealed by a gramophone, the gift of Mary, on
-the top of the sewing machine in the corner, and by the
-accession to the walls of lithograph portraits of the son
-and grandson of the august lady who still held pride of
-place over the chimney-piece.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon was stifling even for South London in
-the middle of June. And Joseph Kelly, who had attained
-the rank of sergeant in the Metropolitan Police
-Force, not having to go on duty until six o’clock that
-evening, was seated coatless and solemn, spectacles on
-nose, smoking a well-colored clay and reading the <i>Daily
-Mail</i>. At the level of his eyes, in portentous type was,
-“Laxton Bye-Election. A Sharp Contest. New Home
-Secretary’s Chances.” Joe was a shade stouter than of
-yore, his face was even redder, a thinning thatch had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-turned gray, but in all essentials the man himself was
-still the genial cockney of one-and-twenty years ago.</p>
-
-<p>The outer door of the sitting-room, which was next
-the street, was wide open to invite the air. But ever
-and again there rose such a fierce medley of noises from
-a mysterious cause a little distance off, that at last Joe
-got up from his chair, and waddling across the room in
-a pair of worn list slippers, banged the door against
-the sounds from the street which had the power to annoy
-him considerably.</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had Joe shuffled back to his chair and his
-newspaper when the door was flung open again and an
-excited urchin thrust a tousled head into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Vote for Maclean an’ a free breakfast-table’!”</p>
-
-<p>The law in the person of Sergeant Kelly rose from
-its chair majestically.</p>
-
-<p>“If you ain’t off&mdash;my word!”</p>
-
-<p>Headlong flight of the urchin. Joe closed the door
-with violence and sat down again. But the incident had
-unsettled him. He seemed unable to fix his mind on
-the newspaper. And the noises in the street waxed ever
-louder. Now they took the form of cheers and counter
-cheers, now of hoots, cat-calls and shouts of derision. At
-last the tumult rose to such a pitch that it drew Eliza
-from an inner room.</p>
-
-<p>The years had changed her rather more than her husband.
-But she was still the active, capable, bustling
-housewife, with a keen eye for the world and all that
-was passing in it.</p>
-
-<p>“They are making noise enough to wake the dead.”
-Eliza looked eagerly through the window.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish that durned Scotchman hadn’t set his committee-room<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>
-plumb oppersite Number Five, Beaconsfield
-Villas,” was Joe’s sour comment.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the all-embracing eye of a relentless
-housewife swooped down upon a card lying innocently
-on the linoleum. It had been flung there by the recent
-visitor. Eliza picked it up and read:</p>
-
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="left no-indent">Vote for Maclean, thus:<br />
-<span class="left2"><span class="smcap">Maclean</span></span>&ensp;&ensp;X<br />
-<span class="left2"><span class="smcap">Whitley</span>.</span></p></div>
-
-<p>On the back of the card was a portrait of Sir Dugald
-Maclean, M.P.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza gazed at it in astonishment mingled with awe.</p>
-
-<p>“I am bound to say he is a better-favored jockey than
-when he came a-courting our Harriet. Look, Joe!”</p>
-
-<p>With scornful vehemence, Joe declined the invitation.</p>
-
-<p>Eliza was sternly advised to tear up the card, but
-instead she chose to set it on the chimney-piece. The
-rash act was too much for her lord. Once more he rose
-from his chair, tore the card into little pieces and flung
-them into a grate artistically decorated with colored
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>“You are jealous!” said Eliza, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Of the likes of him! Holy smoke! But if you think
-we are going to have such trash in the same room as the
-Marquis, you make an error.”</p>
-
-<p>The words had hardly been uttered when shouts yet
-more piercing came from the street. Eliza made a hasty
-return to the window.</p>
-
-<p>“Come and look, Joe!” she cried breathlessly. “Here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span>
-he is with his top hat and eyeglass. He’s that dossy
-you wouldn’t know him. He’s dressed up like a tailor’s
-dummy.”</p>
-
-<p>But Joe declined to budge.</p>
-
-<p>“It fairly makes me sick to think of the feller,” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>A little later, when the tumult in the street had died
-down a bit, Joe settled himself in his chair for an afternoon
-nap. Eliza, duly noting the symptoms, retired on
-tiptoe to another room, closing the door after her gently.
-But today, alas, the skyey influences were adverse. Joe
-had barely entered oblivion when a smart tap at the street
-door shattered this precarious peace. With a grudge
-against society he rose once more, shambled across the
-room and flung open the door, half expecting to find that
-the urchin had returned to torment him. A dramatic
-surprise was in store. On the threshold was a creature
-so stylishly trim that even the blasé eye of the Metropolitan
-Force was sensibly thrilled in beholding her. “A
-bit of class” without a doubt, although adorned by the
-colors of the People’s Candidate, and surprisingly cool
-in sheer defiance of the thermometer.</p>
-
-<p>“Good afternoon!” The tone of half-confidential intimacy
-was quite irresistible. “May I have a little talk
-with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, miss.” The unconscious gallantry of an
-impressionable policeman was more than equal to the
-occasion. “Step inside and make yourself at home.”</p>
-
-<p>When Joe came to review the incident afterwards, it
-seemed very surprising that he should have yielded so
-easily to the impact of this elegant miss. For instinctively
-he knew her business. Moreover, the last thing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>
-he desired at that moment was to be troubled by her or
-by it. But he had been taken by surprise, and in all
-circumstances he would have needed ample notice to
-deny a lady. He had a great but impersonal regard for
-a lady, as some people have for a Rembrandt or a Corot
-or a Jan van Steen. And although the fact was not
-important, perhaps his sense of humor was a little
-touched by such a young woman taking the trouble to
-come and talk to such a man as himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I am here,” said the voice of the dove, as soon as its
-owner had subsided gracefully upon a chair covered with
-horsehair, “to ask your vote and interest for Sir Dugald
-Maclean, the People’s Candidate.”</p>
-
-<p>The prophetic soul of Joe had told him that already.
-But again the sense of humor, the fatal gift, may have
-intervened. Had the elegant miss had any <i>nous</i>, she
-would have known that a sergeant of the X Division has
-not a vote to bestow. In justice to the fair democrat,
-Joe might have reflected that in the absence of his tunic
-there was nothing to show his status. However, he
-didn’t trouble to do that. It was enough for him that
-she was on a fool’s errand. But Joe was a man of the
-world as well as a connoisseur of the human female. A
-picturesque personality intrigued him. Moreover, it was
-working for a cause that Joe despised from the depths
-of his soul. So much was she “the real thing” that she
-had even turned on a melodious lisp for his benefit; yet
-he had no particular wish, even under these flattering
-auspices, to discuss the people and their champion. He
-had quite made up his mind about both. But, the
-Machiavellian thought occurred to him, here was a
-dangerous implement in the hands of the foe, therefore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-it would be the part of wisdom to waste a little of her
-time.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Government of the people, by the people, for the
-people,’” lisped the siren, “that, of course, as you may
-know, is what Sir Dugald stands for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he!” reflected Joe. With a roguish smile he
-looked the speaker over from her expensive top to her
-equally expensive toe.</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>do</i> believe in the people?” said the siren with a
-rather dubious air.</p>
-
-<p>“Since you ask the question, miss,” said Joe, “I am
-bound to say I don’t, and never have done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not believe in the <i>people!</i>” It didn’t seem possible.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’d seen as much of the people as I have, miss,”
-said Joe grimly, “I’m thinking you’d not be quite so set
-up with ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone of conviction disconcerted the fair canvasser.
-Somehow she had not expected it. In the course of her
-present ministrations it was the first time she had met
-that point of view. Laxton’s working-class, which
-for several days had been honored by her delicate flatteries,
-had shown such a robust faith in itself and had
-purred so responsively to her blandishments that she
-now took for granted that in all circumstances it would
-fully share her own enthusiasm for it. But this rubicund,
-coatless Briton, with eyes of half truculent humor,
-was a little beyond her. Gloves were needed to handle
-him; otherwise fingers of such flowerlike delicacy stood
-a chance of being bruised.</p>
-
-<p>“May one ask what you have against them?” lisped
-the people’s champion, opening large round eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing particular, miss,” said Joe urbanely. “But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span>
-you ask me whether I believe in ’em and I say I don’t.
-Mind you, the people are all right in their place. I’ve
-not a word to say against ’em personally. Of a Monday
-morning at Vine Street, when the Court has been swep’
-an’ dusted and his Worship has returned from his Sunday
-in the country, we always try to make ’em welcome.
-‘Let ’em all come,’ that’s the motto of the Metropolitan
-Force. But as for <i>believing</i> in ’em, that’s another story.”</p>
-
-<p>This was rather baffling for the people’s champion.
-She was at a loss. But her faith was sublime. This
-odd, crass, heavy-witted plebeian who denied his kind was
-a sore problem even for the bringer of the light. Still,
-she stuck to her guns gallantly.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Government of the people, by the people, for the
-people.’” Lisping the battle cry of Demos she returned
-stoutly to the charge. Sacred formulas flowed from her
-lips in a stream of charming pellucidity.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, you don’t know ’em, miss,” ejaculated Joe, at
-intervals.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pretty joust; vicarious enthusiasm on the one
-side, first-hand experience on the other. But Joe was
-a rock. The fair canvasser took forth every weapon
-of an elegantly-furnished armory, yet without avail.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t hold with the people, miss, not in no shape
-nor form.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone was so final that at last a sense of defeat
-came upon this Amazon. She was still seated, however,
-without having quite made up her mind to the inevitable,
-on her grand chair in the front sitting-room of Number
-Five, Beaconsfield Villas, when Fate intervened in quite
-a remarkable way.</p>
-
-<p>All of a sudden, there appeared on the threshold of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>
-open door a figure tall, fine and unheralded. It was that
-of Harriet Sanderson.</p>
-
-<p>“Anybody at home?” she inquired gayly.</p>
-
-<p>The unexpected visitor was looking very handsome
-and distinguished in a well-cut black coat and skirt, and
-a large hat too plain for fashion, but very far from
-<i>démodé</i>. She came into the room with that almost proprietary
-air she was never without in her intercourse
-with her own people. But it was about to suffer an
-eclipse.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet just had time to greet her brother-in-law with
-a happy mingling of the <i>bon camarade</i> and the woman of
-the world, her fixed attitude towards such an Original,
-whom somehow she could not help liking and respecting,
-when her eyes met suddenly those of the fair canvasser.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment an intense surprise forbade either to
-speak. But the people’s champion was the first to overcome
-the shock.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Sanderson!” she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>The change in Harriet was immediate and dramatic.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Muriel!” A slight flush of a fine face accompanied
-the tone of awe.</p>
-
-<p>The visitor rose. And in the act of so doing an accession
-of great ladyhood, almost entirely absent a few
-minutes ago, seemed automatically to enter her manner.</p>
-
-<p>“What a small world it is!” she laughed. “Fancy
-meeting you here!”</p>
-
-<p>By now the iron will of the secretly annoyed and oddly
-discomposed Harriet was able to reassert itself.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a small world, my lady.” The tone was a very
-delicate mingling of aloofness and respect.</p>
-
-<p>Brief explanations followed. These quickly culminated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span>
-in the presentation of Joe, who then became the
-most embarrassed of the three. Unawares and in his
-shirt sleeves, he had been entertaining an angel. And to
-one of Conservative views, with a profound reverence
-for law, order and all established things, this seemed to
-verge upon indecency. A mere “one of Scotchie’s lady
-canvassers” had been magically transformed, in the
-twinkling of an eye, into Lady Muriel Dinneford, the
-third daughter of one whom Number Five, Beaconsfield
-Villas, always alluded to as “his Grace.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>It was the work of a few tactful minutes for Lady
-Muriel to effect a discreet retirement from the scene.
-Yet so deeply had she been engaged by Joe’s contumacy,
-and at the back of a mind which was making the most
-heroic efforts to be “broad” was such a sense of amusement,
-that she declared her intention of returning anon
-with the People’s Candidate, if he could possibly spare
-a few minutes from his multifarious duties, in order that
-the <i>coup de grâce</i> might be given to Mr. Kelly’s dangerous
-heresies.</p>
-
-<p>The withdrawal of the distinguished visitor across the
-street to the Candidate’s committee room left a void
-which for a few tense moments only wonder could fill.</p>
-
-<p>It was Joe who broke the silence which, like a pall,
-had suddenly descended upon the front parlor of Number
-Five.</p>
-
-<p>“If that don’t beat Banagher,” he said. “Fancy one
-of the Fam’ly taking the trouble to come a canvassin’
-for Scotchie!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
-
-<p>Keen humor and acute annoyance contended now in
-the eloquent face of Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, why shouldn’t she canvass for Sir Dugald
-Maclean”&mdash;the level voice was pitched in a very quiet
-key&mdash;“if she really believes in his principles?”</p>
-
-<p>“How can she believe in ’em, gal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“How can a blue blood believe in that sort of a feller?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Dugald is a remarkably clever man. One of
-the cleverest men in England, some people think.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s nothing to do with the matter. It’s character
-that counts.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing against his character, I believe. At
-any rate, Lady Muriel is going to marry him.”</p>
-
-<p>The state of Joe’s feelings forbade an immediate reply.
-And when reply he did, it was in a tone of scorn. Said
-he: “‘Government of the people, by the people, for the
-people!’ Harriet, for a dead beat fool give me a blue
-blood aristocrat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Joe,” came the answer, with a gleam of humor and
-malice, “I really think you should learn to speak of our
-governing class a little more respectfully.”</p>
-
-<p>This was rather hard. She ought to have realized that
-it was because Joe respected them so much that he now
-desired to chasten them.</p>
-
-<p>“Scotchie of all people!” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no accounting for taste, you know.” There
-was a sudden flash of a very handsome pair of eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“O’ course there ain’t,” said Joe, sorrowfully malicious.
-“You may have forgot there was a time when
-Scotchie came a-courtin’ you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you suppose I am ever likely to forget it!” said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span>
-Harriet, with a cool cynicism which took the simple
-Joseph completely out of his depth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s a queer world, I must say.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is,” his sister-in-law agreed.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment, Eliza came into the room. The
-visit of Harriet was so unexpected as to take her by
-surprise. But the cause of it was soon disclosed. Harriet
-was troubled about Mary. Ever since the girl,
-against the wishes and advice of her friends, had taken
-what they felt to be a fatal step, there had been a gradual
-drifting apart. Harriet had kept in touch with her as
-well as she could, but she had not been able to stifle
-her own private fears. The peril of such a career, even
-when crowned by success, was in her opinion, difficult
-to exaggerate. She disapproved of the friendship
-with the Wrens, and had strongly opposed Mary’s living
-with them. But as the girl rose in her profession,
-Harriet’s hold upon her grew still less. And now at
-second and third hand had come news which had greatly
-upset her.</p>
-
-<p>With the tact for which she was famous, Harriet
-did not speak of this in the presence of Joe. She accompanied
-Eliza to the privacy of the best bedroom, ostensibly
-to “take off her things,” but really to discuss a
-matter which for the past week had filled her with misgiving.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, Joe in the parlor set himself doggedly
-to compass the nap that so far had been denied him.
-In spite of the noises in the street and romantic appearance
-of a real live member of the Family in his
-humble abode, he had just begun to doze when the ban of
-Fate fell once more upon him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span></p>
-
-<p>From the strange welter in the amazing world outside
-there now emerged a large open motor. And royally it
-drew up before the magic door of Number Five. Two
-persons were seated in the car. One was no less than
-Princess Bedalia. The other was the humblest and yet
-the boldest of her adorers.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>The idea itself had been Mary’s that they should use
-a fine afternoon in motoring into Laxton, in order to see
-her parents. Behind this simple plan was fell design.
-A week had passed since that conversation under the
-trees in the Park in which she had sought in vain for
-her release. But so shallow had her reasoning appeared
-that Jack declined to take it seriously. He had her
-promise, and he felt he had every right to hold her to
-it. Unless she could show a real cause for revoking it,
-he was fully determined not to give her up.</p>
-
-<p>In desperation, therefore, she had hit on the expedient,
-a poor and vain one, no doubt, of taking him to see those
-humble people whom she called father and mother. In the
-course of her twenty odd years up and down the world
-she had had intimations from various side winds and
-divers little birds that she was an adopted child. Her
-real parentage and the circumstances of her birth were
-an impenetrable mystery and must always be so, no
-doubt, but her feeling for the Kellys was one of true affection
-and perfect loyalty. Not by word or deed had
-she hinted at the possession of knowledge which had
-come to her from other sources.</p>
-
-<p>In the circumstances of the case she now allowed herself
-to imagine that a visit to her home people in their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
-native habit as they dwelt might help to cure Jack of his
-infatuation. An insight into things and men told her that
-Beaconsfield Villas must be whole worlds away from any
-sphere in which he had moved hitherto. Nor would he
-be likely to suspect, as she was shrewdly aware, that a
-creature so sophisticated as herself had risen from such
-humble beginnings. She had a ferocious pride of her
-own, but it was not of the kind that meanly denies
-its origin.</p>
-
-<p>“Father,” was her gay greeting to the astonished and
-still coatless Joe, “I’ve brought somebody to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack, wearing a dustcoat and other appurtenances of
-the chauffeur’s craft, had followed upon the heels of
-Princess Bedalia into the front parlor of Number Five.
-In response to the young man’s bow, Kelly offered a
-rather dubious hand. As became a symbol of law and
-order and a member of the straitest sect of the Pharisees,
-he didn’t feel inclined to encourage Mary in gallivanting
-up and down the land. Nor did he feel inclined to give
-countenance to any promiscuous young man she might
-bring to the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dinneford&mdash;my father, Police-Sergeant Kelly.”
-It was a delightfully formal introduction, but rather
-wickedly contrived.</p>
-
-<p>Jack was so taken aback that he felt as if a feather
-might have downed him. But even to the lynx eyes of
-Mary, which were covertly upon him, not a trace of his
-feelings was visible. He merely bowed a second time,
-perhaps a little more gravely than the first.</p>
-
-<p>“Pleased to meet you, sir,” said Sergeant Kelly, in
-a voice which showed pretty clearly that he was overstating
-the truth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mary could not repress the rogue’s laugh that sprang
-to her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s my old mumsie?” she gayly demanded, partly
-in the hope of concealing her wicked merriment.</p>
-
-<p>“Upstairs with your Aunty Harriet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Harriet here!” The tone was full of surprise.
-And then the charming voice took a turn affectionately
-non-committal. “What luck! It seems an age since I
-saw her.”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of himself, Joe could not help being a little in
-awe of the girl. She was so remarkably striking that
-every time he saw her it became harder to keep up the
-pretense of blood relationship. She had developed into
-the finest young woman he had ever met. Her official
-father was very proud of her, the affection she inspired
-in him was true and real, but at the moment he was
-more than a little embarrassed by the impact of an
-immensely distinguished personality.</p>
-
-<p>However, in spite of such beauty and charm, he was
-determined to do his duty by her; as became a father and
-a man he felt bound to admonish her.</p>
-
-<p>“Since you took up with those people, none of us
-have been seeing much of you,” he forced himself to say,
-in his most magisterial manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Old story!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s true and you know it.” Joe declined on principle
-to be softened by her blandishments.</p>
-
-<p>“Wicked old story!” She took him by the shoulders
-and shook him; and then she sighed as a mother might
-have done, and gazed into his solemn face. “Father,”
-she said, “you are an old and great dear.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Get along with you!” said Joe sternly, but in spite of
-himself he couldn’t help laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll leave you and Mr. Dinneford to have a little crack
-while I take this to my mumsie.” Brandishing an important-looking
-milliner’s box, she left the room in a laughing
-search of Eliza.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Jack found himself alone with Mary’s
-father a period of constraint ensued. It would have
-been wrong to deny that his reception had been the reverse
-of cordial. The sensitiveness of a lover, in duty
-bound to walk delicately, made no secret of that. Moreover,
-he was still so astonished at Mary’s paternity that
-he felt quite at a loss. Nature had played an amazing
-trick. Somehow this serio-comic London copper in half-mufti,
-was going to make it very difficult to exercise
-the deference due to a prospective father-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>An acute silence was terminated by Joe’s “Won’t you
-sit down, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack sat down; and then Mary’s father, torn between
-stern disapproval and the humane feelings of a host,
-invited the young man solemnly to a glass of beer.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you very much,” said Jack, with admirable
-gravity.</p>
-
-<p>Murmuring “excuse me a minute,” Joe went to draw
-the beer. Left alone the young man tried to arrange
-his thoughts; also he took further stock of his surroundings.
-He had yet to overcome a powerful feeling of surprise.
-It was hard to believe that Princess Bedalia, in
-the view of her <i>fiancé</i>, the very last word in modern
-young women, should have sprung from such a <i>milieu</i>
-as Number Five, Beaconsfield Villas. It was a facer.
-Yet somehow the chasm between Mary and her male<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-parent seemed almost to enhance her value. She was so
-superb an original that she defied the laws of nature.</p>
-
-<p>The young man was engulfed in an odd train of speculation
-when Mary’s father returned with the beer. He
-poured out two glasses, gave one to the visitor, took
-one himself, and after a solemn “Good health, sir!”
-solemnly drank it.</p>
-
-<p>Jack returned the “Good health!” and followed the
-rest of the ritual. And then feeling rather more his
-own man, he made an effort to come to business. But
-it was only possible to do that by means of a directness
-verging upon the indelicate.</p>
-
-<p>“Sergeant Kelly,” he said, “have you any objection
-to my marrying Mary?”</p>
-
-<p>No doubt the form of the question was a little unwise.
-At least it exposed the young man to the prompt rejoinder:</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing whatever about you, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Dinneford”&mdash;he could not refrain from
-laughing a little at the portentous gravity of a prospective
-father-in-law. “And I think I can claim that I have
-always passed as respectable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glad to hear it, sir,” said Joe, the light of a respectful
-humor breaking upon him. And then measuring
-the young man with the eye of professional experience.
-“May I ask your occupation?”</p>
-
-<p>“No occupation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like the sound o’ that.” Sergeant Kelly sagely
-shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps it isn’t quite so bad as it sounds,” said the
-young man. “At present, you see, I am a kind of understudy
-to a sort of uncle I have. I am in training as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-you might say, so that one day I may follow in his
-footsteps.”</p>
-
-<p>“An actor,” said the dubious Joe. He didn’t mind
-actors personally, but impersonally he didn’t quite hold
-with the stage.</p>
-
-<p>“Not exactly,” said the young man coolly, but with
-a smile. “And yet he is in his way. In fact, you might
-call him a prince of comedians.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, sir.” Sergeant Kelly measured each word
-carefully. “But I’m afraid that’s only a very little in
-his favor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, too,” said Jack. “My uncle is a duke,
-and the deuce of it is, I have to succeed him.”</p>
-
-<p>“A duke!” Sergeant Kelly’s tone of rather pained
-surprise made it clear that such a romantic circumstance
-greatly altered the aspect of the case. It also implied
-that he was far from approving an ill-timed jest
-on a sacred subject. His brow knitted to a heavy frown.
-“Well, sir, I can only say that if such is the case you
-have no right to come a-courting our Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>“For why not, Sergeant Kelly?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know why not, sir, as well as I do. She’s a
-fine gal, although I say it who ought not, but that will
-not put her right with your friends. They will expect
-you to take a wife of your own sort.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s rather my look-out, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, it is,” said Joe, with the air of a warrior,
-“but as you have asked me, there’s my opinion. The
-aristocracy’s the aristocracy, the middle-class is the middle-class,
-and the lower orders are the lower orders&mdash;there
-they are and you can’t alter ’em. At least, that’s
-my view of the matter.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span></p>
-
-<p>Jack forced a wry smile. Mary was a chip of the old
-block. Such an uncompromising statement seemed at
-any rate to explain the force of her conviction upon
-this vexed subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Excuse the freedom, sir,” said the solemn Joe, “but
-you young nobs who keep on marrying out of your
-class are undermining the British Constitution. What’s
-to become of law and order if you go on mixing things
-up in the way you are doing?”</p>
-
-<p>The young man proceeded to do battle with the
-Philistine. But the weapons in his armory were none
-of the brightest with which to meet the crushing onset of
-the foe.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no use, sir. As I say, the aristocracy’s the aristocracy,
-the middle-class is the middle-class, and the
-lower orders are the lower orders&mdash;there they are and
-you can’t alter ’em. You don’t suppose I’ve reggerlated
-the traffic at Hyde Park Corner all these years
-not to know <i>that</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>In the presence of such a conviction, the best of Jack’s
-arguments seemed vain, futile and shallow. Fate had
-charged Joseph Kelly with the solemn duty of maintaining
-the fabric of society, and in his purview, no argument
-however cunning, could set that fact aside.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>While these two were still at grips, each meeting the
-arguments of the other with a sense of growing impatience,
-the cause of the trouble intervened. Mary came
-into the room, leading her mother by the hand. With
-the face of a sphinx followed Harriet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span></p>
-
-<p>The blushing Eliza was adorned with a fine coat which
-had come in the milliner’s box. Mary had laughingly
-insisted on her mother appearing in it, in spite of Eliza’s
-firm conviction that “it was much too grand.”</p>
-
-<p>“My word, mother!” roared Joe, at the sight of her
-splendor. “I’m thinking I’ll have to keep an eye on
-<i>you</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>The visitor was promptly introduced, first to the wearer
-of the coat, who offered a shy and embarrassed hand,
-and then to Aunt Harriet, who stood mute and pale
-in the background.</p>
-
-<p>“Why&mdash;why, Mrs. Sanderson,” said the young man,
-“fancy meeting you here!”</p>
-
-<p>“You have met before?” said Mary, innocently.</p>
-
-<p>“We meet very often.”</p>
-
-<p>“Really?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes. Mrs. Sanderson is Uncle Albert’s right
-hand at Bridport House.”</p>
-
-<p>A pin might have been heard to fall in the silence that
-followed. The blood fled from Mary’s cheeks; they
-grew as pale as those of her aunt. Even the knowledge
-that had recently come to her had not connected Jack
-with Bridport House. No attempt had been made to
-realize exactly who and what he was. It had been
-enough that he belonged to a world beyond her own.
-And now as this new and astonishing fact presented
-itself she saw the strongest possible justification for the
-attitude she had taken up.</p>
-
-<p>As for Harriet, stern and unbending in the background,
-she was like an Antigone who abides the decree. Her
-fears were realized. The worst had happened. Fate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span>
-had played such a subtle and unworthy trick that the
-instinct uppermost was to resent it bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>The feelings of the girl were very similar. But her
-strength of character and the independence of her position
-enabled her to take charge of a situation delicate
-and embarrassing. In a rather high-pitched voice, she
-began to talk generalities in order to bridge if possible
-the arid pauses which were always threatening to submerge
-the conversation. But at the back of her mind
-was a growing sense that secret forces are always at
-work in this strange world we inhabit&mdash;forces which
-have a peculiar malice of their own.</p>
-
-<p>And yet, hopeless as the position had suddenly become
-for these five people, the fates had one more barb
-in their quiver. And it was of so odd a kind that it
-was as if the stars in their courses were bent upon
-seeing what mischief they could contrive in this particular
-matter. A sudden sharp rap from the knocker of the
-front door fell into the midst of the growing embarrassment.
-Joe, welcoming this diversion as relief to a
-tension that was almost intolerable, went at once to
-attend the cause of it.</p>
-
-<p>“As I’m a living man,” came a lusty voice from the
-threshold, “if it isn’t old Joe Kelly.”</p>
-
-<p>The People’s Candidate, rosetted, dauntless and triumphant,
-accompanied by the lady of his choice, stepped
-heroically into the small room. Twenty-three years had
-wrought a very remarkable change in a very remarkable
-man. In that time Dugald Maclean had bent all the
-powers of his genius to a task that Miss Harriet Sanderson
-had discreetly imposed upon the author of “Urban
-Love, a Trilogy.” And now he came in, every inch<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-a victor, he had not looked to find his monitress. But
-there she was, pale, grim, yet somehow oddly distinguished
-in the background of a room curiously familiar.
-It was to her that his eyes leapt.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Miss Sanderson!” he said, with a conqueror’s
-laugh, in which there was no trace of the tongue-tied
-youth of three and twenty years ago. Offering a conqueror’s
-hand, he went forward to greet her.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet yielded hers with a vivid blush. And as she
-did so, she was suddenly aware of two swordlike orbs
-piercing her right through.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know Mrs. Sanderson was a friend of
-yours,” said the honeyed voice of Lady Muriel.</p>
-
-<p>“A very old friend,” said Sir Dugald gayly.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment, however, it was necessary for Lady
-Muriel to curb her curiosity. Since her exit from that
-room half-an-hour ago other people had gathered in it.
-She had hardly spoken when her astonished eyes fell
-upon Cousin Jack. Their recognition of each other was
-mutually incredulous. Yet there was really no reason
-why it should have been. It was known to the young
-man that Muriel had been refused permission to marry
-a politician already on the high road to place and power,
-and it was known to her that Jack had been going about
-with an actress.</p>
-
-<p>“A family party,” said Jack, as their eyes met. “Let
-me introduce Miss Lawrence&mdash;Lady Muriel Dinneford.”</p>
-
-<p>An exchange of aloof bows followed. And then,
-although very careful to seem to do nothing of the kind,
-each measured the other with an eye as hard and bright
-as a diamond. To neither was the result of this scrutiny
-exactly pleasant. It came upon Cousin Muriel with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span>
-little shock of surprise that “the Chorus Girl” should
-look just as she did, and that she knew how to bear
-herself in a way that did not yield an inch to the
-enemy, yet at the same time scrupulously refrained from
-offering battle. Here was beauty of a very compelling
-kind, and in the hostile view of its present beholder
-something more valuable. The distinguished air, the look
-of breeding, went some way to excuse a deplorable infatuation.
-But as far as “the Chorus Girl” herself was concerned,
-a little over-sensitive as circumstances may have
-made her on the score of her own dignity, it was far from
-pleasant to detect in this authentic member of the family
-that power of conveying subtle insult, without speech
-or look, which belonged to the two others, presumably
-her sisters, whom she had met in the Park.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the girl felt a keen rage within. It may
-have been the world of unconscious arrogance behind
-that aloof nod, it may have been the implicit challenge
-in the lidded glance down the long straight nose. But
-whatever the cause, Mary suddenly felt a surge of
-resentment in her very bones.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the People’s Candidate was playing
-his part to perfection. The flight of time had wrought
-wonders in this champion of Demos. He was no longer
-tongue-tied and awkward; even the roll of his “r’s” was
-so diminished that Ardnaleuchan would hardly have
-known its child. Everything was in perfect harmony.
-After a few brief passages with Harriet, audaciously
-humorous, in which homage was paid to old times, he
-turned with a sportsman’s eye to exchange a ready quip
-with Joe and Eliza.</p>
-
-<p>Joe, in his heart, was scandalized. A Tory to the bone,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
-in his view the social hierarchy was part of the cosmic
-order. It was unchanging, immutable. “Scotchie” was
-a charlatan, tongue in cheek; a mountebank of a fellow
-whom it was amazing that honest men, let alone high-born
-women, could not see through. Joe was determined
-to have no truck with him, but the People’s
-Candidate with a bonhomie which the former colleague
-of the X Division was inclined to regard as mere brazenness,
-seemed quite determined not to take rebuffs from
-an old friend.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t a vote, Joe, I know,” said Maclean, “but
-you are a man of influence here and I want you to
-speak for me with your pals.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe shook a solemn head.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe in your principles,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>The voice, a growl of indignation, struck the ear of
-Lady Muriel a veritable blow. In spite of “the breadth”
-she was trying so hard to cultivate, the laws of her
-being demanded that these humble people should grovel.
-They were of another caste, another clay; somehow
-Joe’s blunt skepticism gave her a sense of personal
-affront.</p>
-
-<p>“You have not a vote, Mr. Kelly,” she interposed, in
-a sharp tone. “Pray, why didn’t you tell me? A canvasser’s
-time is valuable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your ladyship never asked the question.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you knew, surely, my object in coming?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did,” said Joe coolly, with a slightly humorous air.
-“And I thought your ladyship so dangerous that the
-best thing I could do was to get you barking up the
-wrong tree.”</p>
-
-<p>The answer delighted Maclean. He threw up his head<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-and laughed like a school boy. But in the midst of a
-mirth that his fiancée was quite incapable of sharing
-with him, Jack and Mary rose to go. They had been
-waiting to seize the first chance which offered in order
-to escape from a decidedly irksome family party.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>As Mary and Jack took leave, the penetrating eye
-of the new Home Secretary regarded them. The two
-men had not met before, but they were known to each
-other by hearsay. Jack had heard little good of Maclean&mdash;Sir
-Dugald had heard even less good of Jack. A light
-of amused malice sprang to their eyes in the moment
-of recognition. But from those of the Scotsman it
-quickly passed. For almost at once his attention was
-caught by the affectionate intimacy of the good-bys bestowed
-upon Joe, Eliza, and Harriet by a girl of quite
-remarkable interest.</p>
-
-<p>Was it possible? The live thought flashed through
-Sir Dugald’s mind. In an instant it had leapt to the
-November evening of the year 1890. Immense quantities
-of water had flowed under the bridge since that
-far distant hour. And if this vivid, unforgettable girl
-was the creature he now suspected that she must be,
-here was one example the more of the romance of
-time, nature and circumstance.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Mary and Jack were away on what they
-called a joy-ride to Richmond, all Sir Dugald’s doubts
-in the matter were laid at rest. At once there followed
-a few brief, but pitiless and bitter passages between
-Harriet Sanderson and Lady Muriel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Tell me, Mrs. Sanderson,” said the younger woman
-in a tone of ice, “is Miss Lawrence a connection of
-yours?”</p>
-
-<p>“My niece, my lady,” said Harriet, an odd tremor in
-her voice.</p>
-
-<p>“A daughter, I presume, of your sister and her husband?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so, my lady.” Harriet’s tone was slowly
-deepening to that of her questioner.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, the matter will have to be mentioned at
-once to my father. And I’m afraid the consequences
-cannot fail to be serious. You must feel that it is
-very wrong to have connived at such a state of things.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet’s reply, brief but considered, made with a sudden
-flush of color and a lighted eye, was a cold denial.
-It was a short but painful scene, and its three witnesses
-would gladly have been spared it. Lady Muriel
-had lost a little of her poise. In spite of her “breadth”
-she was simply horrified by her discovery. She could
-not believe that Harriet spoke the truth. And the cunning,
-the duplicity, the chicane of a retainer who had
-held a privileged position for so many years filled her
-with an inward fury that was almost beyond control.</p>
-
-<p>“One could not have believed it to be possible,” she
-said, in a voice that trembled ominously. And having
-discharged that Parthian bolt, she withdrew with the
-People’s Candidate in order to canvass the next house
-in the street.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VI</p>
-
-<p>Such a departure left consternation in its train. After
-a moment of complete silence, Eliza burst into a sudden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span>
-flood of tears, Joe put on his tunic with the air of a
-tragedian, but Harriet remained immovable as a statue.</p>
-
-<p>“This comes of the stage,” wailed poor Eliza.</p>
-
-<p>Joe felt the times themselves were to blame, at any rate
-they were sadly out of joint.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what things are coming to,” he said,
-flinging his slippers into a corner and putting on his
-boots. “Things are all upside down these days and no
-mistake.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet blamed no one. She merely stood white and
-shaken, a picture of tragic unhappiness.</p>
-
-<p>“Gal,” said Joe, turning to her a Job’s comforter, “one
-thing is sure. You are going to lose your place.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet bit her lip, coldly disdaining a reply.</p>
-
-<p>“As sure as eggs that’ll be the upshot,” proceeded Joe.
-“I’m sorry I let that jockey go without giving him a
-bit of my mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“He is not to blame,” said Harriet tensely.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“You and me, Joe,” sobbed Eliza, “for letting her
-go on the stage.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was no stopping her&mdash;you know that well
-enough. As soon as she took up her dancing we lost
-all control of her. But we’ve got to be pretty sensible
-now. A nice tangle things are in, and they’ll take a bit
-of straightening out.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet shook a mournful head.</p>
-
-<p>“What can people like ourselves possibly do?” she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a great mind,” said Joe, “to step as far as
-Bridport House and have a few words with his Grace.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s merely preposterous,” said Harriet decisively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The matter must be brought to his notice at once,
-any way,” said Joe doggedly.</p>
-
-<p>“You can count upon that,” said Harriet grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’ll be one side only. And there’s the other,
-my gal.”</p>
-
-<p>“What other?” Harriet asked with a drawn smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Her side. She is not going to be made a fool of by
-anyone if I can help it.”</p>
-
-<p>Said Harriet very gravely: “Joe, I sincerely hope
-you will not meddle in this. I am quite sure that
-any interference of ours will be most unwise.”</p>
-
-<p>But Joe shook the head of a warrior.</p>
-
-<p>“There you’re wrong. This is our affair and we’ve
-got to see it through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Far better let the matter alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“When we adopted that girl,” said Joe, “we took a
-great responsibility on ourselves, and we’ve got to live
-up to it. In my opinion that young man means no
-good.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have no right to say that,” said Harriet quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve a right to say what I think. And you know as
-well as I do that the likes o’ him don’t condescend to the
-likes o’ her with any good intention.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet flushed darkly.</p>
-
-<p>“I am quite sure that Mr. Dinneford would always
-behave like a gentleman,” she said sternly.</p>
-
-<p>“That is more than you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to forget that he is one of the Family.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe laughed rather sardonically. “I don’t blame you
-for being so set up with your precious Family,” he said.
-“It is only right that you should be&mdash;but I know what
-I know. Human nature’s human nature.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span></p>
-
-<p>Harriet shook her head. Not for a moment could
-she accept this point of view. Moreover, she strongly
-urged that there must not be interference of any kind
-with Bridport House.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s as may be,” said Joe stoutly. “But you can
-take your oath that I mean to see justice done in the
-matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk as if she was your own daughter,” said
-Harriet, who was growing deeply annoyed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ever since I gave her my name and my roof, I have
-looked on her as a gal of my own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that we have,” chimed Eliza tearfully. “And
-I am sure that Joe is right to take the matter up.”</p>
-
-<p>Again Harriet dissented. In her view, and she did
-not hesitate to express it forcibly, it would be sheer folly
-for people like themselves to meddle in such a delicate
-affair.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me,” said Eliza bitterly, “that rather than
-go against Bridport House, you would ruin the girl.”</p>
-
-<p>The words struck home. Eliza had long looked up
-to her younger sister. The position she held was one
-of honor, but Harriet’s exaggerated concern for an
-imposing machine of which she was no more than a very
-humble cog, somehow aroused Eliza’s deepest feelings.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a very wicked thing to say.” And in the eyes
-of Harriet was an odd look.</p>
-
-<p>“You set these grandees above everything in the
-world,” Eliza taunted. “Like the Dad, you simply worship
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>A deadly pallor overspread Harriet’s face. Her
-eyes grew grim with pain and anger. But a powerful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-nature, schooled to self-discipline, fought for control and
-was able to gain it.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a futile discussion,” she said suddenly, in a
-changed tone. And then she added with an earnestness
-strangely touching. “Joe, I implore you not to take any
-step in the matter without first consulting me.”</p>
-
-<p>The solemn words seemed to gain finality from the
-fact that Harriet Sanderson then walked abruptly out
-of the house.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he Duke</span>, in his morning-room, was reading a
-letter which had just come to him by post. As
-he folded it neatly and returned it to an envelope
-which bore the stamp of the south-eastern postal district,
-the light of humor played over an expressive face. And
-when, after much reflection, he took the letter again from
-its envelope and solemnly re-read it, the look deepened to
-the verge of the saturnine.</p>
-
-<p>Still pondering what he plainly considered to be
-a priceless document, a succession of odd grimaces caused
-him to purse his lips and to frown perplexedly. At last
-he dropped his glasses and broke into a guffaw.</p>
-
-<p>Lying back in his invalid’s chair, still in the throes
-of an infrequent laughter, he was presently brought back
-to the plane of gravity by the unexpected arrival of
-Lady Wargrave upon the scene.</p>
-
-<p>She entered the room with a gladiatorial air.</p>
-
-<p>The face of his Grace underwent a sudden change at
-the sight of this unwelcome visitor.</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte seated herself ponderously. And then having
-allowed a moment’s pause for dramatic effect, she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
-said, marking her brother with an intent eye, “The plot
-thickens.”</p>
-
-<p>“Plot?” he said, warily.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you wish me to believe that you have not heard
-the latest development?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why speak in riddles, Charlotte?” He was trying
-to suppress a growing irritability.</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte smiled frostily. “One should make allowances,
-no doubt, for natural simplicity. But even to
-the aloofness of philosophers there’s a limit, my friend.
-You must know that there is only one subject in all
-our minds just now.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke, a concentrated gaze upon Charlotte, did
-not allow himself to admit anything of the kind. For
-one thing they were lifelong adversaries. Charlotte was
-a meddlesome woman, an intriguer and a busybody in the
-sacred name of Family. They had tried many a fall
-with each other in the past, and although Providence in
-making Albert John the head of the house had given
-him an unfair advantage, he was often hard set by Charlotte’s
-malice and persistency.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you spoken to that young wretch?” Charlotte
-lost no time in coming boldly to the horses.</p>
-
-<p>“I have not,” was the sour reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it quite wise, do you think, to let the grass grow
-under your feet?&mdash;particularly having regard to the fact
-that the person happens to be a niece of Mrs. Sanderson’s.”
-This was a very shrewd blow, whose manner
-of delivery had been most carefully considered beforehand.
-Indeed, so neatly was it planted now that his
-Grace got the shock of his life. The surprise was so
-painfully sharp that he found it hard to meet the foe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-without flinching. He had to make a great effort to
-hold himself in hand. And Charlotte, a cold eye upon
-him, followed up in an extremely businesslike manner.
-She had a very strong hand to play and a true warrior,
-if ever there was one, she was set on wringing out
-of it the last ounce of advantage. There had come to
-her at last, after many a year of watching and waiting,
-an opportunity beyond her hopes and her prayers.</p>
-
-<p>“Last evening poor Sarah came to me in great distress,”
-proceeded Charlotte. “Muriel, it appears, had
-been electioneering in the constituency of a certain person,
-and in the course of her wanderings up and down
-the suburbs, she found herself quite by chance at the
-house of Mrs. Sanderson’s brother-in-law.”</p>
-
-<p>By this time his Grace had sufficiently recovered from
-the blow that had been dealt him to ask how Muriel had
-contrived to make that particular discovery.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that she had found Mrs. Sanderson there.</p>
-
-<p>“The long arm of coincidence,” opined his Grace with
-a wry smile. He opined further that the whole thing
-began to sound uncommonly like a novel.</p>
-
-<p>“Sober reality, I assure you, Johnnie. And sober
-reality can beat any novel in the power of the human
-mind to invent, that’s why it’s so stupid to write them.
-Muriel entered the house by chance, Mrs. Sanderson
-came there, and presently, if you please, Master Jack
-arrived by motor with the young person. By the way,
-Muriel says she is very good looking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite a family party.” His Grace achieved a light
-tone with difficulty. “But I incline to think, Charlotte,
-you a little overstate the facts.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is the story Muriel told Sarah.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, I am very unwilling to believe that Mrs. Sanderson
-knew what was going on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, why not?” He was raked by a goshawk’s
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>“She would have told me.”</p>
-
-<p>Somehow those lame, impotent words revealed a man
-badly hit. Charlotte saw that at once, and forthwith
-proceeded to turn the fact to pitiless advantage. A
-gust of coarse laughter swept the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Johnnie, it’s the first time I’ve read you a fool.
-Simple Simon! Do you think a woman who has learned
-to play her cards like that is the one to give away
-her hand?”</p>
-
-<p>This was a second blow planted neatly on the vizor
-of his Grace. In spite of his armor of cynicism he
-could be seen to wince a little. And the silence which
-followed enabled the implacable foe to perceive that he
-was shaken worse than it seemed reasonable to expect
-him to be.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you’ll now permit her to be sent away. A
-sordid intriguer. She must go at once.”</p>
-
-<p>In the trying moment which followed, the Duke, badly
-hipped, fought valiantly to pull himself together. But
-somehow he only just managed to do so.</p>
-
-<p>“You make a mistake, Charlotte,” he said, with an
-effort that clearly hurt him. “She is not that kind of
-person. You always have made that mistake. She is a
-superior woman in every way. At least, I have always
-found her so. I can’t imagine such a woman intriguing
-for anybody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shows how little you know ’em, Johnnie.” Another
-Gargantuan gust swept the room. “Every woman intrigues<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span>
-unless she’s a born fool, and this housekeeper
-nurse of yours is very far from being that&mdash;believe
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>For a brief, but uncomfortable moment the Duke
-thought the matter over with an air of curious perplexity.
-Then he said abruptly and with defiance:</p>
-
-<p>“I must have further information.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sarah has the details. It would be well, no doubt,
-to have her views on the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon Charlotte rose massively, crossed to the
-bell and rang it in order that a much tormented male
-should enjoy this further privilege.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>The eldest daughter of the house, when she came
-on the scene, found the atmosphere decidedly electric.
-Her father was glaring with very ominous eyes; while
-it was clear from the look on the face of Aunt Charlotte
-that she was under the impression that she had
-downed him at last. No doubt she had, but if those eyes
-meant anything there was still a lot of fight in the stricken
-warrior.</p>
-
-<p>Sarah herself was a long, thin, flat-chested person.
-Totally devoid of imagination, her horizon was so limited
-that outside the Family nothing or nobody mattered.
-And yet she was not in the least domesticated. In
-fact, she was not in the least anything. She was nobly
-and consistently null, without opinions or ideas, without
-humor, charm or amenity. Her mental outlook had
-somehow thrown back to the 1840’s, yet with all her
-limitations, apart from which very little remained of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>
-her, she was a thoroughly sound, exceedingly honest
-Christian gentlewoman of thirty-eight.</p>
-
-<p>Sarah, it seemed, having heard Muriel’s story, had
-taken counsel of the dowager. And at once realizing the
-extreme gravity of the whole affair, both ladies determined
-to make the most of a long-sought opportunity
-to give the housekeeper her quietus. Sarah herself, who
-was inclined to be embittered and vindictive on this particular
-point, fell in only too readily with Aunt Charlotte’s
-desire to take full advantage of such a golden
-chance. Called upon now to divulge all that she knew,
-the eldest daughter re-told Muriel’s remarkable story
-of her meeting with Mrs. Sanderson, Jack and the girl,
-in the course of political endeavors at Laxton. The
-story, amazing as it was, was undoubtedly authentic.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, father,” was Sarah’s conclusion, very
-pointedly expressed, “she will simply <i>have</i> to go. And
-the sooner the better, as no doubt you agree.”</p>
-
-<p>To Sarah’s deep annoyance, however, her sire seemed
-very far from agreeing.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no direct evidence of collusion,” he said.
-“And knowing Mrs. Sanderson to be an old and tried
-servant, who has always had our welfare at heart, I
-am very unwilling to place such a construction upon what
-may be no more than a rather odd coincidence.”</p>
-
-<p>Sarah was too deeply angry to reply. But she looked
-on grimly while the ruthless Charlotte showly marshaled
-her forces. The quarrel was a very pretty one. Yet
-the Duke, now his back was to the wall, was able to
-take excellent care of himself. Moreover, he flatly declined
-to hear a worthy woman traduced until she had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>
-had a chance of meeting charges so recklessly, and as
-it seemed, malevolently brought against her.</p>
-
-<p>“From the way in which you speak of her,” said the
-incensed Charlotte, “you appear to regard her as a person
-of importance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Charlotte, I regard her as thoroughly honest, trustworthy,
-competent&mdash;in fact a good woman in every way.”</p>
-
-<p>“You willfully blind yourself, Johnnie. This creature
-has thrown dust in your eyes. But it will be no more
-than you deserve if one day her niece is installed as mistress
-here. You will not live to see it, yet it would be
-no more than bare justice if you did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pernicious nonsense,” rejoined his Grace. “Perhaps
-in the circumstances it would be well to hear what Mrs.
-Sanderson has to say for herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is bound to lie.”</p>
-
-<p>Somehow the precision of the language stung his
-Grace.</p>
-
-<p>“You are not entitled to say that,” he flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the common sense of the situation and one has a
-perfect right to express it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not here, Charlotte&mdash;not in this room before me. If
-I trust people implicitly&mdash;there are not many that I do&mdash;I
-trust them implicitly, and I can’t allow even <i>privileged</i>
-people to speak of them in that way&mdash;at any rate, in my
-presence.”</p>
-
-<p>This explosion was so unlooked for that it took the
-ladies aback. In all the years they had fought him
-they had never seen him moved so deeply. A new
-Albert John had suddenly emerged. Never before had the
-head of the house allowed these enemies to catch a
-glimpse of such quixotic, such fantastic chivalry. Charlotte<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
-was sourly amused, Sarah, amazed; but both ladies
-were deeply angry.</p>
-
-<p>However, they had fully made up their minds that
-the housekeeper must go. Indeed, that had been already
-arranged at the after-dinner conference at Hill Street the
-previous evening. They were convinced that a woman
-whom they intensely disliked, whose peculiar position
-they greatly resented, was at last driven into a corner.
-The Duke’s indecently bold defense of her had taken
-them by surprise, but it only made them the more determined
-to push their present advantage ruthlessly home.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Sarah rose and pressed the bell. She demanded
-of the servant who answered it that Mrs. Sanderson
-should appear.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet, already apprised of Lady Wargrave’s arrival,
-came at once. She was quite prepared for a painful
-scene. Only too well had she reason to know the
-state of feeling in regard to herself. She had always
-been so able and discreet that she had enforced the
-outward respect of those whom she served so loyally.
-But she well knew that she was not liked by the
-ladies of the house, and that the special position she
-had come to hold owing to the decline of the Duke’s
-health, was a <i>casus belli</i> between him and the members
-of his family. She had long been aware that in the
-opinion of the Dinneford ladies it was no part of a
-housekeeper’s functions to act as a trained nurse to their
-invalid father.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet had a natural awe of Lady Wargrave, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-she shared with all under that roof; for Lady Sarah
-she had the deep respect which she extended to every
-member of the august clan it had been her privilege
-to serve for so many years. In the devout eyes of
-Harriet Sanderson each unit of that clan was not as
-other men and women. In the matter of Bridport House
-and all that it stood for, she was more royalist than the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>From the dark hour, a week ago now, in which the
-news had come by a side wind, that the fates by a
-stroke of perverse cruelty, as it seemed, had thrown
-Mary across the path of Mr. Dinneford, she had hardly
-known how to lay her head on her pillow. To her
-mind the whole thing was simply calamitous. It had
-thrown her into a state of profound unhappiness. She
-now came into the room looking worn and ill, yet fully
-prepared for short shift to be meted out to her by
-those whom she found assembled there.</p>
-
-<p>The ladies looked for defiance, no doubt. And they
-may have looked for an undercurrent of malicious triumph.
-Yet if they expected either of these things their
-mistake was at once very clear. It was hard to find a
-trace of the successful intriguer in the haggard cheeks
-and somber eyes of the woman before them. But to
-minds such as theirs portents of this kind could not
-be expected to weigh in the scale against their preconceived
-ideas.</p>
-
-<p>It was left to Lady Wargrave to fix the charge. And
-this she did with a blunt precision which was itself
-a form of insult. The icy tones were scrupulously
-polite, nothing was said which one in her position was
-not entitled to say in such circumstances, yet the whole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-effect was so deadly in its venom as to be absolutely
-pitiless.</p>
-
-<p>At first Harriet was overwhelmed. The force of the
-attack was beyond anything she had looked for. Moreover,
-it seemed to fill the Duke, an unwilling auditor,
-with anger and pain. He moved uneasily in his chair,
-yet he was not able to check the cold torrent of quasi-insult
-by word of mouth, for none knew better than
-Lady Wargrave how to administer castigation without
-going outside the rules of the game.</p>
-
-<p>Even when the shock of the first blows was past,
-Harriet could find no means of defending herself. She
-was a very proud woman. Her blamelessness in what
-she could only regard as a very odious matter was so
-clear to her own mind that it did not seem to call for
-re-statement. She, too, said nothing. But a hot flush
-came upon the thin cheek.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave grew more and more incensed by a
-silence, the cause of which she completely mistook.</p>
-
-<p>“You have been nearly thirty years here, Mrs. Sanderson,
-and you have been guilty of a wicked abuse of
-trust.”</p>
-
-<p>The painful pause which followed this final blow was
-broken at last by the Duke.</p>
-
-<p>“You must forgive me, Charlotte, if I say that the
-facts of the case as they have been presented, hardly
-justify such a statement.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone was honey. And it was in such ironical
-contrast to Charlotte’s own that nothing could have
-shown more clearly the wide gulf between their points
-of view or the envenomed strife of many years now coming
-to a head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span></p>
-
-<p>“They prove the charge to the hilt.” The hawk’s eyes
-of Charlotte contracted ominously.</p>
-
-<p>“What charge?&mdash;if you don’t mind stating it explicitly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Sanderson has used her position here to make
-her niece known to the future head of this house, she
-has connived at their intimacy, she appears to have fostered
-it in every way.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think you are entitled to say that, Charlotte.”
-The Duke spoke slowly and pointedly, and then
-he turned to Harriet with an air of such delicate politeness
-that it added fuel to the flame which was withering
-her traducers. “If it is not asking too much, Mrs. Sanderson,”
-he said, with a smile of grave kindness, “I
-should personally be very grateful if you would be
-wicked enough to defend yourself. Let me say at once
-that I am far from accepting the construction Lady
-Wargrave has placed on the matter. But her zeal for a
-time-honored institution is so great that if her judgment
-is outrun, it seems only kind to forgive her.”</p>
-
-<p>Such oblique but resounding blows in the sconce of
-Charlotte filled her with a fury hard to hold in check.</p>
-
-<p>“What defense is possible?” Her voice was like
-a crane. “The facts are there to look at. Mrs. Sanderson’s
-niece has extracted a promise of marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke turned to Harriet rather anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“I sincerely hope Lady Wargrave has been misinformed,”
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet flushed.</p>
-
-<p>“I only know”&mdash;speech for her had become almost
-intolerably difficult&mdash;“that Mr. Dinneford has asked my
-brother-in-law’s consent to his marrying her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Duke may have been deeply annoyed, but not a
-line of his face betrayed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is your brother-in-law, Mrs. Sanderson?”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet told him.</p>
-
-<p>“A very honest man”&mdash;the Duke checked a laugh&mdash;“I
-have been honored by a letter from him this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Even the lacerated Harriet could not forbear to smile.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure,” said she, “he will not let Mary marry
-Mr. Dinneford if he can help it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” sharply interposed Lady Wargrave.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not, Charlotte?” Her brother took upon himself
-to answer the question. “Because Sergeant Kelly
-is a very sensible and enlightened man who evidently
-tries to see things in their right relation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fiddle-de-dee!” said Charlotte, with the bluntness
-for which she was famous. “Depend upon it, he knows
-as well as anybody on which side his bread is buttered.”</p>
-
-<p>Her brother shook his head. “I think,” he said, “if you
-had had the privilege of reading Sergeant Kelly’s letter
-you would be agreeably surprised. At any rate, he
-seems quite to share your view of the sacredness of the
-social fabric.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us look at the facts,” said Charlotte. “This
-marriage has to be prevented at all costs. And I hope
-it is not too much to ask Mrs. Sanderson that she will
-give us any assistance which may lie in her power.”</p>
-
-<p>The look upon Lady Wargrave’s face, as she made the
-request, clearly implied that help from such a quarter
-must, in the nature of things, be negligible. But in spite
-of the covert insult in the tone and manner of the dowager,
-Harriet replied very simply that there was nothing
-she would leave undone to prevent such a catastrophe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am quite sure, Mrs. Sanderson, we can count upon
-that,” said the Duke, in a tone which softened considerably
-the humiliating silence with which the promise had
-been received.</p>
-
-<p>“To begin with,” said the Duke, turning to Harriet,
-“I shall ask your brother-in-law to come and see me.
-Evidently he is one of these sensible, straightforward
-men who can be trusted to take a large view of things.”</p>
-
-<p>The face of Lady Wargrave expressed less optimism.</p>
-
-<p>“There is one question I would like to put to Mrs.
-Sanderson,” she suddenly interposed. It seemed that she
-had reserved for a final attack the weapon on which she
-counted most. “Be good enough to tell me this.” The
-ruthless eye was fixed on Harriet. “How long, Mrs.
-Sanderson, have you known of Mr. Dinneford’s intimacy
-with your niece?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a slight but painful pause, and it was broken
-by a rather faltering reply.</p>
-
-<p>“It is just a week since I first heard of it, my lady.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just a week! And in the whole of that time you have
-not thought well to mention the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>The tone cut like a knife. And the stab it dealt was
-so deep that Harriet was unable to answer the question
-which propelled it.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Why didn’t</i> you mention it, Mrs. Sanderson?”</p>
-
-<p>The blood fled suddenly from Harriet’s cheek. She
-grew nervous and confused.</p>
-
-<p>“Please answer the question.” There was now a ring
-of triumph in the pitiless tone.</p>
-
-<p>“I wished to spare his Grace unpleasantness,” stammered
-Harriet.</p>
-
-<p>“Very thoughtful of you, Mrs. Sanderson,” said Lady<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-Wargrave, bitingly. “No doubt his Grace appreciates
-your regard for his feelings. But even if that was the
-motive, surely it was your duty to report the matter
-to Lady Sarah as soon as it came to your knowledge.”</p>
-
-<p>The hesitation of Harriet grew exceedingly painful to
-witness.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she said at last. Tears suddenly sprang to
-her eyes. “I begin to see now that it <i>was</i> my duty. I
-wish very much that I <i>had</i> mentioned the matter to
-Lady Sarah.”</p>
-
-<p>Both ladies were so fully set on the overthrow of this
-serpent that the air of touching, exquisite simpleness
-went for nothing. But in any case they would have been
-too obtuse to notice it.</p>
-
-<p>“We all wish that.” Lady Wargrave pursued her advantage
-pitilessly. “And I am sure I speak for his
-Grace as well as for the rest of us.” She trained a
-look of malicious triumph upon the perplexed and
-frowning face of her brother.</p>
-
-<p>As became a consummate tactician who now had the
-affair well in hand, Charlotte gave the Duke a moment to
-intervene if he felt inclined to do so. But she well knew,
-a kind of instinct told her, that the attack had succeeded
-completely. The housekeeper made such a feeble
-attempt to parry it, that for the time being her champion
-was dumb. Nor was this surprising. In the opinion
-of both ladies the sinister charge of collusion had
-now been proved to the hilt.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave having given her brother due opportunity
-for a further defense of Mrs. Sanderson, which
-he had quite failed to grasp, proceeded coldly and at
-leisure to administer the <i>coup de grâce</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid, Mrs. Sanderson,” she said, “that in
-these circumstances only one course is open to you now.”</p>
-
-<p>She was too adroit, however, to state exactly what
-that course was. She was content merely to suggest it.
-But Harriet did not need to be told what the particular
-alternative was that her ladyship had in mind.</p>
-
-<p>“You wish me to resign my position,” she said, in a
-low calm voice. She turned with tears in her eyes
-to the eldest daughter of the house. “I beg leave to
-give a month’s notice from today, my lady. If you
-would like me to go sooner, I will do so at any time you
-wish.”</p>
-
-<p>The words and manner showed a consideration wholly
-lacking in the measure meted out to herself. There
-was so little of pride or of wounded dignity that the
-tears were running in a stream down the pale cheeks.
-Uppermost in Harriet Sanderson was still a feeling of
-profound veneration for those to whom she had dedicated
-the best years of her life.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>The ladies of the Family had won the day. Mrs. Sanderson
-was going. It was an occasion for rejoicing.
-She had intrigued disgracefully; moreover, it had long
-felt that this clever, unscrupulous, plausible woman had
-gained a dangerous ascendancy over the head of the
-house. But Aunt Charlotte, it seemed, with the tactical
-skill for which she was famous, had driven her into a
-corner and had forced her to surrender.</p>
-
-<p>In the opinion of Sarah, Mrs. Sanderson had behaved
-very well. It was, of course, impossible to trust<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-that sort of person; but to give the woman her due, she
-had appeared to feel her position acutely; she had promised,
-moreover, to undo as far as in her lay the mischief
-she had caused. The ladies saw no inconsistency
-in that. They had formed a low opinion of Mrs. Sanderson&mdash;for
-what reason they didn’t quite know&mdash;but
-now that she had received her <i>congée</i> and they were to
-have their own way at last there would be no harm in
-taking up a magnanimous attitude towards her.</p>
-
-<p>As far as it went this was well enough, but a serious
-and solemn task had been imposed upon various people
-by the circumstances of the case. It now seemed of
-vital importance to those concerned that Jack should
-become engaged to Marjorie without further delay.
-With that end in view the ladies of the Family were
-now working like beavers. But all they had done so
-far had not been enough. In vain had the lure been
-laid in sight of the bird. In vain had they used the
-arts and the subtleties of their sex. For several weeks
-now Jack and Marjorie had been thrown together on
-every conceivable pretext, yet the only result had been
-that the future head of Bridport House had re-affirmed
-a fixed intention of taking a wife from the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Three days after Lady Wargrave had gained her signal
-triumph over Mrs. Sanderson, the Duke was at home
-to an odd visitor. In obedience to the written request
-of his Grace’s private secretary, Sergeant Kelly presented
-himself about noon at Bridport House.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately, Joe had been able to arrange for a day
-off for the purpose. Thus the dignity of man, also the
-dignity of the Metropolitan Force, were upheld by impressive
-mufti. He had discarded uniform for his best<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-Sunday cutaway, old and rather shining it was true, but
-black and braided, with every crease removed by Eliza’s
-iron; a pair of light gray trousers, superbly checked; a
-white choker tie and a horse-shoe pin; while to crown
-all, a massive gold albert, a recent gift from Mary, was
-slung across a noble expanse of broadcloth waistcoat.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Sergeant Kelly,” said a musical voice,
-as soon as the visitor was announced. The Duke in the
-depths of his invalid chair looked at him from under
-the brows of a satyr. “Excuse my rising. I’m a bit
-below the weather, as you see.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe, secretly prepared for anything in the matter of
-his reception, was impressed most favorably by such a
-greeting. Somehow the note of cordiality was so exactly
-that of one man of the world to another, that Joe was
-conscious of a subtle feeling of flattery. He was invited
-to sit, and he sat on the extreme verge of a Sheraton
-masterpiece, pensively twisting between his hands a
-brand-new bowler hat purchased that morning en route
-to Bridport House.</p>
-
-<p>“Sergeant Kelly,” said the Duke, speaking with a directness
-that Joe admired, “I liked your letter. It was
-that of a sensible man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good of your Grace to say so,” said Joe, a nice mingling
-of dignity and deference.</p>
-
-<p>“I agree with you that the matter is extremely
-vexatious.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe took a long breath. “It’s haggeravating, sir,”
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” said his Grace, with a whimsical smile.
-“But as a matter of curiosity, may I ask what had led
-you to that conclusion?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Just this, sir.” Joe laid the new bowler hat on the
-carpet, squared his shoulders and fixed the Duke with his
-eye. “The aristocracy’s the aristocracy, the middle-class
-is the middle-class, and the lower h’orders are the lower
-h’orders&mdash;there they are and you can’t alter ’em. Leastways
-that was the opinion of the Marquis.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sure that I know your friend,” said the Duke
-with charming urbanity, “but I’m convinced his views
-are sound. If I read your letter aright, you are as
-much opposed to the suggested alliance between your
-daughter and my kinsman as I am myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so, your Grace. It simply won’t do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I quite agree,” said the Duke, “but from your point
-of view&mdash;why won’t it? I ask merely for information.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why won’t it, sir?” said Joe, surprisedly. “Don’t
-I say the aristocracy’s the aristocracy?”</p>
-
-<p>“In other words you disapprove of them on principle?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, it’s because I respect ’em so highly,” said
-Joe, with a simple largeness that bore no trace of the
-sycophant. “I’ve not reggerlated the traffic at Hyde Park
-Corner all these years without learning that it won’t
-do to keep on mixing things up in the way we’re
-doing at present. Things are in a state of flux, as
-you might say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Profoundly true,” said the Duke, with a fine appearance
-of gravity. “And I have asked you to come here,
-Sergeant Kelly, to advise me in a very delicate matter.
-In the first place, I assume that you have withheld your
-consent to this ridiculous marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so, your Grace. But the young parties are
-that headstrong they may not respect their elders. I
-told the young gentleman what my feeling was, and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
-told the girl, but I’m sorry to say they laughed at me.
-Yes, sir, society is in a state of flux and no mistake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Sergeant Kelly, what’s to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like your Grace to speak a word to the
-parties. Seemingly they take no notice of me. But perhaps
-they might of you, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke smiled and shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, they only laugh at me,” said Joe. “But
-with you it would be different.” And then with admirable
-directness: “Why not see the girl and give her
-your views in the matter? She’s very sensible and
-she’s been well brought up.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke looked at his visitor steadily. If his Grace
-was in search of <i>arrière pensée</i>, he failed to find a sign
-of it in that transparently honest countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“A bold suggestion,” he said, with a smile. “But I
-don’t know that I have any particular aptitude for handling
-headstrong young women.”</p>
-
-<p>Joe promptly rebutted the ducal modesty. “Your
-words would carry weight, sir. She’s a girl who knows
-what’s what, I give you my word.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke could hardly keep from laughing outright at
-the sublime seriousness of this old bobby. But at the
-same time curiosity stirred him. What sort of a girl
-was this who owned such a genial grotesque of a father?
-It would impinge on the domain of comic opera to instal
-such a being as the future châtelaine of Bridport House.
-Still, as his visitor shrewdly said, society was in a state
-of flux.</p>
-
-<p>“My own belief is,” said Joe, “that she’s the best girl
-in England, and if your Grace would set your point of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span>
-view before her as you have set it before me, I’m thinking
-she’d do her best to help us.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke was impressed by such candor, such openness,
-such simplicity. After all, there was just a chance
-that things might take a more hopeful turn.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s not one to go where she’s not wanted, sir,”
-said Joe. “And my belief is that if you have a little
-talk with her and let her know how you feel about it,
-you may be spared a deal o’ trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“You really think that?” said the Duke with a sigh
-of relief.</p>
-
-<p>“I do, sir. Leastways, if you ain’t, Joseph Kelly will
-be disappointed.”</p>
-
-<p>Such disinterestedness was not exactly flattering, yet
-the Duke was touched by it. Indeed, Sergeant Kelly’s
-sturdy common sense was so reassuring that he was
-invited to have a cigar. At the request of his host, he
-pressed the bell, one long and one short, and in the process
-of time a servant appeared with a box of Coronas.
-Joe chose one, smelt it, placed it to his ear and then
-put it sedately in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll not smoke it now, sir,” he said urbanely. “I’ll keep
-it until I can really enjoy it.”</p>
-
-<p>He was graciously invited to take several. With an
-air of polite deprecation he helped himself to three more.
-Then he realized that the time had come to withdraw.</p>
-
-<p>The parting was one of mutual esteem. If the girl
-would consent to pay a visit to Bridport House, the Duke
-would see her gladly. But again his Grace affirmed that
-he was not an optimist. Society <i>was</i> in a state of flux,
-he quite agreed, democracy was knocking at the gate
-and none knew the next turn in the game. Still the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
-Duke was not unmindful of Sergeant Kelly’s remarkable
-disinterestedness, and took a cordial leave of him, fully
-prepared to follow his advice in this affair of thorns.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the door had closed upon the dignified form
-of Sergeant Kelly, the Duke lay back in his chair fighting
-a storm of laughter. Cursed with a sense of humor,
-at all times a great handicap for such a one as himself,
-its expression had seldom been less opportune or more
-uncomfortable. For there was really nothing to laugh
-at in a matter of this kind. The thing was too grimly
-serious.</p>
-
-<p>Still, for the moment, this amateur of the human comedy
-was the victim of a divided mind. He wanted to
-laugh until he ached over this solemn policeman upholding
-the fabric of society.</p>
-
-<p>“By gad, he’s right,” Albert John ruminated, as he
-dipped gout-ridden fingers in his ravished cigar box.
-“Things <i>are</i> in a state of flux.” He cut off the end of
-a cigar. “My own view is that this monstrous bluff
-which these poor fools have allowed some of us to put
-up since the Conquest, more or less, will mighty soon
-be about our ears. However,”&mdash;Albert John placed
-the cigar between his lips&mdash;“it hardly does to say so.”</p>
-
-<p>For a time this was the sum of his reflections. Then
-he pressed the bell at his elbow and the servant reappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask Mr. Twalmley to be good enough to telephone
-to Mr. Dinneford. I wish to see him at once.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-A TRAGIC COIL</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">M</span>ary</span>, breakfasting late and at leisure, before
-her ride at eleven, had propped the <i>Morning
-Post</i> against the coffee-pot. Milly was arranging
-roses in a blue bowl.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m miserable!” Mary suddenly proclaimed. She
-had let her eyes stray to the column devoted to marriage
-and the giving in marriage, and at last she had flung the
-paper away from her.</p>
-
-<p>“Get on with your breakfast,” said the practical Milly.
-“I’ve really no patience with you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary rose from the table with big trouble in her face.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a gaby,” said Milly, scornfully. “If everybody
-was like you there’d be no carrying on the world
-at all. You’re absurd. Mother is quite annoyed with
-you, and so am I.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m simply wretched.” The tone was very far from
-that of the fine resolute creature whom Milly adored.</p>
-
-<p>The truth was Mary had been following a policy of
-drift and it was beginning to tell upon her. Nearly a
-week had gone since the visit to Laxton had disclosed a
-state of things which had trebly confounded confusion.
-Besides, that ill-timed pilgrimage had given duty a sharper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
-point, a keener edge, but as yet she had not gathered
-the force of will to meet the hard logic of the matter
-squarely.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of a growing resolve to make an end of a
-situation that all at once had become intolerable, she had
-weakly consented to ride that morning with Jack as
-usual. So far he had proved the stronger, no doubt
-because two factors of supreme importance were on his
-side. One was the promise into which very incautiously
-she had let herself be lured, to which he had ruthlessly
-held her, the other the simple fact that she was deeply
-in love with him. It had been very perilous to temporize,
-yet having been weak enough to do so, each passing
-day tightened her bonds. The little scheme had
-failed. Laxton had caused not the slightest change in
-his attitude; he was not the kind of man to be influenced
-by things of that kind; only a simpleton like herself
-would expect him to be! No, the plain truth was he was
-set more than ever on not giving her up, and it was going
-to be a desperate business to compel him. To make
-matters worse his attraction for her was great. There
-was a force, a quality about him which she didn’t know
-how to resist. When they were apart she made resolves
-which when they were together she found herself unable
-to keep. The truth was, the cry of nature was too
-strong.</p>
-
-<p>Milly looked up from her roses to study a picture of
-distraction.</p>
-
-<p>“You odd creature.” A toss of a sagacious head.</p>
-
-<p>The charge was admitted frankly, freely, and fully.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand you in the least.” A wrinkling
-of a pert nose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Milly looked at her wonderingly. “I really don’t.
-You are quite beyond me. If you were actually afraid
-of these people, which I don’t for a moment think you
-are, one might begin to see what’s at the back of your
-absurd mind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you think I’m afraid of them?” Mary
-in spite of herself was a little amused by the downrightness.</p>
-
-<p>The question brought her right up against an eye
-of very honest admiration.</p>
-
-<p>“Because, Miss Lawrence, it simply isn’t in you to be
-afraid of anybody.”</p>
-
-<p>Princess Bedalia shook a rueful head. “You say that
-because you don’t know all. I’m in a mortal funk of
-Bridport House.”</p>
-
-<p>“That I won’t believe,” said the robust Milly. “And
-if a fit of high-falutin’ sentiment, for which you’ll get
-not an ounce of credit, causes you to throw away your
-happiness, and turn your life into a sob-story, neither
-my mother nor I will ever forgive you, so there!”</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to forget that I am the housekeeper’s
-niece.”</p>
-
-<p>“As though it mattered.” The pert nose twitched
-furiously. “As though it matters a row of little apples.
-You are yourself&mdash;your big and splendid self. Any man
-is lucky to get you.”</p>
-
-<p>But the large, long-lashed eyes were full of pain.
-“We look at things so differently. I can’t explain what
-I mean or what I feel, but I want to see the whole thing,
-if I can, as others see it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are the others&mdash;mother and I,” said Milly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
-stoutly. “But as we are not titled snobs with Bridport
-House stamped on our notepaper, I suppose we don’t
-count.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not fair.” A curious look came into Mary’s
-face, which Milly had noticed before and, for a reason
-she couldn’t explain, somehow resented. “They have
-their point of view and it’s right that they should have.
-Without it they wouldn’t be what they are, would they?”</p>
-
-<p>“You speak as if they were better than other people.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall begin to think you are as bad as they are,”
-Milly burst out impatiently. “You are the oddest creature.
-I can understand your not going where you are
-not wanted, but that’s no reason why you should fight
-for the other side.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want them to have fair play.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s more than they mean you to have, any way.”</p>
-
-<p>“One oughtn’t to say that.” The tone had a quaint
-sternness, charming to the ear, yet with a great power
-of affront for the soul of Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Lawrence,” said that democrat, “you annoy me.
-If you go on like this before mother she’ll shake you.
-The trouble with you”&mdash;a rather fierce recourse to a
-cigarette&mdash;“is that you are a bit of a prig. You must
-admit that you are a bit of a prig, aren’t you now?”</p>
-
-<p>“More than a bit of one,” sighed Mary. And then
-the light of humor broke over her perplexity. In the
-eyes of Milly this was her great saving clause; and in
-spite of an ever-deepening annoyance with her friend
-for the hay she was making of such amazingly brilliant
-prospects, she could not help laughing at the comic look
-of her now.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span></p>
-
-<p>“You are much too clever to take things so seriously,”
-said Milly. “You are not the least bit of a prig in anything
-else, and that’s why you made me so angry. Be
-sensible and follow your luck. Jack should know far
-better than you. Besides, if you didn’t mean to keep
-your word, why did you give it?”</p>
-
-<p>This was a facer, as the candid Milly intended it to be.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I was a fool.” At the moment that seemed
-the only possible answer.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>The argument had not gone farther when a rather
-strident “coo-ee” ascending from the pavement below
-found its way through the open window.</p>
-
-<p>“Diana, you are wanted.” The impulsive Milly ran
-on to the little balcony to wave a hand of welcome to a
-young man in the street.</p>
-
-<p>It was the intention, however, of the young man in the
-street, as soon as he could find someone to look after
-his horses, to come up and have a talk with Mary. To
-the quick-witted person to whom he made known that
-resolve, he seemed much graver than usual. It hardly
-required any special clairvoyance on the part of Milly to
-realize that something was in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>Three minutes later, Jack had found his way up and
-Milly had effaced herself discreetly. This morning that
-warrior was not quite the serenely humorous self whom
-his friends found so engaging. Recent events had annoyed
-him, disquieted him, upset him generally, and the
-previous afternoon they had culminated in a long and
-unsatisfactory interview at Bridport House.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span></p>
-
-<p>Those skilled in the signs might have told, from the
-young man’s manner, that he had cast himself for a big
-thinking part. This morning he was “all out” for diplomacy.
-He would like Mary to know that his back was to
-the wall, and that he must be able to count on her implicitly
-in the stern fight ahead; but the crux of the problem
-was, and for that reason he felt such a great need of
-cunning, if he let her know the full force and depth of
-the opposition the effect upon her might be the reverse
-of what he intended. Even apart from the stab to her
-pride, she was quite likely to make it a pretext for
-further quixotism. Therefore, Mr. John Dinneford had
-decided to walk very delicately indeed this morning.</p>
-
-<p>His Grace, it appeared, had asked to see the lady in
-the case. Jack, however, scenting peril in the request,
-had by no means consented lightly to that. Diplomacy,
-assuming a very large D, had promptly assured him that
-his kinsman and fiancée were far too much birds of a
-feather; their method of looking at large issues was
-ominously alike. Mary had developed what Jack called
-“the Aunt Sanderson viewpoint” to an alarming degree.
-Aunt Sanderson, no doubt, had acquired it in the first
-place from the fountain head; its authenticity therefore
-made it the more perilous.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Albert sends his compliments and hopes you’ll
-be kind enough to go and see him.” The statement was
-made so casually that it was felt to be a masterpiece of
-the non-committal. He would defy anyone to tell from
-his tone how he had fought the old wretch, how he had
-tried to outwit him, how he had done his damnedest to
-short-circuit a most mischievous resolve.</p>
-
-<p>“Now.” The diplomatist took her boldly by a very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span>
-fine pair of shoulders, and so made a violent end of the
-pause which had followed the important announcement.
-“Whatever you do, be careful not to give away the whole
-position. There’s a cunning old fox to deal with, and
-if he finds the weak spot, we’re done.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean he thinks as I do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t say he does exactly, but, of course, he may.
-When you come to Bridport House, you are up against
-all sorts of crassness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or common sense, whichever you choose to call it,”
-said the troubled Mary.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you go playing for them.” He shook the fine
-shoulders in a masterful colonial manner. “If you do,
-I’ll never forgive you. Bridport House can be trusted
-to take very good care of itself. We’ve got to keep our
-own end going. If we have really made up our minds
-to get married, no one has a right to prevent us, and it’s
-up to you to let his Grace know that.”</p>
-
-<p>Again came the look of trouble. “But suppose I don’t
-happen to think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think so for you. In fact, I think it so strongly
-that I intend to answer for both.”</p>
-
-<p>She could not help secretly admiring this cool audacity.
-At any rate, it was the speech of a man who knew his
-own mind, and in spite of herself it pleased her.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, remember.” Once more the over-bold wooer
-resorted to physical violence: “You simply can’t afford
-to enjoy the luxury of your fine feelings in this scene
-of the comedy. As I say, he’s a cunning old fox and
-he’ll play on them for all he’s worth.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why should he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because he knows you are Mrs. Sanderson’s niece.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In his opinion that would make one the less likely
-to have them, wouldn’t it?” She tried very hard to
-keep so much as a suspicion of bitterness out of her tone,
-yet somehow it seemed almost impossible to do that.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not exactly a fool. Nobody knows better than
-he that your Aunt Sanderson is more royalist than the
-king. And my view is that he and she have laid their
-heads together in order to work upon your scruples.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, why shouldn’t they? Isn’t it right that they
-should?”</p>
-
-<p>“There you go!” he said sternly. “Now, look here.”
-In the intensity of the moment his face was almost
-touching hers. “I’m next in at Bridport House, so this
-is my own private funeral. But I just want to say this.
-A man can’t go knocking about the world in the way
-I have done without getting through to certain things.
-And as soon as that happens one no longer sees Bridport
-House at the angle at which it sees itself. White marble
-and precedence were all very well in the days of Queen
-Victoria, but they won’t build airships, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never heard of a duchess building airships.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the duke who is going to do the building. The
-particular hobo I’m figuring on has got to take a hand in
-all sorts of stunts at this moment of the world’s progress
-which will make his distinguished forbears turn in their
-graves, no doubt. It seems to me he’s got to do a single
-on the big time, as they say in vaudeville, and the finest
-girl in the western hemisphere must keep him up to his
-job.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Some’ talk,” said Mary, with a smile rather drawn
-and constrained.</p>
-
-<p>“You see”&mdash;the force of his candor amused her considerably&mdash;“I’ve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-drawn a big prize in the lottery, and if
-I let myself be robbed of it by other people’s tomfool
-tricks, I’m a guy, a dead-beat, an out and out dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“But don’t you see,” she urged, laughing a little,
-although suffering bitterly, “how cruel it would be for
-them, poor souls? We <i>must</i> think of them a little.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should they come in at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“I really think they ought, poor dears. After all, they
-stand for something.” She recalled their former talk on
-this vexed subject.</p>
-
-<p>“What do they stand for?&mdash;that’s the point. They
-are an inbred lot, a mass of conceit and silly prejudice.
-I’m sorry to give them away like this, but, after all, they
-are only very distant relations to whom I owe nothing,
-and they have a trick of annoying me unspeakably.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t have you say such things.” The stern line
-of a truly adorable mouth was a delight, a challenge.
-“You are one of them, whether you want to be or
-whether you don’t, and it’s your duty to stand by them.
-<i>Noblesse oblige</i>, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that means a scrupulous respect for the feelings
-of other people, if it means anything. No, let us see
-things as they are and come down to bedrock.” And as
-the Tenderfoot spoke after this manner, he took a hand
-of hers in each of his in a fashion at once whimsical,
-delicate, and loverlike. Somehow he had the power to
-put an enchantment upon her. “You’ve got to marry me
-whatever happens.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t ask me to do that.” Black trouble was
-now in her eyes. “Don’t ask me to go where I’m not
-wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly you shan’t. We can do without Bridport<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-House, and if they can do without us, by all means
-let ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they are in a cleft stick, aren’t they? If you
-insist, they will simply have to climb down, and that’s
-why it would be cruel to make them. Don’t be too hard
-upon them&mdash;<i>please</i>!” A sudden change of voice, rich
-and surprising, held him like magic. “Somehow they
-don’t quite seem to deserve it. They have their points.
-And they are really rather big and fine if you see them
-as I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“They are crass, conceited, narrow, ossified. They
-think the world was made for ’em, instead of thinking
-they were made for the world. It’s time they had a
-lesson. And you and I have got to teach ’em.” He
-took her wrists and drew her to him. “We’ve got to
-larn ’em to be toads&mdash;you and me.”</p>
-
-<p>“On these grounds you command me!” The flash
-of glorious eyes was a direct challenge.</p>
-
-<p>“No, on these&mdash;you darling.” And he took her in
-his arms and held her in a grip of iron.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>“Please, please!”</p>
-
-<p>Reluctantly he let her go&mdash;provisionally and on
-sufferance.</p>
-
-<p>But there was something in her face that looked like
-fear. The observant lover saw it at once, and the invincible
-lover tried to dispel it.</p>
-
-<p>“Why take it tragically?” he said. “It’s a thing to
-laugh at, really.”</p>
-
-<p>She shook a solemn head. “We <i>must</i> think of them&mdash;you
-must at any rate. You are all they have, and you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-are bound to play for them as well as you know how&mdash;aren’t
-you, my dear?” The soft fall of her voice laid
-a siren’s spell upon him. His eyes glowed as he looked
-at her.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t see it in that way,” he said. “Somehow
-I can’t. It’s my colonial outlook, I daresay&mdash;anyhow
-there it is&mdash;simply us two. The bedrock of the matter
-is you and me? And when you get down to that, other
-people don’t come in, do they?”</p>
-
-<p>Again she shook a head rather woeful in its defiance.
-“Poor Aunt Harriet came to me yesterday. I wish you
-could have seen her. This means the end of the world
-for her. She almost went down on her knees to implore
-me not to marry you.”</p>
-
-<p>The Tenderfoot snorted with impatience. “That’s
-where this old one-horse island gets me all the time.
-Things are all wrong here. They’re positively medieval.”</p>
-
-<p>“You forget”&mdash;the tone of the voice was stern dissent&mdash;“she’s
-been thirty years a servant in the Family.”</p>
-
-<p>“That should make her all the prouder to see her niece
-married to the head of it.” He was determined to stand
-his ground.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but she understands what it means to them.
-She has thought herself into their skins; she lives and
-moves and has her being in Bridport House. Dear soul,
-it makes me weep to think of her! She almost forced
-me to give you up.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t do that, not on grounds of that kind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why can’t I?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I won’t let you.” She was bound to admire
-this masculine decision. “Your Aunt Sanderson is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-woman of fine character and Uncle Albert has a great regard
-for her, but why let ourselves be sidetracked by
-prejudice? You see this is the call of the blood, and&mdash;under
-Providence!&mdash;it means the grafting of a very valuable
-new strain upon a pretty effete one. I mean no disrespect
-to Bridport House, but look what the system of
-intermarriage has done for it. From all one hears poor
-Lyme was better out of the world than in it. And that
-parcel of stupid women! And, of course, I should never
-have been here at all if another couple of consumptive
-cousins hadn’t suddenly decided to hand in their checks.
-So much for the feudal system, so much for inbreeding
-and marrying to order. No, it won’t do!”</p>
-
-<p>In spite of her own deep conviction, she could not
-hope to shake such force and such sincerity. She was
-bound to admit the strength of his case. But the power
-of his argument left her in a miserable dilemma, from
-which there seemed but one means of escape. There
-must be no half-measures.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us be wise and make an end now,” she said very
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not playing fair if you do,” was the ruthless
-answer. “Besides, as I say, Uncle Albert wants to see
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am quite sure it would be far better to end it all
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must go and see Uncle Albert before we decide
-upon anything,” he said determinedly.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind doing that, if really he wishes it.”
-There was a queer little note of reverence in her tone,
-which the Tenderfoot, having intelligently anticipated,
-was inclined to resent as soon as he heard it. “I don’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span>
-know why he should trouble himself with me, but I’ll
-go as he asks me to. But whatever happens we can’t
-possibly get married, unless&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless what?” he demanded sternly.</p>
-
-<p>“Unless the head of the house gives a full and free
-consent, and of course he’ll never do that.”</p>
-
-<p>“It remains to be seen, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, it’s all so clear. Poor Aunt Harriet has
-made me realize that. I never saw anyone so upset as
-she was yesterday; she nearly broke down, poor dear.
-She has made me see that there is so much at stake for
-them all, that it simply becomes one’s duty not to go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish! Rubbish! Rubbish!” The Tenderfoot
-suddenly became tempestuous. “Mere parochialism, I
-assure you. I’ve been back six months, and every day it
-strikes me more and more what a lot we’ve got to learn.
-Our so-called social fabric is mainly bunkum. Half the
-prejudice in these islands is a mere cloak for damnable
-incompetence. Forgive my saying just what is in my
-mind, but this flunkeyism of ours&mdash;try to keep the
-daggers out of your eyes, my charmer!&mdash;fairly gets one
-all the time. In one form or another one’s always up
-against it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t flunkeyism at all.” The air of outrage was
-nothing less than adorable.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me finish&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Under protest!” Her face was aglow with the light
-of battle.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s perfectly absurd to take a mere pompous stunt
-like Bridport House at its own valuation.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t have you vulgar&mdash;I won’t allow you to be
-vulgar!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Be it so, Miss Prim&mdash;but I don’t apologize. One’s
-uncles, cousins, aunts, they are all alike, whether they
-are yours or mine. They simply grovel before material
-greatness&mdash;the greatness that comes of money&mdash;that begins
-and ends with money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be rude, sir!” The stamp of a particularly
-smart riding boot, and a flash of angry eyes were as
-barbs to this fiat.</p>
-
-<p>“They are all so set on things that don’t matter a bit,
-that they lose sight altogether of the one thing that is
-really important.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, what is that?” The eyes held now a lurking,
-troubled smile; for him at that moment, their fascination
-verged upon the tragic.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly both the slender wrists were seized by this
-forcible thinker. “Why the time spirit, you charmer.
-And that just asks one simple question. Do you love
-me&mdash;or do you not?”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>She tried to keep her eyes from his.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t hide the truth,” he cried triumphantly.
-“And if you think I’m going to lose you for the sake of
-some stupid piece of prejudice you don’t know what it
-means to live five years in God’s own country.”</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to shrink into herself. “Don’t you see the
-impossibility of the whole thing?” she gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Frankly, I don’t, or I wouldn’t be such a cad as to
-badger you. If you marry me an effete strain is going
-to be your debtor. Just look at them&mdash;poor devils!
-Look at the two who died untimely. That’s the feudal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-system of marriage working to a logical conclusion.
-And if I put it squarely to my kinsman, Albert John,
-who is by no means a fool, he’d be the first to admit
-it. No, it doesn’t matter what your arguments are, if
-you override the call of the blood sooner or later there’s
-bound to be big trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>The conviction of the tone, the urgency of the manner
-were indeed hard to meet. From the only point of view
-that really mattered it was impossible to gainsay him,
-and she was far too intelligent to try. Suddenly she
-broke away from him and in a wretched state of indecision
-and unhappiness flung herself into a chair.</p>
-
-<p>“The whole thing’s as clear as daylight.” Pitilessly
-he followed up the advantage he had won. “There’s
-really no need to state it. And once more, to come down
-to bedrock, far better to make an end of Bridport House
-and all that it stands for&mdash;just what it does stand for I
-have not been able to make out&mdash;than that it should
-perpetuate a race of inbred incompetents who are merely
-a fixed charge on the community.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you don’t see&mdash;you don’t see!” The words were
-rather feeble, and rather wild, but just then they were
-all she could offer. Yet in spite of herself, and in spite
-of the half-promise the intensely unhappy Aunt Harriet
-had wrung from her on the previous afternoon, the clear-cut
-determination of this young man, his force and his
-breadth, his absolute conviction were beginning to tell
-heavily.</p>
-
-<p>“You are going to Bridport House to have a word
-with my kinsman. And if you’re true blue&mdash;and I know
-you are that&mdash;you will make him see honest daylight.
-And it ought to be easy, because he has only to look<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
-at you&mdash;the finest thing up to now that has found its
-way on to this old planet, in order to realize that he’s
-right up against it.”</p>
-
-<p>He knew his own mind and she didn’t know hers.
-Such a man was terribly hard to resist.</p>
-
-<p>“He says any morning at twelve. I suggest tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“You insist?” She was struggling helplessly in
-meshes of her own weaving.</p>
-
-<p>“I insist. And my last word is that if you let the
-old beast down us, as of course he’ll try to do, I go back
-to B. C. and remain a single man to the end of my days.
-And I’m not out for that, as long as there is half a chance
-of something better. So that’s that.” In the style of
-the great lover he laid a hand on each shoulder, looked
-into the troubled eyes and kissed her. “And now, if
-you please, we will witch the world with noble horsemanship.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-A BUSY MORNING</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">T</span>he</span> next morning was a busy one for his Grace,
-and it also marked a tide in the affairs of Bridport
-House. Soon after ten the ball opened with
-the inauspicious arrival of Lady Wargrave. The head
-of the Family had just unfolded his newspaper and put
-on his spectacles when her ladyship was announced.</p>
-
-<p>As the redoubtable Charlotte entered the room, the hard
-glitter of her eyes and the forward thrust of a dominant
-chin were ominous indeed. Bitter experience made her
-brother only too keenly alive to these portents.</p>
-
-<p>Without any beating about the bush she came at once
-to the point.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this I hear, Johnnie? Sarah tells me you
-have revoked that woman’s notice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Woman!” temporized his Grace. “What woman?”
-The tone was velvet.</p>
-
-<p>She glowered at him.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s only one woman in this household, my
-friend.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke laid down his <i>Times</i> with an air of extremely
-well assumed indifference. Were the parish
-pump and the minor domesticities all she could find to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span>
-interest her, while all sorts of Radical infamies played
-Old Harry with the British Constitution?</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave, however, was well inured to this
-familiar gambit.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Johnnie,” she said tartly, “don’t waste time.
-The matter’s too serious. Sarah says you have asked
-Mrs. Sanderson to stay on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I have asked her to be good enough to reconsider
-her decision,” said his Grace in the slightly forensic
-manner of the gilded chamber.</p>
-
-<p>“On what grounds, may one ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“I merely put it to her”&mdash;he now began to choose each
-word with a precision that made his sister writhe&mdash;“that
-she was indispensable to the general comfort and well-being
-of a man as old and gout-ridden as myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you, indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>It was a facer. And yet it might have been foreseen.
-Perhaps the ladies had been a little too elated by their
-<i>coup de main</i>; or, had they assumed too confidently that
-at last they had made an end of a shameless intriguer?</p>
-
-<p>Yes, a facer. Charlotte could have slain her brother.
-He had given away the whole position. It was the act
-of a traitor. In a voice shaken with anger she proceeded
-in no measured terms to tell him what she thought of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>His Grace bore the tirade calmly and with fortitude.
-He had an instinct for justice&mdash;long a source of inconvenience
-to its possessor!&mdash;which now insisted that there
-was something to be said for the enemy point of view.
-Still he might not have borne its presentment so patiently
-had Charlotte not shown her usual cunning. “She did
-not speak for herself,” she was careful to assure him,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
-“but for the sake of the Family as a whole.” The presence
-of this woman at Bridport House could no longer
-be tolerated.</p>
-
-<p>To this the Duke said little, but he committed himself
-to the statement that Mrs. Sanderson was much maligned
-and that they all owed a great deal to her devotion.</p>
-
-<p>This was too much for Charlotte. She bubbled over.
-“You must be mad!” Her voice was like the croak of
-a raven.</p>
-
-<p>“Personally,” rejoined his mellifluous Grace, “I am
-particularly grateful that she has consented to stay on.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re mad, my friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“So are we all.” His Grace folded the <i>Times</i> imperturbably.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave was defeated. She abruptly decided
-to drop the subject. However, she did not quit the room
-until one last bolt had been winged at her adversary,
-yet in order to propel it she had to impose an iron
-restraint on her feelings.</p>
-
-<p>“Before I go”&mdash;she turned as she got to the door&mdash;“there’s
-something else I should like to say. Jack’s
-mother is in town and is staying with me. Like all the
-Parington’s she has plenty of sense. She will welcome
-the Marjorie arrangement&mdash;thinks it quite providential&mdash;has
-told her son so&mdash;and she looks to you as the head
-of the Family to see that it doesn’t miscarry.”</p>
-
-<p>Her brother’s ugly mouth and explosive eyes were not
-lost upon Charlotte, but before he could reply she had
-made a strategic retirement. Did these futile women expect
-him to play the matrimonial agent? The mere suggestion
-was infuriating, yet well he knew the extreme
-urgency of the matter. The whole situation called for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-great delicacy. A combination of subtle finesse and iron
-will was needed if the institution to which he pinned
-his faith was not to be shaken to its foundations.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave had gone but a few minutes when
-Jack arrived at Bridport House. He had to inform his
-kinsman that Mary Lawrence would appear at twelve
-o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke was in a vile temper. Charlotte had fretted
-it already; moreover, the disease from which he suffered
-had undermined it long ago; and at the best of
-times the mere sight of this young Colonial, with his wild
-ideas, was about as much as he could bear. However,
-he was too astute a man and far too well found in the
-ways of his world not to be able to mask his feelings on
-an occasion of this magnitude. The fellow was a perpetual
-source of worry and annoyance, yet so much was
-at stake that the Duke, in order to deal with him, summoned
-all the bonhomie of a prospective father-in-law.
-If anything could have bridged the gulf such tones of
-honey must surely have done so.</p>
-
-<p>Jack, however, was in no mood to accept soft speeches,
-no matter how flattering to the self-esteem of a raw
-Colonial! He was determined to put all to the touch.
-These people must learn the limit of their power. And
-as it was the Tenderfoot’s habit to leave nothing to
-chance he began with the bold but simple declaration that
-nothing would induce him to give up the finest girl in
-the country. And he hoped when Mary appeared at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span>
-twelve o’clock his kinsman would bear in mind that very
-important fact.</p>
-
-<p>Months ago his Grace had begun to despair of the
-rôle of the modern Chesterfield. Even since the young
-ass had first reported himself at Bridport House, very
-sound advice, based on intimate knowledge and first-hand
-experience, had been lavished upon him. The best had
-been done to correct the republican ideas he had gathered
-in the western hemisphere. He lacked nothing in the
-way of counsel and precept. But the seed had fallen on
-unreceptive soil, nay, on ground singularly barren.
-From the first the novice had shown precious little inclination
-to heed the fount of wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke asked the young man to look at the matter
-in a common sense way. He would have an extraordinarily
-difficult place to fill; therefore, it was his clear
-duty to trust those who knew the ropes. The lady of
-his choice was a case for experts. Special qualities, inherited
-aptitudes were needed in the wife he married!
-Surely he must realize that?</p>
-
-<p>The Tenderfoot said bluntly that he did and that Mary
-Lawrence had them.</p>
-
-<p>His Grace managed to hold a growing impatience in
-check. But the answer of the novice had revealed such a
-confusion of ideas that it was hard to treat it seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“Unless a woman has been born to the thing and bred
-up in it, how can she hope to be equal to the task?”</p>
-
-<p>“Plenty of ’em are,” said the Tenderfoot. “Anyhow
-they seem to make a pretty good bluff at it.”</p>
-
-<p>His Grace shook a somber head.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t deny that the Upper Crust is always being
-recruited from the people underneath.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Immensely to the detriment of the Constitution,” said
-his Grace forensically.</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t be so in this case,” said the Tenderfoot.
-“Any family is devilish lucky that persuades Mary
-Lawrence to enter it. She’s a very exceptional girl.
-And when you see her, sir, I’m sure you’ll say so.”</p>
-
-<p>“A young woman of ability, no doubt.” The Duke
-was growing irritated beyond measure, yet he was determined
-to give no hint of his frame of mind. “These&mdash;these
-bohemians always are. But if you’ll allow me to
-say so, the mere fact that she is ready to undertake
-responsibilities of which she can know nothing proves
-the nature of her limitations.”</p>
-
-<p>The hit was so palpable that Jack felt bound to counter
-it as well as he could. But his eagerness to do so led
-him into a tragic blunder. “That’s where you do her an
-injustice,” he said, not giving himself time to weigh his
-words. “She didn’t know that she might have to be a
-duchess when she promised to marry me.”</p>
-
-<p>The folly of such a speech was apparent to the young
-man almost before it was uttered. A sudden heightening
-of a concentrated gaze made him curse his own
-damnable impetuosity. He saw at once that the admission
-would be used against him; moreover, an intense
-desire that Mary should have fair play led him into
-further pitfalls. “The odd thing is,” he said in his
-blunderer’s way, “that she happens to see things here at
-the angle at which you see them, sir. At least, I always
-tell her so.”</p>
-
-<p>His kinsman smiled. “That gives us hope at any
-rate.” And he even showed a glint of cheerfulness.</p>
-
-<p>The Tenderfoot had a desire to bite off his tongue.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-He felt himself floundering deeper and deeper into a
-morass. A sickening sensation crept upon him that he
-had put himself at the mercy of this crafty old Jesuit.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, sir, don’t go taking an unfair advantage of
-anything I may have told you.” The sheer impotence of
-such a speech served only to emphasize his tragic folly.</p>
-
-<p>By now there was a sinister light in the eyes of his
-Grace. The unlucky Tenderfoot could hardly stifle a
-groan of vexation. Only a born idiot would have taken
-pains to put such a weapon in the hands of the enemy!</p>
-
-<p>Overcome by a sudden hopeless anger the young man
-rose from his chair and fled the room. His course was
-not stayed until he had passed headlong down the white
-marble staircase and out of doors into a golden morning
-of July. For the next two hours he ranged the Park
-grass. It was the only means he had of working off an
-irritation and self-disgust that were almost unbearable.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>Youth and inexperience might have put a weapon into
-the hand of his Grace, yet when the clock on the
-chimneypiece struck twelve he was in a very evil mood.
-The task before him was not at all to his taste; and the
-more he considered it the less he liked the part he had
-now to play.</p>
-
-<p>From various sources he had heard enough of the girl
-to stimulate his curiosity. Apart from a lover’s hyperbole,
-of which he took no account whatever, impartial
-observers, viewing her from afar, had commented upon
-her; moreover, there was the extremely piquant nature
-of her antecedents. She was a niece of the faithful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
-Sanderson, she was also the daughter of a police constable.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke was apt to plume himself that his instinct
-for diplomacy amounted to second nature. But, he ruefully
-reflected, his powers in this direction were likely
-to be tested to the full. His task seemed to bristle with
-difficulties. Bridport House was no place for a young
-woman of this kind, but it was not going to be an easy
-matter to tell her that in just so many words. The best
-he had to hope for was that she would prove a person
-of common sense.</p>
-
-<p>When at five minutes past the hour Miss Lawrence
-was announced, for one reason or another, the Duke was
-in a state of inconvenient curiosity. And as if the mere
-circumstances of the case did not themselves suffice, a
-chain of odd and queer reflections chose to assail his
-mind at the very moment of her appearance.</p>
-
-<p>It was terribly inconvenient for his Grace to rise from
-his chair, mainly for the reason that one swollen, snowbooted
-foot reclined at ease on another. But with an
-effort that wrung him with pain he contrived to stand up.</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t move,” said a voice deep, clear, and
-musical, while he was still in the act of rising. “Oh,
-don’t&mdash;please!”</p>
-
-<p>But without making any immediate reply the Duke
-poised himself as well as he could on one foot, more or
-less in the manner of an emu, and bowed rather grimly.
-The dignity of the whole proceeding was perhaps slightly
-over-emphasized, it was almost as if he intended to
-overawe his visitor with the note of the grand seigneur.</p>
-
-<p>Whether this was the case or not the bow was returned;
-and slight as it was, it had a dignity that matched<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-his own. Also it was touched ever so gently with
-humor. A pair of gravely-searching eyes met the
-hooded, serious, half-ironical orbs of his Grace.</p>
-
-<p>“Nice of you to come and see an invalid,” he said
-slowly, very slowly, with a good deal of manner.</p>
-
-<p>“A great pleasure,” she smiled from the topmost inch
-of her remarkable height.</p>
-
-<p>While these brief, and on his part decidedly painful
-maneuvers had been going on, the man of the world had
-been busily seeking something of which so far he had
-not been able to find a trace. In manner and bearing
-there was not a flaw.</p>
-
-<p>Already the expert’s eye had been struck by a look of
-distinction that was extraordinary. She was undoubtedly
-handsome, nay, more than handsome; she had the
-subtle look of race which gives to beauty a <i>cachet</i>, a
-quality of permanence. Her height was beyond the common,
-but every line of the long, slim frame was a thing
-of elegance, of molded delicacy. She was perhaps a
-shade too thin, but it gave her an indefinable style which
-charmed, in spite of himself, this shrewd, instructed observer.
-Then her dress and her hat, her neat gloves and
-boots, although they were models of reticence, were all
-touched by a subtle air of fashion which seemed somehow
-to reflect their wearer.</p>
-
-<p>The “Chorus Girl” was in the nature of a surprise.
-The Duke indicated a chair, on the edge of which she
-perched, straight as a willow, her chin held steadily, her
-amused eyes veiled with a becoming gravity. As the
-Duke painfully reseated himself he felt a cool scrutiny
-upon him. And that very quality of coolness was a
-little provocative. In the circumstances of the case it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span>
-had hardly a right to be there. To himself it
-was most proper, but in this young woman, a police
-constable’s daughter, who earned her living in the theater,
-a little embarrassment of some kind would have been
-an added grace. If anything however she had more composure
-than he; and in spite of the charm and the power
-of a personality that was vivid yet clear-cut, he could
-not help resenting the fact just a little.</p>
-
-<p>When at last he had slowly resettled himself on his
-two chairs he turned eyes of ironical power full upon
-her. Yes, she was amazingly handsome, and she reminded
-him strangely of a face he had seen. “I wonder
-if you know why I have asked you to be so kind
-as to come here,” were the first words he spoke. And
-he seemed to weigh each one very carefully before he
-uttered it.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I do, at least I think I may guess.” The
-note of absolute frankness was so much more than he
-had a right to look for that it pleased him more than
-it need have done.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” he said, with a gentleness in his voice of
-which he was not aware.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I’ve been causing a lot of trouble.” The
-tone of regret was so perfectly sincere that it threw
-him off his guard. He had not expected this, nay, he
-had looked for something totally different. The girl was
-a lady, no matter what her private circumstances might
-be, and with a sudden deep annoyance he felt that it
-was going to be supremely difficult to say in just so
-many words what he had to say.</p>
-
-<p>To his relief, however, she seemed with the <i>flair</i> of her
-sex at once to divine his difficulty. This splendid-looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>
-old man, every inch of whom was grand seigneur, poor
-old snowboot included! was already asking mutely for
-her help in a situation that she knew he must dislike
-intensely. In his odd silence, in the defensive arrogance
-of his manner there was appeal to her own fineness.
-She could not help feeling an instinctive sympathy with
-this old grandee, who at the very outset was finding
-himself unequal to the task imposed upon him by the
-circumstances of the case.</p>
-
-<p>They entered on a long pause, and it was left to her
-to break it.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know when I promised to marry Jack that
-he would be the next Duke of Bridport,” she said very
-slowly at last.</p>
-
-<p>The simple speech was intended to help him, a fact
-of which he was well aware. And with a sense of acute
-annoyance he felt a latent chivalry begin to stir him; it
-was a chord that she, of all people, had no right to
-touch.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you?” he said; and in the grip of this new
-emotion it would have been not unpleasant to add
-“My dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I’m much to blame,” she went on, encouraged
-by his tone. “I realize that one ought to have
-made inquiries.”</p>
-
-<p>He was clearly puzzled. From under heavily knitted
-brows his keen eyes peered at her. “But why?” An
-instinct for fair play framed the question on her behalf.</p>
-
-<p>A note of pain entered the charming voice. “Oh, one
-ought,” she said. “It was one’s duty to know who and
-what he was and all about him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me if I don’t altogether agree.” In spite of
-himself he was being conquered by this largeness and
-magnanimity. So fully was he prepared for something
-else that he was now rather at a loss. “In any case,” he
-said, “the fault hardly seems to be yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is kind of you to say that.” A pair of wide eyes,
-long-lashed and luminous, which seemed oddly familiar,
-raked him with a wonderful candor. “But I seem to
-be giving enormous trouble to others&mdash;trouble it would
-have been easy to spare them.”</p>
-
-<p>Again his Grace dissented. Surprise was growing,
-along with that other, that even more inconvenient emotion
-which was now driving him hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t overlook your own side of the case,” he was
-constrained to say.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, there’s that&mdash;but one doesn’t like to insist
-on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“The other is so much more important.”</p>
-
-<p>She felt his deep eyes searching hers, but except a
-little veiled amusement, they had nothing to conceal.</p>
-
-<p>“I am by no means sure that it is.” To his own
-clear annoyance, the fatal instinct for justice began to
-take a hand in his overthrow. “As the matter has been
-represented to me there is no doubt, if you took it to a
-court of law, that you would get substantial damages.”</p>
-
-<p>“As if one could!” She suddenly crimsoned.</p>
-
-<p>“If I have hurt you in any way, I beg your pardon,”
-he said at once with a simple humility for which she
-honored him. “After all, if you decide not to marry
-my relation you give up a position which most people
-allow to be exceptional.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;but if one has never aspired to it!”</p>
-
-<p>He grew more puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you afford to be so fastidious?&mdash;if you don’t
-think the question impertinent?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have my living to earn,” she said very simply, “but
-of course I don’t want that to enter into the case.”</p>
-
-<p>“Naturally. Of course. Let me put another question&mdash;if
-it is not impertinent?” The eyes of the Duke had
-now a grave amusement, but they had also something else.
-“I suppose you care a good deal for this young man?”</p>
-
-<p>She simply stared at him in a kind of bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>Such an answer, unexpectedly swift, nobly complete,
-seemed to disconcert him a little.</p>
-
-<p>“And&mdash;and without a word you give him up for the
-sake of other people?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes&mdash;if they insist upon it.”</p>
-
-<p>“If they insist upon it!” He shook his head at her
-in rather uneasy surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“I have told Jack that I cannot marry him unless he
-has your full consent.”</p>
-
-<p>Again the wide gray eyes looked out fearlessly upon
-the rather bewildered gentleman. They could hardly
-refrain from a smile at his growing perplexity. But there
-was something other than perplexity in his tone when
-at last he said, “You know of course that I cannot
-possibly give it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<a id="illo2"><img src="images/i_198.jpg" width="300" alt="“You give up your young man&mdash;simply because of that?””" title="" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption">“You give up your young man&mdash;simply because of that?”</p>
-
-<p class="p2">The unhesitating reply seemed to increase his surprise.
-This girl was taking him into deeper places than
-he had ever been in before. He shook his head at her
-in a whimsical fashion which she thought quite charming.
-“It hardly does, you know, to be too bright and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>good for human nature’s daily food,” he said with a
-softness in his deep voice, which was enchanting.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m very far from being that.” She smiled
-and shook her head. “I won’t own that I’m as bad as
-all that&mdash;at least I hope I’m not.”</p>
-
-<p>“But if you insist on being so uncommonly self-sacrificing,
-you’re in danger, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“One can’t call it self-sacrifice altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>“Afraid of being bored, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I could never be bored with Jack,” she said gravely.
-“But I don’t see why one should pat oneself on the back
-for trying to live up to one’s principles.”</p>
-
-<p>“Principles! May I ask what principles are involved
-in a case of this kind?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do unto others as you would be done by.’ It’s
-rather priggish, I admit, but it’s a splendid motto, if only
-one is equal to it. As a rule it is much too much for
-me, but in this case I want to do my best to live up
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There you go again.” The old man shook an amused
-finger at her. “Why it’s altruism, there’s no other word
-for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s common sense&mdash;if one is able to think through
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that is why,” he said, with almost the air of a
-father, “you give up your young man&mdash;simply because
-of that?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded. But her smile was rather drawn.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me, Miss Lawrence”&mdash;the curiosity of his Grace
-was mounting to a pitch that enabled him to match her
-frankness with his own&mdash;“why are you so sure that
-you will be unacceptable here?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It stands to reason, I’m afraid. If I lived at Bridport
-House and the future head of the Family married
-the housekeeper’s niece, I should be bound to look on it as
-a perfectly hopeless arrangement.”</p>
-
-<p>He honored this candor. Choosing his words with
-great delicacy, he could but pay homage to such clear-sighted
-honesty. “I only hope you will not blame us too
-much,” he said finally, with an odd change of voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t blame you at all. You are as you are. If I
-lived here I am sure those would be my feelings.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man was touched by this generosity. Lest he
-should overrate it, however, she added quickly with a
-flash of pride, “Besides, I should simply hate to go where
-I was not wanted.”</p>
-
-<p>Patrician to the bone, he admired that, too. Every
-inch of her rang true. Somehow it had become terribly
-difficult to treat her in the only way the circumstances
-permitted. But no matter what his private feelings, he
-must hold them in check.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I think, Miss Lawrence,” he said, with a return
-to the dryness of the man of the world, “you ought
-to congratulate yourself that you don’t live here.” But
-suddenly his voice trailed off. “You would not be half so
-fine as you are”&mdash;after all, he couldn’t conceal that a
-deeply-stirred old man was speaking&mdash;“had you been
-born and bred in a hot-house.”</p>
-
-<p>She flushed at the unexpected words. Quite suddenly
-her eyes brimmed with tears.</p>
-
-<p>“If I have said anything that wounds I humbly apologize,”
-he said, with a gentleness that to her was adorable.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! It is only that I had not expected to have
-such a compliment paid me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s a sincere one.” As he looked at her strange
-thoughts came into his mind; his voice began to shake
-in a queer way. “And it is paid you by an old man
-who is not very wise and not very happy.” As he
-continued to look at her his voice underwent further
-surprising changes. “I wish we could have had you
-with us. There is not one of us here fit to tie your shoe-lace,
-my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Such a speech gave pain rather than pleasure.
-She saw him a feudal chieftain, the head of a sacred
-order. Was it quite fit and proper that he should speak
-in that way to the humblest of his vassals? She would
-never be able to forget his words, but in that room,
-with the spirit of place enfolding her like some exquisite
-garment, she could almost have wished that they had not
-been uttered.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she rose to go. As he regarded her in all
-the salient perfection of mind and mansion, it seemed too
-bitterly ironical that he should bar the door against her.
-Why were they not on their knees thanking heaven for
-such a creature!</p>
-
-<p>“You must forgive us, even if Fate is not likely to,”
-he said, thinking aloud.</p>
-
-<p>“Please don’t let us look at it in that way,” was the
-quick rejoinder. “We all have our places in the world.
-And, after all, one ought to remember that it is very
-much easier to be Mary Lawrence than to be Duchess
-of Bridport.”</p>
-
-<p>The old man shook his head dolefully, and then, in
-spite of her earnest prayer that he should stay as he
-was, he rose with a great effort to say good-by. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-deeply-lined face was a complex of many emotions as
-he did so.</p>
-
-<p>In the very act of taking leave, her eyes, magnetized
-by the room itself, strayed round it almost wistfully.
-Somehow it meant so much that they hardly knew how
-to tear themselves away. Involuntarily the Duke’s eyes
-followed hers to a masterpiece among masterpieces on
-the farther wall. He could trace all that was in her
-mind, and the knowledge seemed to increase his pain
-and his perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something wonderful in this room,” she said,
-half to herself. “Something one can’t put into words.
-It’s like nothing else. I suppose it’s a kind of harmony.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke didn’t speak, but slowly brought back his
-eyes to look at her. His favorite room held treasures
-of many kinds, yet as he well knew he was wantonly
-casting away a gem rarer than any in his collection.
-His eyes were upon a noble profile instinct with the
-dignity of an old race. Here was artistry surer, even
-more exquisite than Corot’s. He could not repress a sigh
-of vexation.</p>
-
-<p>Unwilling to part with her, he still detained her even
-when she had turned to go. “One moment, Miss Lawrence,”
-he said. “Do these things speak to you?” Near
-his elbow was a wonderful cabinet of Chinese lacquer
-which housed a collection of old French snuffboxes. He
-opened it for her inspection, and with a little air of connoisseurship
-she gazed at the rarities within.</p>
-
-<p>“They <i>are</i> lovely,” she said eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Honor me by choosing one as a token of my gratitude.”</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated to take him at his word, but he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span>
-so much in earnest that it would have seemed unkind to
-refuse.</p>
-
-<p>“May I choose any one of them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Please. And I hope you will do me the honor of
-choosing the best.”</p>
-
-<p>Put on her mettle she brought instinct rather than
-knowledge to bear on a fine collection, and chose a
-charming Louis Quinze.</p>
-
-<p>“You have a <i>flair</i>,” said the Duke, laughing. “That
-is the one. I am so glad you found it. I should not
-like you to have less than the best. Good-by!” Again
-he took her hand and his voice had a father’s affection
-in it. Then he pressed the bell, opened the door, and
-ushered her into the care of a servant with an air of
-solicitude which she felt to be quite extraordinary. As
-he did so he apologized with a humility that seemed
-almost excessive for his inability to accompany her downstairs.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the girl had gone, the Duke returned
-painfully to his chair. He was now the prey of very
-odd sensations, and they began to crystallize at once into
-emotion as deep as any he had ever felt. Something
-had happened at this interview which left him now
-with a feeling of numb surprise. The entrance of this
-girl into that room had brought something into his life,
-her going away had taken something out of it. Almost
-in the act of meeting a subtle bond had seemed to arise
-between them. It was as if each had a sixth sense
-in regard to the other. Their minds had marched so
-perfectly together that it was hard to realize that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-this was the first time they had met. This rare creature
-had touched cords which had long been forgotten,
-even had they been known to exist, in the slightly dehumanized
-thing he called himself.</p>
-
-<p>Shaken as he had never been in his life, his mind was
-held by the thought of her long after she had gone.
-Mystified, disconcerted, rather forlorn, a harrowing idea
-was beginning to torment him. At last he could bear
-it no longer. Rising from his chair with a stifled impatience,
-he made his way out of the room leaning heavily
-upon his stick. He went along the corridor as far as the
-head of the central staircase. Here he stood a long
-while in contemplation of a large, rather florid picture
-by Lawrence. The subject was a young woman of distinguished
-beauty, a portrait of his famous grandmother,
-the wife of Bridport’s second duke. Apart from her
-appearance, which had been greatly celebrated, she had
-had a reputation for wit and charm; her memoirs of the
-’Thirties had long taken rank as a classic; and no annals
-of the time were complete without the mention of her
-name.</p>
-
-<p>The prey of some very unhappy thoughts, the Duke
-stood long immersed in the picture before him. The
-resemblance he sought to trace had grown so plain that
-it provoked a shiver. The line of the cheek, the shape of
-the eyes, the curve of the chin, the poise of the head on
-the long and slender throat were identical with the living
-replica he had just seen.</p>
-
-<p>At last he returned to his room and rang the bell. To
-the servant who answered it, he said: “Ask Mrs. Sanderson
-to come to me.”</p>
-
-<p>The summons was promptly obeyed. But as Harriet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
-came into the room she bore a small tray containing
-a wine-glass, a teaspoon, and a bottle of medicine. At
-the sight of these the Duke made a grimace like a
-petulant child.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure the new medicine does you a great deal of
-good.” The tone was quite maternal in its tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>“You think so?” The words were dubious; all the
-same her voice and look seemed to have an odd power
-of reassurance.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, I think there can be no doubt of it.” She
-measured the dose gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I take your word, I take your word.” And
-he drank the bitter draught.</p>
-
-<p>She put back the glass on the tray, but as she was
-about to leave the room she was abruptly detained.
-“Don’t go,” he said. “Sit and let us talk a little.”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know,” he said, and the unexpectedness of
-the words threw her off her guard, “that I have just
-had a visit from&mdash;from your niece?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mary!” She clutched her dress. “Mary&mdash;here!”
-A sudden tide of crimson flowed in the startled face.
-But the next instant it had grown white. “No, I didn’t
-know,” she said. And then, her soul in her eyes, she
-waited for his next words.</p>
-
-<p>There was one stifling moment of silence, then he
-said: “Of course you know what is in my mind?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded, not trusting herself to speak.</p>
-
-<p>While he searched his memory silence came again, and
-now it had the power to hurt them both. “Haven’t you
-always led me to believe,” he said in a voice of curious
-intensity, “that she was a nurse in a hospital?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span></p>
-
-<p>Harriet did not reply at once. But at last she said,
-“Yes, I have always wanted you to think so.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her white face, and suddenly checked
-the words that rose to his tongue. Whatever those may
-have been, there was an immense solicitude in his manner
-when he spoke again. “It is not for me,” he said,
-“to question anything you may have said, or anything
-you may have done.”</p>
-
-<p>“I did everything I could to carry out your wishes.”
-Her voice trembled painfully. “And I&mdash;I&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“And you didn’t like to tell me,” he said gently.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I couldn’t bear to tell you that she had insisted
-on choosing the life of all others you would have
-the least desired for her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t think that I complain,” he said. “I know
-you must have had a good reason. You have always
-been very considerate. But it looks as if the stars in
-their courses have managed to play a scurvy trick.”</p>
-
-<p>“That they have!” Once more the swift color flowed
-over a fine face.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she pressed her fingers to her eyelids to
-repress the quick tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” he said. “The gods have been a little
-too much for us, but things might have been worse.”</p>
-
-<p>Tearfully she agreed.</p>
-
-<p>“The other day when I talked with that excellent fellow,
-your brother-in-law, it didn’t occur to me who this
-girl really was. I don’t think I was ever told that she
-had been adopted by your family.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Harriet, very simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Do your friends know the truth of the matter?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think they have a suspicion&mdash;not of the real
-truth,” she said slowly.</p>
-
-<p>“Has anyone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a soul that I know of.”</p>
-
-<p>“The girl herself, is she also in ignorance?”</p>
-
-<p>“She knows, I believe, that she is only the adopted
-child of my sister and her husband, but I don’t think
-she has gone at all deeply into the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me this”&mdash;the mere effort of speech seemed to
-cost him infinite pain&mdash;“do you think there is a means
-open to anyone of learning the truth at this time of day?”</p>
-
-<p>“My brother-in-law knew from the first that the child
-was mine, but I feel sure the real truth can never come
-out now.”</p>
-
-<p>Impassive as he was, a shade of evident relief came
-into his face. But the look of strain in his eyes deepened
-to actual pain as he said, “No doubt we ought to
-be glad that it is so. At the same time, I think you’ll
-agree, that we have a duty to face which may prove extraordinarily
-difficult.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet did not speak, but suddenly she bent her head
-in a quivering assent.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” he said slowly, “we can no longer burke
-the fact that something is due to the girl herself.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet’s eyes suddenly filled with an intensity of suffering
-he could not bear to look at.</p>
-
-<p>“You know the position, of course?” he said gently,
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“I know she has promised to marry Mr. Dinneford.”</p>
-
-<p>“But only if I give my consent.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure that is right.” A note of relief came into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span>
-her tone. “She has done exactly as one could have
-wished.”</p>
-
-<p>“If one could only see the thing as clearly as you do!”
-he said with a reluctant shake of the head. “At any rate
-let us try to be as just as the circumstances will allow
-us to be.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can we hope to do justice and not hurt other people?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid that’s impossible, as things are. But for
-a moment let us try to consider the whole matter from
-her point of view. Perhaps you’ll allow me to say at
-once that the course you insisted on taking seems to have
-justified itself completely. She is a girl to be proud of;
-and she appears to be living a happy and useful life.
-One sees now how wise it was not to take half-measures.
-She has been allowed to fight her own battle with the
-gifts of the good God, and the result does your foresight
-the highest credit.”</p>
-
-<p>The judicial words, very simply uttered, brought a
-flood of color to the pale cheeks. But listening with
-bent head, she did not look up, nor did she say a word
-in reply.</p>
-
-<p>“The heroic method has proved to be the right one,
-but I think now we have to be careful not to take any unfair
-advantage of that fact. It’s a terribly difficult case,
-but as far as we can we ought not to overlook what is
-due to the girl herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the others!” said Harriet with fear in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a terribly difficult situation.” The Duke sighed.
-“But for the moment let us try to see the matter simply
-as it affects her. She has been made to suffer a grievous
-injustice so that others might benefit. The question is,
-must she still be made to sacrifice herself?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span></p>
-
-<p>Harriet had no answer to give. The long silence which
-followed was almost unendurable in its intensity.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” he said at last, as he looked at her white face.</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head mutely, unable to speak, unable
-to meet his eyes. Tears crept again along her eyelids.</p>
-
-<p>“You wish me to decide?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she said at last.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her now with the light of pity in his
-face. Not at once did he speak, and when he did it was
-with a clear, a too-clear perception of the impotence of
-his words.</p>
-
-<p>“The truth is,” he said, “the problem is beyond me.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-AN INTERLUDE</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">A</span>s</span> Mary made her way from Bridport House
-across the Park, in the direction of Broad Place
-and luncheon, it came suddenly upon her that she
-was in a state of the most abject misery she had ever
-been in. It was a gorgeous midday of July, but the world
-had ceased to be habitable. She had come up against
-a blank wall. At that moment there was nothing in life
-to make it worth while.</p>
-
-<p>In the ordeal she had just passed through a fierce
-pride had forbade her to show one glimpse of her real
-feelings. She had carried off the whole scene with almost
-an air of comedy, for she was determined that
-“those people” should not realize what wounds it was
-in their power to deal. But Dame Nature, now that
-she had the high-mettled creature to herself, was having
-something to say to her on the matter. A price was
-being exacted for these heroics and for this stoicism.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke had left an impression of fine chivalry
-on a perceptive mind, but in spite of that, now they
-were no longer face to face, her deepest feeling was an
-angry resentment. Life was not playing fair. In the
-course of a strenuous three and twenty years she had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-rubbed shoulders with all sorts of men and women, but
-in spite of an honest catholicity of outlook, she had come
-to the conclusion already that there was only one kind
-for which she had any real use. It was not a question of
-loaves and fishes, or a puerile snobbishness; it was simply
-that one of the deepest instincts she had, the sense of the
-artist, demanded a setting.</p>
-
-<p>Walking along, blind to everything but the misery of
-this reaction, she was suddenly brought up short, thrown
-as it were against the world in its concrete reality, by the
-knowledge that a pair of eyes was devouring her. Cutting
-across her path at an acute angle as he converged
-upon her from the direction of Kensington Gardens was
-a man wholly absorbed in the occupation of looking at
-her. With a start she awoke to the force of his gaze;
-her subconscious perception of it was so strong that it
-even aroused a tacit hostility.</p>
-
-<p>Who was this large, lean, top-hatted creature striding
-towards her in a pair of aggressively checked trousers?
-Where had she seen that freckled face, those bold eyes,
-those prognathous jaws? As he came on he caught her
-gaze and fixed it; but she dropped her eyes at once,
-adroitly giving him only the line of her cheek to look
-at. Whoever he was, he was not a gentleman!</p>
-
-<p>In the next moment, however, she had begun to realize
-that he was outside and beyond any trite symbol of
-that kind. He was less a man than a natural force;
-moreover, as soon as he had passed her, he stopped
-abruptly and turned round to follow her with his eyes.
-She did not need to turn round herself to verify her
-sense of the act, even had personal dignity not intervened
-to prevent her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span></p>
-
-<p>She felt annoyed. Again she asked herself who he
-could be. When and where had she seen him? And then
-a light broke. It may have been the checked trousers, it
-may have been the prognathous jaws, but her mind was
-suddenly flung back upon that recent visit to Beaconsfield
-Villas, and a certain unforgettable scene. This
-slightly fantastic figure was no less a person than
-Lady Muriel’s fiancé, the new Home Secretary.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>Crossing to Broad Place she could not check a laugh.
-Wounded, angry, humiliated by the pressure of a recent
-event, there still lurked in her a true appreciation of the
-human comedy. What a pill for Bridport House to
-have to swallow! It was poetic justice that the pride
-which strained at a gnat so harmless as herself should
-have to gulp a real live camel in the person of the
-Right Honorable Gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>But the laugh, after all, was hollow. Tears of vexation
-leaped to her eyes. And they owed more to the
-perception of her own inadequacy in this smarting hour
-than to the act of Fate. “Wretch that I am!” She was
-ready to chasten herself with scorpions as she crossed
-the familiar path into Albert Gate.</p>
-
-<p>Within a very few yards were the loyal, warm-hearted
-friends of her own orbit. And there, alas! was the rub.
-Her own orbit could not satisfy her now. She craved
-something that all their kindness, their cheerfulness, their
-frank affection could not give. “Just common or garden
-snobbishness, my dear, that’s the nature of your complaint,”
-whispered a monitor within. “You are no better<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-than anyone else when you are invited to call on a duke
-in Mount Street.”</p>
-
-<p>That might be true, or it might not, but sore and rebellious
-as she was, she was strongly inclined to dispute
-the verdict. After all, her feeling went infinitely deeper.
-It was futile, however, to analyze it now. This was not
-the place nor was there present opportunity. She glanced
-at the watch on her wrist. It was one o’clock.</p>
-
-<p>The watch on her wrist was as hostile as everything
-else in her little world just now. Even one o’clock had
-a sharp sting of its own. “Don’t be late for lunch,”
-had been Milly’s parting words. “Charley Cheesewright
-is coming. And he’s dying to meet you.”</p>
-
-<p>She managed to navigate the vortex of Knightsbridge
-without knowing that she did so; and then, all at once,
-she realized that she was within twenty yards of Victoria
-Mansions, and that a rather overdressed young man was
-a few yards ahead.</p>
-
-<p>With a feeling akin to nausea she pulled up in time
-to watch this short, squat figure disappear within the
-precincts of Number Five. For a reason she couldn’t explain
-she was quite sure that this was none other than
-Mr. Charles Cheesewright. She didn’t know him; if a
-back view meant anything she had no wish to know
-him; certainly she had no desire to make his acquaintance
-going up in the lift.</p>
-
-<p>She hung back a discreet three minutes on the pavement
-of Broad Place before daring to enter the vestibule
-of Number Five, Victoria Mansions. By then the coast
-was clear; Mr. Charles Cheesewright, apparently, had
-gone up in the Otis elevator. And she stood on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span>
-mat, drawn and tense, a figure of tragedy, waiting for
-the Otis elevator to come down again.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>At last the Otis elevator came down and she went
-up in it. And then confronted by the door of the flat,
-she peered through the glass panel to make sure that
-Mr. Charles Cheesewright was not standing the other
-side of it; then she opened it with a furtive key, slipped
-in, and stole past the half-open door of the tiny drawing-room
-through which came the penetrating accents of Mrs.
-Wren attuned to the reception of “company.”</p>
-
-<p>Once in her own room her first act was to look in
-the glass with a lurking sense of horror; the second was
-to decide, which she instantly did, that it would be quite
-impossible to meet Mr. Cheesewright, and that she didn’t
-need any luncheon.</p>
-
-<p>By the time she had taken off her hat and made herself
-a little more presentable, both these decisions had grown
-immutable. She could <i>not</i> meet Mr. Cheesewright, she
-did <i>not</i> want any luncheon. All she needed was complete
-solitude, and perhaps a cigarette. But all too soon was
-she ravished of even these modest requirements. Milly
-burst suddenly into the room.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty past one!” she cried reproachfully. “I didn’t
-hear you come in. We are waiting for you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary saw that her plan must be given up. If she
-really meant to forgo a meal and the honor of Mr.
-Cheesewright’s acquaintance there would have to be a
-satisfactory explanation. But what explanation could
-she make? Certainly none that would conceal the truth.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
-And at that moment she wished almost savagely for it to
-be concealed. Confronted by a choice of evils she made a
-dash at the less.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so sorry. I’ll be with you in one minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Sheer pride forced her tone to a superhuman lightness,
-verging on gayety. But there was a formidable
-member of her sex to deal with. In spite of that heroic
-note, Milly was not to be taken in; she looked at the
-dissembler with eyes that saw a great deal too much.
-“I expect you’ve taken a pretty bad toss, my fine lady,”
-they seemed to say.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be with you in one minute,” repeated Mary, with
-burning cheeks and a beating heart. But Milly continued
-to stare. Suddenly she laid impulsive hands on her
-shoulders and gave her a kiss.</p>
-
-<p>Mary didn’t like kissing. Her friend’s proneness to
-the habit always irritated her secretly; this present indulgence
-in it brought Mary as near to active dislike as
-it would have been possible for her to get.</p>
-
-<p>Milly went back to the drawing-room seething with an
-excited curiosity. Before she could make up her mind
-to follow Mary stood a long moment in black despair;
-and then “biting on the bullet,” as the soldiers say, she
-went to join the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Naughty girl!” was the arch reception of Mrs. Wren.
-“I’m very cross. Didn’t you promise not to be late?
-But if you must call before lunch on dukes in Park Lane
-I suppose people like us will have to take the consequences.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary would gladly have given a year’s salary for the
-head of Mrs. Wren on a charger, but Milly intervened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-neatly with the presentation of Mr. Cheesewright, in itself
-a little masterpiece of quiet humor.</p>
-
-<p>Princess Bedalia’s reception of Mr. Charles Cheesewright
-was perhaps the severest test to which her
-sterling goodness had been exposed. Every nerve was on
-edge. She wanted to slay Mr. Cheesewright, braided
-coat, turquoise tie-pin, diamond sleeve links, immaculate
-coiffure and all. But for the sake of Milly she dragooned
-her feelings to the pitch of bowing quite charmingly.</p>
-
-<p>Luncheon, after all, was not so bad. Mrs. Wren was
-frankly at her worst and most tactless; her one idea
-was to impress the guest, to let him see that money was
-not everything, and that judged by her standards he was
-a most ordinary young man. For such a democrat her
-table talk was surprisingly full of Debrett. It was all
-very lacerating, but Mary continued to play up as well
-as she knew how. And by the time the meal was half
-over the reward of pure unselfishness came to her in
-the shape of a quite unexpected liking for Mr. Charles
-Cheesewright.</p>
-
-<p>By all the rules of the game, that is, if mere outward
-appearance went for anything, Mr. Cheesewright should
-have been insufferable. But at close quarters, with
-curried prawns and chablis before him, and a very fine
-girl opposite, he was nothing of the kind. Mrs. Wren
-had confided to Mary a week ago, “that she was afraid
-from what she had heard, that he was not out of the top
-drawer.” The statement had been provoked by an odious
-comparison with Wrexham, “who,” declared Milly
-in her most aboriginal manner, “had, as far as mother
-was concerned, simply queered the pitch for everybody.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps in the eyes of Mary it was Mr. Cheesewright’s
-supreme merit that, in spite of his clothes, he was modestly
-content to be his humble self. In every way he
-was a very middling young man. But he knew that he
-was and, in Mary’s opinion, that somehow saved him
-from being something worse. Mrs. Wren was far from
-agreeing. His face and form were plebeian, but there
-was no reason why he should take them lying down. He
-was Eton and Cambridge certainly&mdash;or was it Harrow
-and Oxford?&mdash;anyhow an adequate expression of a
-sound convention; and it was for that reason no doubt
-that all through a particularly trying meal he kept up
-his end bravely. In fact, he did so well that he earned
-the gratitude of the young woman opposite, although he
-was far from suspecting that he had done anything of
-the kind.</p>
-
-<p>She had begun by counting the minutes and in looking
-ahead to the time when she could retire with her wounds.
-But there was a peculiar virtue in the meal; at any rate
-it agreed so well with the natural constitution of Mr.
-Charles Cheesewright that he was able to relieve the
-tension of the little dining-room without knowing it.
-He wasn’t brilliant, certainly, but he talked plainly,
-sanely, modestly about the things that mattered; the
-Brodotsky Venus at the Portman Gallery, the miserable
-performance of Harrow, the new play at the Imperial,
-the sure defeat of America’s Big Four, Mr. Jarvey’s new
-novel, the prospect of the Kaiser lifting the pot at
-Cowes, and other matters of international importance, so
-that by the time coffee and crême-de-menthe had rounded
-up the meal, Mary was inclined to feel sorry that it was
-at an end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span></p>
-
-<p>When a few minutes before three Mr. Cheesewright
-went his way&mdash;to have a net at Lord’s Cricket Ground&mdash;the
-famous Princess Bedalia felt a pang of regret.
-He had played a pretty good innings already, even if he
-didn’t seem to know it. And the honest shake of her
-hand did its best to tell him so.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Mr. Cheesewright had gone, Mary prepared
-to go too. But before she could retire Milly and
-her mother were at her. Both had a pretty shrewd
-suspicion that she had been making a sorry mess of
-things at Bridport House. These ladies, however, were
-so cunning, that they did not show their hands at once.
-To begin with, they exchanged a glance full of meaning,
-and then as Mary got up and made for the door,
-Mrs. Wren commanded her to sit down again and tell
-them what she thought of Charley. That was guile.
-She didn’t in the least want to know what anyone
-thought of Charley; besides, it would have been quite
-possible for Mary to deliver her verdict even as she stood
-with the knob of the door in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I like him&mdash;<i>immensely</i>!” she said, returning to the
-sofa in deference to Mrs. Wren.</p>
-
-<p>Mother and daughter looked at her searchingly, with
-eyes that questioned.</p>
-
-<p>“I like him&mdash;immensely!” she repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s not the kind of man,” said Mrs. Wren with an
-air of vexation, “I should have written home about when
-I was a girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s wrong with him?” said Milly, bridling. “Why
-do you always crab him, mother?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I&mdash;crab him!” Mrs. Wren’s air was the perfection
-of injured innocence. “Nothing of the kind. It isn’t
-his fault he’s not a blue blood&mdash;and if my lord of
-Wrexham’s form is anything to go by, he may be none
-the worse for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course, as far as you are concerned
-Wrexham’s the fly in the ointment,” said Milly with a
-sudden flutter of anger.</p>
-
-<p>Mary would have given much to escape, but to have
-fled with thunder and forked lightning in the air would
-have been an act of cowardice, not to say treachery.</p>
-
-<p>The truth was Mrs. Wren still had other views for
-Milly, but up till now Wrexham had disappointed her.
-Moreover, both these clear-headed and extremely practical
-ladies were inclined to think he would continue to
-do so. For one thing he was under the thumb of his
-family, who were as hostile as they could be; again
-Wrexham was a bit of a weakling who didn’t quite know
-his own mind. Certainly he had a regard for Milly, but
-whether it would enable him to wear a martyr’s crown
-was very doubtful. Milly, at any rate, had allowed a
-second Richmond to enter the field of her affections, in
-the shape of Mr. Charles Cheesewright, the sole inheritor
-of Cheesewright’s Mixture, a young man of obscure
-antecedents but of considerable wealth. So far Mr.
-Cheesewright had received small encouragement from
-Mrs. Wren, and Milly herself had been very guarded in
-her attitude; yet it was as plain as could be that one of
-the more expensive of the public schools and one of the
-older universities had made a little gentleman of Mr.
-Cheesewright. “But,” as Milly said, “the truth was
-Wrexham had simply queered the pitch for everybody.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span></p>
-
-<p>Mary, as the friend of all parties, including Mr.
-Cheesewright, who had unexpectedly found favor in her
-sight, felt it to be her duty to stay in the room, so that,
-if possible, oil might be poured on the troubled waters.
-She had sense of acute discomfort, it was true; and it
-was not made less by the sure knowledge that the heavy
-weapons mother and daughter were using for the benefit
-of each other would soon be turned against herself.</p>
-
-<p>There was not long to wait for this prophecy to be
-fulfilled. As soon as the ladies had cut off her retreat,
-they dropped the academic subject of Mr. Cheesewright
-and bluntly demanded to know what was the matter.
-It was vain for Mary to try to parry this expected attack.
-Her friends, when their feelings were deeply stirred,
-indulged in a sledge-hammer style of warfare, against
-which any ordinary kind of defense was powerless.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t tell me,” said Mrs. Wren, “that you have let
-them bully you into giving him up!”</p>
-
-<p>This was what Milly was wont to call her mother’s
-“old Sadler’s Wells touch” with a vengeance. The
-victim bit her lip sharply, but she could not prevent the
-color from rushing to her cheeks and giving her completely
-away.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course she has!” cried Milly, looking at
-her pitilessly. “I knew she would. I told you, my dear,
-she was set on doing something fantastic. And here
-have I been telling Charley that one day she would be a
-duchess.”</p>
-
-<p>“I call it soppy,” said Mrs. Wren.</p>
-
-<p>“Downright mental flabbiness,” cried Milly. “It’s the
-sort of thing a girl would do in the <i>Family Herald</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary quailed before these taunts. Even if her friends<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-had an unconventional way of expressing themselves, it
-did not blind her to the poignant nature of their emotions.
-In the tone of mother and daughter was a note
-which showed how deeply they were wounded by her
-moral weakness&mdash;they could consider it nothing else.
-And the bitterness of the attack was the measure of their
-devotion. Mrs. Wren could hardly restrain her tongue,
-Milly was at the verge of tears. Such a girl as Mary
-Lawrence had no right to wreck two lives for a mere
-whim.</p>
-
-<p>“You are nothing but a fool,” said Mrs. Wren.
-“You’ll never get such a chance again. I’d like to shake
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary had no fight left in her. She sat on the sofa
-a picture of dismay. For the first time she saw mother
-and daughter as they really were, in all their native
-crudeness; yet when the worst was said of them they
-had a generosity of soul which made them suffer on
-her account; and that fact alone seemed to leave her at
-their mercy.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve no right to let them ruin your life and his,”
-said Milly pitilessly.</p>
-
-<p>“One simply can’t go where one isn’t wanted,” said
-Mary at last with a face of ashes.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wren took up the phrase, the first the girl had
-been able to utter in her own defense, and flung it back.
-“Not wanted forsooth! Who are they that they should
-pick and choose! A dead charge on the community&mdash;neither
-more nor less.”</p>
-
-<p>“No one can’t,” said Mary, tormentedly. “How could
-one!”</p>
-
-<p>“Rubbish!” said Mrs. Wren. “You can’t afford to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
-so proud. From the way you talk you might be the
-Queen of England.”</p>
-
-<p>The girl shook her head. “And it isn’t quite fair
-that they should have to put up with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Those unfortunate words were made to recoil upon
-her heavily. Both her assailants were frankly amazed
-that she should want to look at the matter from the
-enemy point of view. To such a mind as Mrs. Wren’s
-it could only mean that Bridport House had hypnotized
-her with the semblance of place and power.</p>
-
-<p>“I could shake you,” re-affirmed the good lady. “A
-girl as first-rate as you are has no right to be a snob.”</p>
-
-<p>Somehow that barb was horrible. Nothing wounds
-like the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Strong in the conviction that “she had got her” Mrs.
-Wren proceeded. “You set as high a value on these
-people as they set on themselves. It’s noodles like you
-who keep them up. What use are they anyway, except
-to play the fool with honest folk?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s right,” said Milly with flashing eyes, as
-she took up the parable. “Wrexham’s one of the same
-push. His lot simply won’t look at me, yet I consider
-myself the equal of anyone. And I should make a very
-good countess.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary could only gasp. She was rather overcome by
-this naïveté.</p>
-
-<p>“So you would, my dear,” said Mrs. Wren. “And
-one of these days you will be a countess&mdash;if you don’t
-throw yourself away on Tom, Dick, and Harry in the
-meantime.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary was hard set not to break out in a hysterical
-laugh. She was in the depths if ever soul was, yet the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span>
-sense of humor is immortal and survives every torment.</p>
-
-<p>Fate, however, had not yet given the last turn to the
-screw.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the neat parlormaid came into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dinneford!” she announced.</p>
-
-<p>Jack stood a moment on the threshold to gaze at the
-three occupants. He was rather like a sailor who fears
-foul weather and has not the courage to read the sky.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad you’ve come, young man,” said Mrs. Wren,
-getting up to receive him. And she added almost at
-once, for it was never her way to beat about the bush,
-“We are giving her the finest talking to she has ever had
-in her life.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack nearly groaned. The look of the three of them
-had told him already that she must have made a fearful
-hash of things.</p>
-
-<p>By now the Tenderfoot had risen very high in Mrs.
-Wren’s favor. To begin with he would one day be the
-indubitable sixth Duke of Bridport&mdash;a handicap, no
-doubt, in the sight of some types of democrat, but apparently
-not, in the eyes of Mrs. Wren, an insuperable
-barrier. Again, she was a pretty shrewd judge of a
-man, and this one had passed all his examinations so
-far with flying colors. He was absolutely straightforward,
-absolutely honorable; moreover, he knew his
-own mind&mdash;whereby he had a signal advantage over his
-stable companion, who, in spite of great merits, was lacking
-in character.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we are setting her to rights,” said Milly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-wrinkling a nose of charming pugnacity. The face of
-the culprit was tense and rather piteous, but Jack’s
-glance at it was perfectly remorseless.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew she would,” he groaned.</p>
-
-<p>“Knew she would what?” demanded Mrs. Wren.</p>
-
-<p>“Let Uncle Albert down her,” was the prompt rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p>“That didn’t want much guessing,” said Milly bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>“Bridport-House-itis! That’s her trouble,” said Mrs.
-Wren. “And she seems to have quite a bad form of
-the disease. I can’t understand such a girl, I can’t really.
-To me she’s unnatural. If I found people ‘coming the
-heavy’ over me, I should just set my back to the wall and
-say, ‘Very well, my fine friends, I’m now going to let
-you see that Jane Wren is every bit as good as you are.’”</p>
-
-<p>“So would any other reasonable being.” And that unpremeditated
-speech of the Tenderfoot’s would have
-made Mrs. Wren his friend for life, had she not become
-so already.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I call sensible,” said she. “And there’s
-only one thing for you to do now, young man, and that
-is to take her straight away and marry her.”</p>
-
-<p>At this point Mary got up from her sofa. But Mrs.
-Wren held one great advantage; she had her back to
-the door. “You don’t leave this room, my fine lady”&mdash;again
-“the old Sadler’s Wells touch,” and Jack and Milly
-could not deny that it was rather superb&mdash;“until you
-realize that we all think alike in this matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” said the Tenderfoot, immensely stimulated
-by this powerful backing. “Let us try to see the thing
-as it is. This isn’t a case for high falutin’ sentiment.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-Bridport House is steeped in crass idiocy; all the more
-reason, I say, that we give it no encouragement.”</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” chimed Mrs. Wren.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” chimed Milly, who was irresistibly reminded
-of a recent command performance of “Money.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wren shook a histrionic finger at the luckless
-Mary, whose eyes were seeking rather wildly a means
-of escape. “Don’t speak! Don’t venture to say a
-word!” The victim had not shown the least disposition
-to do so. “You simply haven’t a leg to stand on, you
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a shameful piece of bullying but the victim
-bore it stoically. And it did not go on for long.
-Neither Mrs. Wren nor Milly was exactly a fool. As
-soon as they saw that main force was not likely to help
-them, and that more harm than good might be done by
-it, they decided to leave the whole matter to Jack. They
-had expressed their own point of view very fully, they
-knew that he could be trusted to make the most of his
-case; besides, when all was said, he was the person best
-able to deal with an entirely vexatious affair.</p>
-
-<p>Of a sudden, the astute Milly flung a swift glance at
-her mother and got up from her chair. And without
-another word on the subject, this pair of conspirators
-dramatically withdrew.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VI</p>
-
-<p>Such an exit from the scene was far more eloquent
-than words. And its immediate effect was to plunge
-Jack and Mary with a haste that was hardly decent, into
-what both felt was perilously like a final crisis. Its very
-nature was of a sort that a finer diplomacy would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>
-been careful to avoid. But Jack, baffled and angry, was
-not in a mood to temporize; besides, that was never his
-way.</p>
-
-<p>The fine shades of emotion were not for him, but he
-had the perception to feel that if he remained five
-minutes longer in that little room the game might be lost
-irretrievably. In fact, it seemed to be lost already. The
-specter of defeat was hovering round him; nay, it was
-embodied in the very atmosphere he breathed.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing the moment to be full of peril, he determined
-to force himself to the greatest delicacy of which he was
-capable, for this might prove the final throw. The look
-in her eyes seemed to tell him that all was lost, but he
-would set the thought aside and act as if he were not
-aware of it.</p>
-
-<p>A long and very trying pause lent weight to this decision,
-and then at last he said in a tone altogether different
-from the one he had recently used, “Tell me, why are
-you so determined to keep a hardshell like Uncle Albert
-on his pedestal?”</p>
-
-<p>The form of the question provoked a wry little smile.
-“We poor females are by nature conservative.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are that,” he said. “Take you and me. We’ve
-both seen the world. And the world has changed me
-altogether, but I should say it hasn’t changed you at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; I don’t think it has,” she admitted ruefully, “in
-the things that are really important.”</p>
-
-<p>“Six years ago, before I went West, I saw Bridport
-House at pretty much the same angle you see it now.
-But I suppose if you get lumbering timber, or living by
-your wits, or looking for gold in the Yukon, it mighty
-soon comes home to you that it is only realities that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span>
-count. And the cold truth is that Bridport House simply
-isn’t a reality at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“There I can’t agree with you,” she said with a simple
-valor he was bound to admire. “I haven’t seen the
-Yukon, but I’ve seen Bridport House and it’s intensely
-real to me. Somehow the place is quite wonderful. It
-works upon one like a charm.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was a fool to let you go there.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it only confirms my guesses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you are as bad as your Aunt Sanderson,” he
-burst out. “And you haven’t her excuse. One can
-understand her point of view, although it’s very extreme,
-and absurdly overdone, but yours, if you’ll let me say so,
-is merely fanciful. Why you should be absolutely the
-last person in the world to be hypnotized by mere rank
-and pride of place.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t that at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s something I can’t explain, a kind of instinct, I
-suppose. Please don’t think I’m overawed by vain
-shows. But there is such a thing as tradition, at least
-there is to me, and every stick and stone of that house
-simply glows with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mere sentiment!”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes&mdash;I know&mdash;but sentiment’s the thing that rules
-the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Plain, practical common sense rules the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean the only world worth living in.”</p>
-
-<p>He could do nothing with her, and the fact was now
-hurting him horribly. A man used to his own way, of
-clear vision, and strong will, he could not bear the
-thought of being sidetracked or thwarted. Besides, her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-reasoning was demonstrably false. He was growing bitterly
-annoyed but, after all, such a solicitude for others
-only added to her value. Moreover, here was a nature
-almost fantastically fine, and for decency’s sake he must
-constrain his egotism to respect her scruples.</p>
-
-<p>But the sense of defeat was hard to bear. Since that
-morning’s fatal visit to the Mecca of tradition her will
-had crystallized. There seemed little hope of shaking it
-now.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me ask one question,” he said tensely. “Do you
-still care for me?”</p>
-
-<p>Before she could answer the question her breath came
-quickly, her color mounted. And then she said in a low
-voice, “I do&mdash;I always shall.”</p>
-
-<p>It was no use telling her she was a fool. She was
-grotesquely in the wrong, even if she was sublimely in
-the right. He would like to have shaken her&mdash;and yet
-how dare he sully her with a point of view which was
-purely personal?</p>
-
-<p>“I expect that old barbarian is laughing finely in his
-sleeve,” he said with a sudden descent to another plane.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t read him right.” A warm throb of feeling
-was in her voice. “He’s quite deep and true&mdash;and kind,
-so kind you would hardly believe. When I went there
-this morning I felt I was going to hate him, and yet I
-find I can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are an idealist,” he said. “And you’ve tuned up
-that old cracked file to the pitch of your own sackbut
-and psaltery. He’s not fine in any way if you see him
-as I do&mdash;but I’m an earthworm, of course. He’s just
-a hardshell and an unbeliever, who runs tradition for all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
-it’s worth, because that means loaves and fishes for him
-and his.”</p>
-
-<p>She countered this speech staunchly; it was not worthy
-of him. And yet the tone of reproof was so gentle that
-it gave him new courage. Besides, he was a born fighter
-and the mere thought of losing such a prize was more
-than he could bear.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t go back on your word,” he burst out with
-sudden defiance. “You made a promise that you’re
-bound to keep.”</p>
-
-<p>The look in her eyes asked for pity. “Oh! I could
-never go there,” she shivered, “among all those hostile
-women.”</p>
-
-<p>“We will keep a thousand miles away from them.”</p>
-
-<p>“They have told me I’m not good enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Like their damned impertinence!” He flushed with
-anger.</p>
-
-<p>“But I promised this morning that I wouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“You first promised me that you would.”</p>
-
-<p>Again he had her cornered. It was almost the act of
-a cad to drive her so hard, but he was an elemental who
-had simply to obey the laws of his being. It seemed
-madness and damnation to let her go. And yet there
-were tears in her eyes which he dare not look at. If he
-saw them he was done.</p>
-
-<p>With a kind of savage joy he felt her weaken a little
-at the impact of his will. It was a piece of cruelty for
-which there was no help, a form of bullying he could
-not avoid.</p>
-
-<p>“The best thing we can do,” he said suddenly, “is to
-get married at once and then clear off to Canada. Then
-we shall be beyond the jurisdiction of Bridport House.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That old man would never forgive me,” was the
-simple reply. “It would make the whole thing quite
-hopeless for everybody.”</p>
-
-<p>He checked the words at the tip of his tongue. She
-had no right to play for the other side, but there was
-something in her bearing which shamed him to silence.
-For the first time he was torn; this immolation of self
-might be a deeper wisdom; at least he felt thin and
-shallow in its presence.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you help me?” She laid a hand on his.
-Tears were now running down her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>He caught his breath sharply at the unexpected appeal;
-it was like the fixing of a knife. There was no alternative;
-he saw at once with fatal clearness that these four
-little words cut the ground from under his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I will,” he said miserably, “if that is how
-you really feel about it.”</p>
-
-<p>She bowed her head in the moment’s intensity.
-“Thank you,” she said softly.</p>
-
-<p>He could only gasp. Here was the end.</p>
-
-<p>“We must forget each other,” she said stoically.</p>
-
-<p>“Or ask the sun and moon to stand still,” he said. “I
-shall never marry anyone else.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave him the honest hand of the good comrade
-and he took it to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go back to Canada.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you stay and help them?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said, “these stupid people have got on my
-nerves. Besides, this city is not big enough to hold us
-both just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I intend to go to Paris and study for the opera.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said decisively. “This time next week I shall
-be on my way back to Vancouver, unless&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless&mdash;&mdash;?”</p>
-
-<p>“Unless Bridport House can be made to forget the
-Parish Pump in the meantime. And there’s hardly a
-chance of that.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-TIME’S REVENGE</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">H</span>is</span> Grace had had such a very bad night that
-he was only just able to reach his morning-room
-by the discreet hour of eleven. He was
-so exceedingly irritable that even the presence of the
-<i>Times</i> on the little table at his elbow was almost too
-much for him. And barely had he settled himself in
-his chair and put on his spectacles when an acute annoyance
-with the nature of things was further increased by
-the ill-timed appearance of his private secretary, Mr.
-Gilbert Twalmley.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Twalmley so well understood the art of being
-agreeable, that, of itself, his appearance was seldom if
-ever unwelcome; had the fact been otherwise it is reasonably
-certain that long ago he would have had to seek
-some other sphere of usefulness. And even on this sinister
-morning Mr. Twalmley was not the head and front
-of his own offending; the germ of unpopularity was in
-the message that he bore.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir Dugald Maclean has rung up, sir. He would
-like to know if you can see him on a matter of urgent
-importance.”</p>
-
-<p>“When?” said the Duke sourly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span></p>
-
-<p>“He will come round at once.”</p>
-
-<p>The fact was clear that his Grace was not in a mood
-to receive anyone just then, least of all Sir Dugald
-Maclean, who at any time was far from being <i>persona
-gratissima</i> at Bridport House. But after a mental struggle,
-which if quite short was rather grim, he allowed
-public policy to override his private feelings.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I’d better,” he said with something
-ominously like a groan of disgust.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>Even when the decision was taken and Mr. Twalmley
-had gone to make it known, the Duke was not quite clear
-in his mind as to why he should submit to such an ordeal.
-Was it really necessary to see this man? Would any
-purpose be served by his so doing?</p>
-
-<p>This morning the Duke was in a mood of vacillation,
-itself the sequel to a night of physical and mental torment.
-Men and events and Nature’s own self were conspiring
-against him; the future and the past were alike
-in their menace; he could see nothing ahead but a vista
-of anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>Waiting for this man whom he disliked so intensely,
-he tried at first to fix his mind on the morning’s news,
-and failed lamentably. For one thing the paper itself
-was a sinister portent of the times. But there were
-others, and in the interval of waiting for an unwelcome
-visitor his Grace reviewed them gloomily.</p>
-
-<p>Albert John had lived to see dark days. At heart a
-time-server and a cynic, his strongest wish had been to
-go to the grave in the faith of his fathers. In the beginning
-none had realized more clearly than he that dukes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
-were not as other men. Born to that convenient dogma,
-or at least having imbibed it with the milk of infancy, it
-was in the very marrow of his bones. But now, it would
-seem, the Time Spirit had overtaken the order to which
-he belonged.</p>
-
-<p>Twin portents of that fact had hovered all night round
-his pillow. First came the business of Jack and the
-lady of his choice, who at close quarters had proved to
-be so much more than his Grace had bargained for;
-then there was the minor yet entirely vexing complication
-of Muriel and her Berserker of a Radical.</p>
-
-<p>Compared with the first gigantic issue, the second was
-a mere sideshow, which in a happier hour his Grace
-would have treated with sardonic contempt. After all,
-did it greatly matter if Muriel had the ill taste to prefer
-an obvious political thruster and <i>arriviste</i> to a state of
-single blessedness? The heavens were not likely to fall
-in either case. The man was a cad and there was no
-more to be said, yet even Albert John was not quite able
-to maintain the standpoint of High Olympus. Such a
-mountebank of a fellow ought not to count, yet when the
-best had been said there was something about the brute
-which rankled horribly.</p>
-
-<p>Some years before, in a historic speech in the Gilded
-Chamber, the Duke had drawn a lurid picture of democracy
-knocking at the gate. His words were so
-nakedly obvious that in a single morning they awoke to
-fame throughout a flattered and delighted island.
-Everybody had known for a generation that democracy
-was knocking at the gate, but the true art of prophecy as
-a going concern is to predict the event the day after it
-happens.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span></p>
-
-<p>His Grace of Bridport, in the course of an admired
-speech, left no doubt as to his own feeling in the matter.
-He conceived it to be his duty to hold the gate as long
-as possible against the mob. But his memorable remarks,
-a little touched, no doubt, with the crudity of one
-who spoke seldom, gave opportunity for a thruster in
-the person of a rising Scots publicist to convulse the
-Lower House with his fanciful portrait of the Great
-Panjandrum of Bridport House with little round button
-on top.</p>
-
-<p>That had happened some years ago. But the
-alchemies of time had now prepared a charming comedy
-for the initiated. The temerarious Scotsman, moving
-from triumph to triumph, had determined to consolidate
-his fortunes by marrying the third daughter of the house
-of Dinneford.</p>
-
-<p>When Sir Dugald’s decision became known to the
-Duke, his amazement took a very caustic turn. He had
-never forgiven the fellow for so savagely flaunting him
-as a trophy at the end of a pole. “<i>Rien qui blesse comme
-la vérité.</i>” It was therefore hard for his Grace to
-knuckle down to this adventurer. Besides, had Sir
-Dugald’s opinions been other than they were, one of his
-kidney must not look for a welcome at Bridport House.</p>
-
-<p>Democracy was knocking at the gate with a vengeance.
-Muriel’s affair had shaken the Family to its base. For
-some little time past it was known that she was cultivating
-breadth. Her coquettings with that dangerous tendency
-had affected her diet, her clothes, her reading, as
-well as her social and mental outlook. She had formed
-quite a habit of emerging from the Times Book Club
-with all kinds of highbrows in a strap. She had made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
-odd friendships, she had joined queer movements, and
-from time to time she regaled very remarkable people
-with tea and cake at Bridport House.</p>
-
-<p>To all this there could only be one end. First she
-consulted her oculist and changed her glasses, and then
-she fell in love. She was the first of the Bridport ladies
-to enter that state; thus she was less a portent than a
-phenomenon. Sarah, Blanche, and Marjorie gave her
-the cold shoulder, and Aunt Charlotte frowned, but there
-was no getting over the sinister fact that Breadth had
-at last undone her. Sir Dugald had recently been seen
-for the first time in one of the smaller and less uncomfortable
-drawing-rooms of Bridport House. The Dinneford
-ladies seldom read the newspapers, at least the political
-part of them, being beyond all things “healthy-minded”
-women; therefore they knew little of the facts
-of his career. Moreover, they were in happy ignorance
-of the attack he had launched three years ago upon their
-sire. But it cannot be said of Muriel that she was
-equally innocent. Evil communications corrupt good
-manners; Breadth had made a recourse to politics inevitable.
-And the slight importance she attached to a
-certain incident was, to say the least, unfilial.</p>
-
-<p>In the cool, appraising eyes of Sarah, Blanche, and
-Marjorie, the bold Sir Dugald was set down already as
-a freak of nature. They were not used to that sort of
-person at Bridport House. Unfortunately such an attitude
-forbade any just perception of the man himself.
-His career was still in the making, and in the view of
-keen but unsympathetic observers who had followed it
-from the start, the hapless Muriel had been marked down
-in order that she might advance him in it. Moreover, up<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span>
-till now, his ambition had never known defeat, particularly
-when inflamed by a worthy object.</p>
-
-<p>According to biographies of the People’s Champion,
-portrait on cover, price one shilling net, which flooded
-the bookstalls of his adopted country, his life had been a
-fine expression of the deep spiritual truth, “God helps
-those who help themselves.” His career had been truly
-remarkable, yet in the opinion of qualified judges it was
-only just beginning. In the person of Sir Dugald
-Maclean, Democracy was knocking at the gate with a
-vengeance. Its keepers must be up and doing lest Demos
-ravish the citadel within and get clear away with the
-pictures, the heirlooms and the gold plate.</p>
-
-<p>“She must be out of her mind,” declared the Duke at
-the first announcement of the grisly tidings. Lady
-Wargrave went further. “She is out of her mind,”
-trumpeted the sage of Hill Street.</p>
-
-<p>There were alarums and excursions, there was a pretty
-todo. But Muriel had grown so Broad that she treated
-the matter very lightly. The ruthless Sir Dugald had
-tied her to the wheel of his car; he was now determined
-to lead her to the altar with or without the sanction of
-his Grace.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>All too soon for the Duke’s liking in this hour of fate,
-Sir Dugald arrived for his interview. At any time he
-was a bitter pill for his Grace to swallow; just now, in
-the light of present circumstances, it called for the virtue
-of a stoic to receive him at all.</p>
-
-<p>Now these adversaries met again certain ugly memories
-were in their minds. But the advantage was with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span>
-the younger man who could afford to be secretly amused
-by the business in hand. A semblance of respect, to be
-sure, was in his bearing, but that was no more than
-homage paid by worldly wisdom to the spirit of place.
-Right at the back lay the mind of the cool calculator,
-which in certain aspects had an insight almost devilish
-into the heart of material man. Well he knew the hostility
-of this peevish, brooding invalid. He was in a
-position to flout it; yet, after all, the man who now received
-him would have been rather more than human
-had he not hated him like poison.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Dugald could afford to smile at this figure of
-impotence; yet the Duke, in his way, was no mean adversary.
-Up to a point his mind was extremely vigorous.
-The will to prevail against encroachment on the privileges
-of his class was still strong. Besides physical suffering
-had not yet bereft him of a maliciously nice
-appreciation of the human comedy. It may even have
-been that which now enabled him to receive “the
-thruster.”</p>
-
-<p>As Sir Dugald entered the room he was keenly aware
-that the eyes of a satyr were fixed upon him. And the
-picture of a rather fantastic helplessness, propped in its
-chair, was not without its pathos. The old lion, stricken
-sore, would have given much to rend the intruder, but
-he was in the grip of Fate.</p>
-
-<p>The success of Sir Dugald had been magical, but luck
-had played no part in it, beyond the period of the world’s
-history and the particular corner of the globe in which
-he happened to be born. He had got as far as he had in
-a time comparatively short for the simple reason that he
-was a man of quite unusual powers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span></p>
-
-<p>No man could have had a truer perception of the conditions
-among which he had been cast than Dugald
-Maclean, no man could have had a stronger grasp of
-certain forces, or of the alchemy transmuting them into
-things undreamt of; no man could have had a bolder
-outlook upon the whole amazing phantasmagoria evolved
-by the cosmic dust out of the wonders within itself. The
-Duke had the cynicism of the materialist; the man who
-faced him now had the vision of him who sees too much.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke, with a great air and a courtesy which was
-second nature, begged his visitor to forgive his being as
-he was.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Dugald, with a mechanical formula and a mechanical
-smile, responded with a ready sympathy. But while
-their conventional phrases flowed, each marked the other
-narrowly, like a pair of strange brigands colloguing for
-the first time on the side of a mountain. It was as if
-each knew the other for a devil of a fellow, yet not quite
-such a devil of a fellow as he judges himself to be.</p>
-
-<p>Efficiency was the watchword of Maclean. There was
-no beating about the bush. He knew what he wanted
-and had come to see that he got it. In a cool, aloof,
-rather detached way he lost no time in putting forward
-the demand he had made at a former meeting.</p>
-
-<p>“But one has been led to infer from your speeches,”
-said the Duke, bluntly, “and the facts of your career, that
-you stand for an order of things very different from
-those obtaining here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Up to a point, yes,” was the ready answer. “But
-only up to a point. In order to govern efficiently it is
-wise to aim at a centralization of power. The happiest
-communities are those in which power is in the hands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
-of the few. Now there is much in the social hierarchy,
-even as at present constituted, which deserves to survive
-the shock of battle that will soon be upon us. It ought
-to survive, for it has proved its worth. And in identifying
-myself with it I shall be glad when the time comes
-to help your people here if only you will help me now.”</p>
-
-<p>“In a word, you are ready to throw over your friends,”
-said the Duke with a narrowing eye.</p>
-
-<p>“By no means! I have not the least intention of
-doing that.”</p>
-
-<p>His Grace was hard to convince; besides the man’s
-nonchalance incensed him. “Well, as I have told you
-already, the only terms on which we can begin to think
-of having you here are that you quit your present stable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you think you take a parochial view?” The
-considered coolness had the power to infuriate. “Whichever
-stable one happens to occupy at the moment is not
-very material. It is simply a means to an end.”</p>
-
-<p>“To what end?”</p>
-
-<p>“The better government of the country&mdash;of the Empire,
-if you prefer it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You aim at the top?”</p>
-
-<p>“Undoubtedly. And I think I shall get there.”</p>
-
-<p>The note of self-confidence was a little too much for
-his Grace. He shot out an ugly lower lip and plucked
-savagely at the small tuft of hair upon it. “That remains
-to be seen, my friend.” And he added in a tone of ice,
-“When you have got there you can come and ask me
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is going to take time,” Sir Dugald spoke lightly
-and readily, not deigning to accept the challenge.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span>
-“Meanwhile Lady Muriel and I would like to get married.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed, however, that the Duke had made up his
-mind in the matter quite definitely. There must be a coat
-of political whitewash for a dirty dog before he could
-hope to receive any kind of official sanction as a son-in-law.
-Such in effect was the last word of his Grace;
-and it was delivered with a point that was meant to
-lacerate.</p>
-
-<p>It did not fail of its effect. Somehow the ducal brand
-of cynicism was edged like a razor, and the underlying
-contempt poisoned the wounds it dealt. The man who
-had sprung from the people, who in accordance with
-the brutal innuendo of the man of privilege would be
-only too ready to throw them over as soon as they had
-served his turn, was powerless before it. At this
-moment, as he was ruefully discovering, place and power
-did not hesitate to use loaded dice.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Dugald was savagely angry. In spite of an iron
-self-control, the cold insolence of one who made no secret
-of the fact that he regarded the man before him as other
-clay was hard to bear. A career of success, consistent
-and amazing, had given Sir Dugald a pretty arrogance of
-his own. And he was a very determined man playing
-for victory.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>It was clear from the Duke’s manner that as far as
-he was concerned the interview was at an end. But Sir
-Dugald had made up his mind to carry the matter a step
-farther. He was a bold man, his position was stronger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-than his Grace had reason to guess, moreover, a powerful
-will had been reënforced by a growing animosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Before I go,” said Sir Dugald, “there is one last word,
-and to me it seems of great importance.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke sat silent, a stony eye fixed upon his visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“First, let me say as one man of the world to another,
-that your objection to my marrying Lady Muriel is injudicious.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt&mdash;from your point of view. But we won’t
-go into that.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the contrary, I think we had better. As I say,
-it is injudicious. We have fully made up our minds to
-marry. You can’t hinder us, you know&mdash;so why make
-things uncomfortable?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I dislike it, sir&mdash;I dislike it intensely!” His
-Grace was suddenly overwhelmed by his feelings.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mind stating the grounds of your objection?”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be tedious to enumerate them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d like you to realize the advantages of letting
-things go on as they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are none so far as one can see at the moment.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are coming to them now,” said Sir Dugald
-blandly. “In the first place, has it occurred to you that
-I may know the history of Mr. Dinneford’s fiancée?”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke stared fixedly at the man before him.
-“What do you mean?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose one happens to know her secret?”</p>
-
-<p>“Her secret!”</p>
-
-<p>“Her origin and early history.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there really any need to ask the question?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Duke shook his head perplexedly. “I’m afraid
-I don’t follow you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Sir Dugald coolly, “it happens that you
-are the one man in the world who is in a position to
-answer the question I have ventured to ask.”</p>
-
-<p>They looked at each other. A rather deadly silence
-followed.</p>
-
-<p>“The question you have ventured to ask.” The Duke
-repeated the words slowly, but with a reluctance and a
-venom he could not conceal.</p>
-
-<p>“You know perfectly well what I mean.” The tone,
-direct and cool, was exasperating.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you trying to blackmail me?” There was an
-ugly light in the Duke’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Dugald laughed. “Why put the matter so
-crudely?” he said. “I am merely anxious that justice
-should be done. You ought to be grateful to Providence
-for giving you this opportunity.”</p>
-
-<p>“Opportunity?”</p>
-
-<p>“To right the wrong that has been committed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I refer to Miss Lawrence’s parentage.”</p>
-
-<p>“One fails to see that her parentage is any business of
-yours or mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is certainly business of yours,” was the sardonic
-answer; “and it is going to be mine because I am determined
-that matters shall take their present course.
-Lady Muriel and I intend to marry, and Mr. Dinneford
-and Miss Lawrence ought to marry.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke gazed at him with an air of blank stupefaction.</p>
-
-<p>“I invite you to give the matter very careful consideration.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
-Sir Dugald had constrained a harsh accent to
-the point of mellowness. “Let me say at once that if
-you don’t withdraw your opposition it is in my power
-to make myself rather unpleasant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nature has relieved you of any obligation in that
-matter. You are the most unpleasant man I have ever
-had to do with.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me outline the position.” The mellifluous note
-spurred his Grace to fury. “Mr. Dinneford and Miss
-Lawrence, Lady Muriel and I are determined to marry
-and we must have your consent.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if I don’t give it?” The tone matched the truculent
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I may be tempted to use my knowledge in a way
-which will be much more disagreeable than the things
-you wish to prevent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do I understand this to be a threat?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Dugald smiled darkly.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well!” Defiance and resentment rode the Duke
-very hard. “Use your knowledge as you like. You are
-a scoundrel.”</p>
-
-<p>“A hard name.” Again the Duke was met by a saturnine
-Scottish smile. “But my motives are sound.”</p>
-
-<p>“So are mine.” The Duke’s voice shook with fury.
-“If you are not careful I will have you put out of the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are not living in the Middle Ages, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>“More’s the pity. I’d have found a short way with
-you then, my friend. Your wanting to marry Muriel
-is bad enough, your interference with Dinneford is an
-outrage.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In the circumstances I feel it to be my duty to do
-what I can in an exceedingly delicate matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Self-interest, sir, that’s all your duty amounts to.”
-But the Duke was now thoroughly alarmed, and he saw
-that recrimination was not going to help him. “Tell
-me,” he said in a tone more conciliatory than he had yet
-used, “exactly on what ground you are standing?”</p>
-
-<p>“In the first place, there is a very remarkable family
-likeness.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you base your allegation upon a mere conjecture
-of that kind!” said the Duke scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Upon far more than that, believe me. I have very
-strong and direct evidence which at the present moment
-I prefer not to disclose.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke paused at this bold statement. He turned
-a basilisk’s eye upon his adversary, but Sir Dugald
-offered a mask, behind which, as his Grace well knew,
-lurked unlimited depth and cunning. One thing was
-clear: a man of this kidney was not likely to venture
-such a <i>coup</i> without having carefully weighed his resources.
-In any case there cannot be smoke unless there
-is fire. A certain amount of knowledge must be in the
-possession of Maclean; the question was how much, and
-what use was he prepared to make of it?</p>
-
-<p>“Do I understand,” said the Duke after a moment of
-deep thought, “that you have spoken of this matter to
-Mr. Dinneford?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have not yet done so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or to Miss Lawrence?”</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;nor to Mrs. Sanderson.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke’s look of concentration at the mention of
-that name was not lost upon Sir Dugald. It had the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
-effect of hardening the ironical smile which for some
-little time now had hung round his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“May I ask you,” said the Duke with the air of a man
-pretty badly hipped, “not to speak of this matter to anyone
-until there has been an opportunity for further discussion?”</p>
-
-<p>The abrupt change in the tone confessed a moral weakness
-which Sir Dugald was quick to notice. But he fell
-in with the suggestion, with a show of ready magnanimity
-for which the Duke could have slain him. There was
-no wish to cause avoidable unpleasantness. Sir Dugald
-was good enough to say that it was in the interests of
-all parties that the skeleton should be kept in the cupboard.
-The matter was bound to give pain to a number
-of innocent people, and if the Duke, even at the eleventh
-hour, would be reasonable he might depend upon it that
-Sir Dugald Maclean would be only too happy to follow
-his example.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>Upon the retirement of the unwelcome visitor, the
-Duke gave himself up to a state of irritation verging on
-fury. Unprepared for this new turn of the game, taken
-at a complete disadvantage by a man of few scruples
-and diabolical cleverness, he was now horribly smitten by
-a sense of having said things he ought not to have said.
-On one point he was clear. In the shock of the unforeseen
-he had yielded far too much to the impact of a
-scoundrel.</p>
-
-<p>The position seen as a whole was one of very grave
-difficulty, and the instinct now dominating his mind was
-to seek a port against a storm which threatened at any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-moment to burst upon him. It was of vital importance
-that certain facts should be kept from certain people;
-otherwise there could be little doubt that the private
-cosmos of Albert John, fifth Duke of Bridport, would
-fall about his ears.</p>
-
-<p>Alone with his fluttered thoughts, the Duke spent a
-bad half-hour trying to marshal them in battle array.
-Face to face with a situation dangerous, disagreeable,
-unforeseen, it would call for much tactical skill to fend
-off disaster. Never in his life had he found it so hard
-to choose a line of action. At last, the prey of doubt,
-he rang for Harriet Sanderson.</p>
-
-<p>She came to him at once and he told her promptly of
-Sir Dugald’s visit. And then, his eyes on her face, he
-went on to tell her there was reason to fear that a secret
-had been penetrated which he had always been led to
-believe was known only to her and to himself.</p>
-
-<p>Watching her narrowly while he spoke he saw his
-words go home. She stood a picture of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if the man really can know all?” he said
-finally.</p>
-
-<p>At first she made no attempt to answer the question;
-but after a while, in a low, rather frightened voice, she
-said, “I don’t think he can know possibly.”</p>
-
-<p>He searched her troubled eyes, almost as if he doubted.
-“Perhaps you will tell me this.” He spoke in a tone of
-growing anxiety. “Would you say there is anything like
-a marked family resemblance?”</p>
-
-<p>“A very strong one, I’m afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is confined, I hope, to the picture at the top of the
-stairs?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no&mdash;at least to my mind&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“She has her father’s eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very interesting to know that.” The Duke laughed,
-but it was a curious note in which there was not a grain
-of mirth. “Yet, even assuming that to be the case, it
-would take a bold man to jump to such a conclusion.
-Surely he would need better ground to go upon.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to say he has much more than a mere
-likeness to help him.” As Harriet spoke the bright color
-ran from neck to brow. “He happened to be at my
-brother-in-law’s on the evening the child was first
-brought to the house.”</p>
-
-<p>That simple fact was far more than the Duke had
-bargained for. A look of dismay came upon him, he
-shook an ominous head. “It throws a new light on the
-matter,” he said, after a pause, painful in its intensity.
-“Now tell me this&mdash;did he see the child?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes!”</p>
-
-<p>“That helps him to put two and two together at any
-rate.” A look of tragic concern came into his face.
-“What an amazing world!”</p>
-
-<p>She agreed that the world was amazing. And in spite
-of the strange unhappiness in her eyes she could not help
-smiling a little as a surge of memories came upon her.
-She sighed softly, even tenderly as she made the confession.
-“To my mind, Sir Dugald Maclean is one of the
-most amazing men in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you any particular reason for saying that?”&mdash;The
-gaze was disconcerting in its keenness&mdash;“apart, I
-mean, from the mere obvious facts of his career?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is simply that I have watched him rise,” said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span>
-Harriet, between a smile and a sigh. “When I knew
-him first he was a London policeman.”</p>
-
-<p>“How in the world did he persuade Scotland Yard to
-part with him?” scoffed his Grace. “One would have
-thought such a fellow would have been worth his weight
-in gold.”</p>
-
-<p>She could not repress a laugh which to herself seemed
-to verge on irreverence. “My brother-in-law says he
-soon convinced them he was far too ambitious for the
-Metropolitan Police Force.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say so!”</p>
-
-<p>“And then he studied the law and got into parliament.”</p>
-
-<p>“And made his fortune by backing a downtrodden
-people against a vile aristocracy.” The Duke’s smile was
-so sour that it became a grimace. “In other words a
-self-made man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes&mdash;entirely!” The sudden generous warmth
-of admiration in Harriet’s tone surprised the Duke.
-“When one considers the enormous odds against him and
-what he has been able to do at the age of forty-two,
-it seems only right to think of him as wonderful.”</p>
-
-<p>“Personally,” said his Grace, “I prefer to regard him
-as an unscrupulous scoundrel.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet dissented with a smile. “A great man,” she
-said softly.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us leave it at a very dangerous man. He is a
-real menace, not only to us, but to the country. Anyhow,
-we have now to see that he doesn’t bring down the
-house about our ears.”</p>
-
-<p>There was something in the tone that swept the color
-from Harriet’s face. “That I realize.” Her voice
-trembled painfully. “Oh, I do hope he has not mentioned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
-the matter to Mary.” And she plucked at her
-dress in sudden alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, I think,” said the Duke venomously. “He
-is too sure a hand to spring his mine before the time
-is ripe. Meanwhile we are forearmed; let us take every
-precaution against him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, we must!” Her eyes were tragic.</p>
-
-<p>“A devilish mischance,” said the Duke slowly, “a devilish
-mischance that he, of all men, has been able to hit
-the trail.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">VI</p>
-
-<p>When Harriet had gone from the room, the Duke
-surrendered again to his thoughts. By now they were
-almost intolerable. Pulled this way and that by a conflict
-of emotion that was cruel, he was brought more than
-once to the verge of a decision he had not the courage to
-make. The situation was forcing it upon him, yet so
-much was involved, so much was at stake that a weak
-man at bottom, he was ready to grasp at anything which
-held a slender hope of putting off the evil day. Two
-interests were vitally opposed; he sought to do justice to
-both, yet as far as he could see at the moment, any
-reconciliation between them was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>He was in a state of bitter, ever-growing embarrassment,
-when Jack was unexpectedly announced.</p>
-
-<p>His Grace was not able to detach himself sufficiently
-from the maelstrom within to observe the hue of resolution
-in the bearing of a rather unwelcome visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, sir,” said the young man coolly, with
-an aloofness that came near to sarcasm. And then in
-a tone of very simple matter of fact, he said, “I have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
-merely called to ask if you will give a formal consent to
-my marrying Mary Lawrence.”</p>
-
-<p>From the particular way in which the question was
-put it was easy to deduce an ultimatum. But it came at
-an unlucky moment. So delicately was the Duke poised
-between two contending forces, that a point-blank demand
-was quite enough to turn the scale. His Grace
-replied at once that he was not in a position to give
-consent.</p>
-
-<p>Jack was prepared for a refusal. The nature of the
-case had made it seem inevitable. But there and then
-he issued a ukase. His kinsman should have a week in
-which to think over the matter. And if in that time the
-Duke did not change his mind he would return to Canada.</p>
-
-<p>The threat was taken very coolly, but his Grace was
-far more concerned by it than he allowed Jack to see.
-In fact, he was very much annoyed. Here was an end
-to the plan which had been formed for the general
-welfare of Bridport House. Such conduct was inconsiderate,
-tiresome, irrational. But it was not merely the
-inconvenience it was bound to cause which was so
-troublesome. There was still the other aspect of the
-case. He could not rid himself of the feeling that a
-cruel injustice was being done to an innocent and defenseless
-person, and that the whole blame of it must lie
-at his own door.</p>
-
-<p>He had been given a week in which to think the matter
-over, in which to examine it in all its bearings. Just
-now he was not in a mood to urge the least objection to
-Jack’s departure; all the same one frankly an autocrat
-resented it deeply. Let the fellow go and be damned to
-him! But in spite of the philosophic air with which he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span>
-sent the young fool about his business, his Grace realized
-as soon as he was alone that it was quite impossible to
-shut his eyes to certain facts. Vital issues were involved
-and it was no use shirking them. Even if he had now
-made up his mind to steel his heart against gross and
-rather brutal injustice, so that the common weal might
-prosper, nothing could alter the human aspect of a matter
-that galled him bitterly.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-A BOMB</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">I</span>t</span> is a bad business, no doubt, when a statesman
-stoops to sentiment. Unluckily for the Duke, now
-that a brain cool and clear was needed in a critical
-hour, it had become miserably overclouded by a sense of
-chivalry. It was very inconvenient. Never in his life
-had he found a decision so hard to reach, and even when
-it had been arrived at he could not dismiss the girl from
-his mind. She had impressed him in such a remarkable
-way that it was impossible to forget her.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond all things a man of the world, one fact stood
-out with exemplary clearness. If this girl could have
-been taken upon her merits she would have been an
-almost ideal mate for the heir to Bridport House. She
-had shown such a delicate regard for his welfare, so right
-had been her feeling in the whole affair, that, even apart
-from mere justice, it seemed wrong to exclude her from
-a circle she could not fail to grace. In the matter of
-Bridport House her instinct was so divinely right that
-no girl in the land was more naturally fitted to help a
-tiro through his novitiate.</p>
-
-<p>A sad coil truly! And Jack had gone but a very few<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-minutes, when the matter took another and wholly unexpected
-turn. The prelude to a historic incident was the
-appearance of Sarah on the scene.</p>
-
-<p>The eldest flower, the light of battle in her gray eyes,
-was plainly bent on mischief. So much was clear as
-soon as she came into the room. She had not been able
-to forgive her father for revoking Mrs. Sanderson’s
-notice. It had been a wanton dashing of the cup from
-lips but little used to victory; and the act had served
-to embitter a situation which by now was almost unbearable.</p>
-
-<p>Sarah had come of fell purpose, but before playing her
-great <i>coup</i>, she opened lightly in the manner of a skirmisher.
-Muriel, it seemed, was the topic that had brought
-her there; at any rate, it was the topic on which she
-began, masking with some astuteness the one so much
-more sinister that lay behind.</p>
-
-<p>“Father, I suppose you know that Muriel has quite
-made up her mind to get married?”</p>
-
-<p>“So I gather.” Detachment could hardly have been
-carried farther.</p>
-
-<p>“Such a pity,” Sarah lightly pursued, “but I’m afraid
-there’s nothing to be done. She was always obstinate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Always a fool,” muttered his Grace.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been discussing the matter with Aunt Charlotte.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke nodded, but his portentous eyes asked Sarah
-not to claim one moment more of his time than the circumstances
-rendered absolutely necessary.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Charlotte feels very strongly that it will be wise
-for you to give your consent.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” The Duke yawned, but the look in his face
-was not of the kind that goes with mere boredom. “Any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>
-specific ground for the suggestion?” He scanned Sarah
-narrowly, with heavily-lidded eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“On general grounds only, I believe.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke was more than a little relieved, but he was
-content to express the fact by transferring his gaze to
-the book-rest in front of him.</p>
-
-<p>“She thinks it will be in the interests of everyone to
-make the best of a most tiresome and humiliating business.
-And, after all, he is certain to be Prime Minister
-within the next ten years.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who tells you that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Last night at dinner I met Harry Truscott, and that’s
-his prediction. He says Sir Dugald Maclean is the big
-serpent that swallows all the little serpents.”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncommonly true!” His Grace made a wry mouth.
-“Still, that’s hardly a reason why we should receive the
-reptile here.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course. I quite agree. But Aunt Charlotte
-thinks there is nothing to gain by standing out. Muriel
-has quite made up her foolish mind. So the dignified
-thing seems to be to make the best of a miserable
-business.”</p>
-
-<p>“It may be,” said his Grace. “But personally I should
-be grateful if Charlotte would mind her own affairs.”</p>
-
-<p>The tone implied quite definitely that he had no wish
-to pursue the topic; nay, it even invited Sarah to make
-an end of their talk and to go away as soon as possible.
-Clearly he was far from understanding that it was little
-more than a red herring across the trail of a sinister
-intention. But the fact was revealed to him by her next
-remarks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, by the way, father,” she said casually, or at least
-with a lightness of tone that was misleading, “there’s one
-other matter. I’ve been thinking the situation out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Situation!” groped his Grace.</p>
-
-<p>“That has been created.” Sarah’s tone was almost
-infantile&mdash;“by your insisting that Mrs. Sanderson should
-stay on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it, what of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It simply makes the whole thing impossible.” Sarah
-had achieved the voice of the dove. “So long as this
-woman remains in the house one feels that one cannot
-stay here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because”&mdash;Sarah fixed a deliberate eye on the face
-of her sire&mdash;“neither Aunt Charlotte nor I think that the
-present arrangement is quite seemly.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>The attack had been neatly launched, and she saw by
-the look on her father’s face that it had gone right home.
-She was a slow-witted, rather crass person, with a kind
-of heavy conceit of her own, but like all the other Dinneford
-ladies, at close quarters she was formidable. The
-button was off her foil. It was her intention to wound.
-And at the instant she struck, his Grace was unpleasantly
-aware of that fact.</p>
-
-<p>“What d’ye mean?” It was his recoil from the stroke.</p>
-
-<p>“I have talked over the matter with Aunt Charlotte.
-She agrees with me that the present arrangement is quite
-hopeless. And she thinks that as you are unwilling for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>
-Mrs. Sanderson to be sent away, the only course for
-Blanche, Marjorie, and myself is to leave the house.”</p>
-
-<p>The face of her father grew a shade paler, but for the
-moment that was the only expression of the inward fury.
-He saw at once that the dull fool who dared to beard
-him was no more than a cat’s-paw of the arch-schemer.
-The mine was Charlotte’s, even if fired by a hand infinitely
-less cunning.</p>
-
-<p>“Is this a threat?” The surge of his rage was hard
-to control.</p>
-
-<p>“You leave us no alternative,” said Sarah doughtily.
-“Aunt Charlotte thinks in the circumstances we shall be
-fully justified in going to live with her. I think so, too;
-and I don’t doubt that Blanche and Marjorie will see the
-matter in the same light.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think you will gain?” His voice shook
-with far more than vexation. “The proposal simply
-amounts to the washing of dirty linen in public.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is such a thing as personal dignity, father,”
-said Sarah in her driest tone.</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt; but how you are going to serve it by
-dancing to the piping of Charlotte I can’t for the life of
-me see.”</p>
-
-<p>Sarah, however, could see something else. The blow
-had met already with some success. And she was fully
-determined to follow up a first advantage.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, father”&mdash;her words were of warriorlike conciseness&mdash;“if
-you still insist on Mrs. Sanderson’s presence
-here, that is the course we intend to take.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” A futile monosyllable, yet at that moment full
-of meaning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>The ultimatum delivered, Sarah promptly retired.
-She took away from the interview a pleasing consciousness
-that the honors were with her. And this sense of
-nascent victory had not grown less by half-past one when
-she reached Hill Street in time to lunch with Aunt Charlotte.</p>
-
-<p>It was a rather cheerless and ascetic meal, but both
-ladies were in such excellent fighting trim that the
-meagerness of the fare didn’t matter. Sarah was sure
-that she had scored heavily. A well-planted bomb had
-wrought visible confusion in the ranks of the foe. “He
-sees that it places him in a most awkward position,” was
-her summary for the grim ears of the arch-plotter.</p>
-
-<p>“One knew it would.” There were times when Aunt
-Charlotte had a striking personal resemblance to Moltke;
-and just now, beyond a doubt, she bore an uncanny likeness
-to that successful Prussian.</p>
-
-<p>“He hates the idea of what he calls washing dirty linen
-in public.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lacks moral courage as usual.” The remark was
-made in an undertone to the coal-scuttle.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope&mdash;&mdash;.” But Sarah suddenly bit off the end of
-her sentence. After all, there are things one cannot
-discuss.</p>
-
-<p>“You hope what?” The eye of Aunt Charlotte fixed
-her like a kite.</p>
-
-<p>“No need to say what one hopes,” said Sarah dourly.</p>
-
-<p>“I agree.” Aunt Charlotte took a sip of hot water and
-munched a peptonized biscuit with a kind of savage glee.
-“But we have to remember that the ice is very thin. One<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span>
-has always felt that&mdash;well, you know what one means.
-One has felt sometimes that your father....”</p>
-
-<p>Sarah agreed. For more years than she cared to remember
-she....</p>
-
-<p>“Quite so,” Aunt Charlotte took another biscuit.
-“And everybody must know.... However, the time
-has now come to make an end.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sure it has,” said Sarah.</p>
-
-<p>“Still we are playing it up very high,” said the great
-tactician. “And we shall do well to remember....”</p>
-
-<p>“I agree,” said Sarah cryptically.</p>
-
-<p>Misgiving they might have, but just now the uppermost
-feeling was pride in their work and a secret satisfaction.
-There could be no doubt that the blow had gone home.
-At last they had taken the measure of his Grace, they
-had found his limit, the point had been reached beyond
-which he would not go.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Au fond</i> a coward,” Aunt Charlotte affirmed once
-more, for the benefit of the coal-scuttle. And then for
-the benefit of Sarah, with a ring of triumph, “Always
-sets too high a value on public opinion, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p>Such being the case the conspirators had every right
-to congratulate themselves. And as if to confirm their
-victory, there came presently by telephone a most urgent
-message from Mount Street. Charlotte was to go round
-at once.</p>
-
-<p>“There, what did I tell you!” said that lady. And she
-sublimely ordered her chariot.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>Enroute to Bridport House, the redoubtable Charlotte
-did not allow herself to question that the foe was at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>
-point of hauling down the flag. His hurry to do so was a
-little absurd, but it was so like him to throw up the sponge
-at the mere threat of publicity. This indecent haste to
-come to terms deepened a contempt which had lent a
-grim enjoyment to a long hostility.</p>
-
-<p>However, the reception in store for her ladyship in the
-smaller library did much to modify her views. She was
-received by her brother with an air of menace which almost
-verged upon truculence.</p>
-
-<p>“Charlotte”&mdash;there was a boldness of attack for which
-she was by no means prepared&mdash;“the time has now come
-to make an end of this comedy.”</p>
-
-<p>She fully agreed, yet the sixth sense given to woman
-found occasion to warn her that she didn’t know in the
-least to what she was agreeing.</p>
-
-<p>“You would have it so, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>He was asked succinctly to explain.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s a long story.” Already there was a note in
-the mordant voice which his sister heard for the first
-time. “A long, a strange, and if you will, a romantic
-story. And let me say that it is by no wish of my own
-that I tell it. However, Fate is stronger than we are
-in these little matters, and no doubt wiser.”</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt,” said Charlotte drily. But somehow that
-note in his voice made her uneasy, and the look in his
-face seemed to hold her every nerve in a vise. “You are
-speaking in riddles, my friend,” she added with a little
-flutter of impatience.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be so, but before I go on I want you clearly
-to understand that it is you, not I, who insist on bringing
-the roof down upon us.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte’s only reply was to sit very upright, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-her sarcastic mouth drawn in a rigid line. She could not
-understand in the least what her brother was driving
-at, but in his manner was a new, a strange intensity which
-somehow gave her a feeling of profound discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t realize what you are doing,” he said.
-“Still you are not to blame for that. But the time has
-come to pull aside the curtain, and to let you know what
-we all owe a woman who has been cruelly maligned.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte stiffened perceptibly at these words. After
-all, the case was no more and no less than for more
-than twenty years she had known it to be. Still open
-confession was good for the soul! It was a sordid
-intrigue, an intrigue of a nature which simply made her
-loathe the man opposite. How dare he&mdash;and with a
-servant in his own house! If looks could have slain,
-his Grace would have been spared the necessity to continue
-a very irksome narrative.</p>
-
-<p>“Make provision for her and send her away.” The
-sharp voice was like the crack of a gun.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke raised himself slowly and painfully on his
-elbows. “Hold your tongue,” he said. And his eyes
-struck at her. “Be good enough to forgo all comment
-until you have heard the whole story.”</p>
-
-<p>It was trying Charlotte highly, but she set herself determinedly
-to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember when she first came here, as second
-maid to poor Rachel, a fine, upstanding, gray-eyed Scots
-girl, one of the most beautiful creatures you ever saw?
-Do you remember her devotion? No, I see you have
-forgotten.” He closed his eyes for an instant, while the
-woman opposite kept hers fixed steadily upon him.
-“Well, I don’t excuse myself. But Rachel and I were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
-never happy; the plain truth is we ought not to have
-married. It was a family arrangement and it recoiled
-upon us. The Paringtons are an effete lot and the same
-can be said of us Dinnefords. Nature asked for something
-else.”</p>
-
-<p>Now that he had unlocked the doors of memory a
-growing emotion became too much for the Duke, and for
-a moment he could not go on. His sister, in the meantime,
-continued to hold him with pitiless eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“One might say,” he went on, “that it was the call
-of the blood. I remember her first as the factor’s
-daughter, a long-legged creature in a red tam-o’-shanter,
-running about the woods of Ardnaleuchan. You haven’t
-forgotten Donald Sanderson, the father?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t forgotten him,” said Charlotte.</p>
-
-<p>“That was a fine fellow. ‘Man Donald’ as our father
-used to call him, helped me to stalk my first stag. We
-ranged the woods together days on end. I sometimes
-think I owe more to that man than to any other human
-being.”</p>
-
-<p>Again he was silent, but the eyes of his sister never
-left his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it was the call of the blood.” He sighed as he
-passed his handkerchief over his face which was now
-gray and glistening. “As I say, Rachel and I ought
-not to have married; we didn’t suit each other. Our
-marriage was a family arrangement. It had almost
-ceased to be tolerable long before the end, but we kept
-our compact as well as we could, for we were determined
-that other people should not suffer. And then
-came Rachel’s long illness, and the girl’s wonderful devotion&mdash;do
-you remember how Rachel would rather have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
-her with her than any of the nurses? And then she
-died, and of course that altered everything.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave sat as if carved out of stone, her eyes
-still upon the bleak face of the invalid. “Is that all?”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it is not. There’s more to tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell it then so that we may have done with it.” Charlotte’s
-voice quivered.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well, since you insist.” The softness of the
-tone was surprising, yet to Charlotte it said nothing.
-“Rachel died and everything, as I say, was altered. ‘Man
-Donald’s’ daughter became the only woman who ever
-really meant anything to me. Somehow I felt I couldn’t
-do without her. And to make an end of a long and
-tedious story, finally I married her.”</p>
-
-<p>“You <i>married</i> her!” Lady Wargrave sat as if she
-had swallowed a poker.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but before doing so I made a condition. Things
-were to go on as they were, provided....”</p>
-
-<p>“... provided!” Excitement fought curiosity in
-Charlotte’s angry voice.</p>
-
-<p>“... she didn’t bring a boy into the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I don’t understand.” Charlotte’s voice
-cracked in the middle.</p>
-
-<p>“It was quite a simple arrangement, and in the circumstances
-it seemed the best. So long as there was no
-man child to complicate the thing unduly, the world
-was to be kept out of our secret. At the time it seemed
-wise and right to do that. Otherwise it would have
-meant a fearful upset for everybody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is one to understand,” gasped Charlotte, “that when
-Rachel died you actually married this&mdash;this woman?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Duke nodded. “But I made the condition that
-our secret should be rigidly guarded&mdash;always assuming
-that Fate did not prove too much for us. She went
-to the little house on the river at Buntisford, where
-I used to go for the fishing and shooting. And she gave
-me ten years of happiness&mdash;the only happiness I have
-known. And then came my breakdown, since when she
-has nursed me with more than a wife’s devotion.” His
-voice failed suddenly and he lay back in his chair with
-closed eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was left to Charlotte to break the irksome silence
-that followed.</p>
-
-<p>“How could you be so mad!” She spoke under her
-breath not intending her words to be heard, but a quick
-ear caught them.</p>
-
-<p>“Nay,” he said in the tone that was so new to her,
-“it was the only thing to do. It was the call of the
-blood. And this was a devoted woman, a woman one
-could trust implicitly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Madness, my friend, madness!”</p>
-
-<p>He shook his head somberly. “All life is a madness,
-if you will a divine madness. It is a madness that damns
-the consequences. By taking too much thought for the
-morrow we entomb ourselves. When Rachel died life
-meant for me the woman of my choice. And, Charlotte,
-let me say this”&mdash;he raised himself in his chair and
-looked at his sister fixedly&mdash;“she is the best woman I
-have ever known.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment she sat a picture of bewilderment, and
-then in a voice torn with emotion she said, “Out of regard
-for the others things had better go on as they are.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
-But perhaps you will tell me, are there any children of
-this marriage?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is one child.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte caught her breath sharply.</p>
-
-<p>“A girl. And in accordance with our compact she
-has been brought up in complete ignorance of her paternity.
-It seemed wise that she should know nothing.
-Her mother had her reared among her own people, because
-it was her mother’s express wish that the children
-of the first marriage should suffer no prejudice; and at
-the present time neither the girl herself nor the world
-at large is any the wiser.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte began to breathe a little more freely. “At
-all events,” she said, “that fact seems to confirm one’s
-opinion that things had better go on as they are.”</p>
-
-<p>But her brother continued to gaze at her with somber
-eyes. “Charlotte,” he said very slowly, “you have forced
-me to tell a story I had hoped would never be told in
-my lifetime. I have had to suffer your suspicions, but
-now that you are in the secret, you must share its responsibilities.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t understand you,” said Lady Wargrave bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>“I will explain. A horrible injustice has been done
-this girl, the child of the second marriage. So much
-is clear to you, no doubt?”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave’s only reply was to tighten her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“You wish me to be still more explicit?”</p>
-
-<p>She invited him to be so.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as far as I can I will be.” His air was simple
-matter of fact. “But I warn you that we are now at
-the point where we have to realize that Fate is so much
-stronger than ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span></p>
-
-<p>A momentary hesitation drew a harsh, “Go on, let me
-hear the worst.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you guess who this girl is?” he said abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, why should one?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is the girl Jack wants to marry.”</p>
-
-<p>A long silence followed this announcement. It would
-have been kind perhaps had he helped his sister to break
-it, but a clear perception of the first thought in her mind
-had raised a barrier. With a patience that was half-malicious
-he waited for a speech that he knew was bound
-to come.</p>
-
-<p>“It was to have been expected,” she said at last with
-something perilously like a snarl of subdued anger.</p>
-
-<p>“Why expected?” They were the words for which he
-had waited, and he seized them promptly.</p>
-
-<p>“She has been too much for you, my friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whom do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“The mother, of course. She has planned this marriage
-so that she might be revenged upon us here.”</p>
-
-<p>He was quite ready to do Charlotte the justice of allowing
-that it was the only view she was likely to hold. The
-pressure of mere facts was too heavy. Words of his
-would be powerless against them; and yet he was determined
-to use every means at his command to clear
-that suspicion from her mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you will believe me when I tell you she is
-entirely innocent,” he said in a voice of sudden emotion.</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte slowly shook her head, but it was a gesture
-of defeat. She was beyond malice now.</p>
-
-<p>“Charlotte, I give you my word that she had no part
-in it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p>
-
-<p>His sister looked at him pityingly. “It is impossible
-to believe that,” she said without bitterness.</p>
-
-<p>“So I see. But it is my duty to convince you.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he fought a growing emotion, and then
-his mind suddenly made up, he pressed the button of the
-electric bell that was near his elbow.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>The familiar summons was answered by Harriet herself.
-As she came into the room her rather scared eyes
-were caught at once by the profile of the dowager. But
-the reception in store for her was far from being of
-the kind she had reason to expect, for which she had
-had too little time to prepare.</p>
-
-<p>To begin with Lady Wargrave rose to receive her.
-And that stately and considered act was supplemented
-by the simple words of the Duke.</p>
-
-<p>“She knows everything,” he said from the depths of
-his invalid chair, without a suspicion of theatricality.</p>
-
-<p>Harriet, all the color struck from her face, shrank back,
-a picture of horror and timidity.</p>
-
-<p>“Sit down, my dear, and let us hold a little family
-council.” That note of intimacy and affection was so
-strange in Charlotte’s ear, that it hit her almost as hard
-as the previous words had hit the wife of his bosom.
-However, the two ladies sat, and the Duke with a nonchalance
-that hardly seemed credible, went on in a
-quietly domestic voice, as he turned to Harriet again.
-“We shall value your help and advice, if you feel inclined
-to give it, in this matter of Mary and the young
-man Dinneford.”</p>
-
-<p>At this amazing speech Lady Wargrave stirred uneasily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span>
-on her cushion of thorns. She breathed hard, her
-mordant mouth grew set, in her grim eyes were unutterable
-things.</p>
-
-<p>“One moment, Johnnie,” she interposed. “Does Mrs.&mdash;er
-Sanderson quite understand what it means to us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly,” he said, “no one better.” The depth of
-the tone expressed far more than those dry words. “It
-may help matters,” he added, turning to Harriet again,
-“if I say at once that we are going to ask you to make
-two decisions in the name of the people you have served
-so long and so faithfully. And the first is this: Since,
-as you will see I have been forced, much against my will,
-to let a third person into our secret, you have now the
-opportunity of taking your true position in the sight of
-the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave shivered. Somehow this was a turn
-of the game she had not been able to foresee.</p>
-
-<p>“That is to say,” the Duke went on, “you have now,
-as far as I am concerned, full liberty to assume your true
-style and dignity as mistress here. For more than twenty
-years you have sacrificed yourself for others, but the
-time has now come when you need do so no longer.
-What do you say?”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet did not speak. Lady Wargrave was silent
-also, but a kind of stony horror was freezing her. The
-whole situation had become so fantastic that she felt the
-inadequacy of her emotions.</p>
-
-<p>“You shall have a perfectly free hand,” the Duke went
-on. “Assume your position now, and good care shall
-be taken that you are amply maintained in it. What do
-you say, my dear?” he added gently.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span></p>
-
-<p>Tears were melting her now, and she was unable to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, think it over,” said his Grace. “And be assured
-that whichever course you take, it will be the right
-one. We owe you more than we can repay. However,
-that is only one issue, and there is another, which is
-hardly less important.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave stirred again on her cushion. For a
-moment there was not a sound to be heard in the room.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” the Duke went on, “I’ve been giving
-anxious thought to&mdash;to this girl of ours. And I really
-don’t see, having regard to all the circumstances, why
-justice should any longer be denied her. No matter who
-the man is, he is lucky to get her. And, as I understand,
-they are a very devoted couple.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, they are!” The words were Harriet’s and
-they were uttered in a tone broken by emotion.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you shall make the decision,” he said. “You
-know, of course, how the matter stands.” Harriet
-bowed her head in assent, and his Grace turned an eye
-bright with malice upon the Dowager. “You see, Charlotte,
-this girl of ours, brought up in a very humble
-way, and left to fight her own battle, under the providence
-of the good God, absolutely declines to come
-among us unless she has the full and free consent of the
-head of the clan. So far that consent has not been given,
-and if in the course of the next week it is not forthcoming,
-the young man Dinneford threatens to return
-to Canada.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see.” The walls of Charlotte’s world had fallen in,
-her deepest feelings had been outraged, but she was still
-perfect mistress of herself. She turned her hard eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
-upon Harriet, but in them now was a look very different
-from the one that had been wont to regard the housekeeper.</p>
-
-<p>Much had happened in a very little time, but to the
-last a fine tactician, Charlotte had contrived to keep her
-head. She was in the presence of calamity, she had met
-a blow that would have broken a weaker person in
-pieces, but already a line of action was formed in her
-mind. One thing alone could save them, and that the
-continued goodwill of the woman they had so long misjudged
-and traduced.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Sanderson”&mdash;she used the old name unconsciously&mdash;“we
-owe you a great deal.” It was not easy
-to make the admission, even if common justice rather
-than policy called for it. “I hope now you will let us
-add to the debt.”</p>
-
-<p>The Duke was forced to admire the dignity and the
-directness of the appeal. He knew how hard she had
-been hit. But that was not all. Marking his sister’s
-tone, intently watching her grim face, he saw how completely
-her attitude had changed. The other woman had
-conquered, but in spite of all he had suffered at the
-hands of Charlotte, it was difficult not to feel a certain
-respect as well as a certain pity for her in the hour of
-her defeat.</p>
-
-<p>By this, Harriet, too, had become mistress of herself.
-She, also, had suffered much, but she had never played
-for victory, and she was very far from the thought of it
-now. “I have but one wish,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“And that is?” His tone was strangely gentle for
-her voice had failed suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>“To do what is right.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span></p>
-
-<p>The simplicity of the words held them silent. Brother
-and sister looked at her with a kind of awe in their eyes.
-It was as if another world had opened to their rather
-bewildered gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to do right to those who have been so good to
-me, and to my father and my grandfather before me.”</p>
-
-<p>Somehow that speech, gentleness itself, yet sharp as
-a sword, brought the blood to Lady Wargrave’s face.
-In a flash she saw and felt the justification of her
-brother’s amazing deed. This devoted woman in her selflessness
-held the master key to life and Fate; in a flash
-of insight she saw that groundlings and grovelers like
-themselves were powerless before it. Somehow those
-words, that bearing, solved the mystery. She could no
-longer blame her brother; he had been caught in the toils
-of an irresistible force.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Sanderson”&mdash;there was reverence now in the
-harsh voice&mdash;“you are the best judge of what is right.
-We are content to leave the matter to your discretion.”
-Even if the accomplished tactician was uppermost in
-Charlotte’s words, in the act of uttering them was a large
-rather noble simplicity.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke nodded acquiescence.</p>
-
-<p>“I should like the present arrangement to go on,” said
-Harriet. “Perhaps the truth will have to be known
-some time, but let it come out after we are dead, when
-it can hurt nobody.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave drew a long breath of relief and gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very wise,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>But the Duke took her up at once with a saturnine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-smile. “You seem to forget, Charlotte, that the existing
-arrangement can no longer go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pray, why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have just been kind enough to tell us,” he said
-bitingly, “that Sarah and the girls are going to live with
-you at Hill Street&mdash;except, of course, on one condition!”</p>
-
-<p>Their eyes met. Suddenly they smiled frostily at each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>“If you care to leave the matter to me,” said Charlotte,
-“I will see to that.”</p>
-
-<p>“But that woman, Sarah,” he persisted. “She’s so
-obstinate that we may have to tell her.”</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte shook her head doughtily. “I think I shall
-be able to manage her.”</p>
-
-<p>“So be it.” He smiled grimly. “Anyhow we shall be
-very glad to leave that matter in your hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“With perfect safety, I think you may do that.” And
-Charlotte, sore and embittered as she was, rounded off
-this comfortable assurance with a long sigh of relief.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-ARDORS AND ENDURANCES</h2></div>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">“T</span>here,</span>” cried Mary upon a note of triumph.</p>
-
-<p>An excited wave of that delightful journal, the
-<i>Morning Post</i>, accompanied the pæan. And then
-it was hurled across the breakfast-table with deft precision
-into the lap of Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“A marriage has been arranged,” said the courier of
-Hymen, “and will shortly take place between Charles,
-only son of the late Simeon Cheesewright and Mrs.
-Cheesewright, of Streatham Hill, and Mildred Ulrica,
-younger daughter of the late H. Blandish Wren and Mrs.
-Wren, 5, Victoria Mansions, Broad Place, Knightsbridge,
-W.”</p>
-
-<p>Again arose the triumphant cry.</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Wren, excavating the interior of a boiled
-egg, felt it to be her duty to check this unbridled enthusiasm.
-For some days past, with rather mournful
-iteration, she had let it be known that the impending
-announcement could not hope to receive her unqualified
-approval.</p>
-
-<p>In the first place, as she frankly admitted, the Marquis
-had spoiled her. She had to confess that he had proved<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>
-sadly lacking in backbone when brought to the test, but
-his sternest critics could not deny that “before everything
-he was a gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wren ascribed her own pure taste in manhood
-to the fact that she had begun her career in the legitimate
-drama under the ægis of Mr. Painswick at the Theater
-Royal, Edinburgh. He, too, had been before everything
-a gentleman. Mr. Painswick had shaped Lydia Mifflin,
-as she was then, in his own inimitable mold. Upon a
-day she was to play Grace to his Digby Grant in “The
-Two Roses.” Then it was, as she had always felt, that
-she had touched her high-water mark; and the signal
-occasion was ever afterwards a beacon in her life. From
-that bright hour the Mr. Painswick standard had regulated
-the fair Lydia’s survey of the human male. Even
-the late lamented Mr. H. Blandish Wren, who was without
-a peer in “straight” comedy, whose Steggles in “London
-Assurance” had never been surpassed, even that paladin&mdash;&mdash;.
-Still it isn’t quite fair to give away State
-secrets!</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Wren had once said of Charles Cheesewright
-“that he was not out of the top drawer.” However, if
-he was not of the caste of Vere de Vere she had to own
-that “he had points.” He was one of those young men
-who mean more than they say, who do better than they
-promise, who clothe their thoughts with actions rather
-than words. Also, he had two motors&mdash;a Daimler and
-a Rolls-Royce, he had rooms in the Albany, and though
-perhaps just a little inclined to overdress, he had such
-a sure taste in jewelry that he took his fiancée once a
-week to Cartier’s. And beyond everything else, he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
-the supreme advantage over my lord that he knew his
-own mind pretty clearly.</p>
-
-<p>In the opinion of Princess Bedalia, Milly was an extremely
-lucky girl. Her young man was a simple, good
-fellow, honest as the day, he was incapable of any kind
-of meanness, he was very rich, and, what was hardly
-less important, he was very much in love. Milly, however,
-who had her mother’s knack of seeing men and
-events objectively, did not yield a final graceful assent
-until she extorted a promise from Mr. Charles that he
-would suffer the rape of his mustache, at the best a mere
-scrub of an affair, and that he would solemnly eschew
-yellow plush hats which made him look like a piano-tuner.</p>
-
-<p>Still, on this heroic morning, in the middle of July,
-Mrs. Wren seemed less pleased with the world than she
-had reason to be. She did some sort of justice to her
-egg, but she wouldn’t look at the marmalade. If the
-truth must be told, a rather histrionic mind was still
-haunted by the shade of the noble Marquis. As Milly,
-in one of her moments of engaging candor, had told
-Mary already, as far as her mother was concerned Wrexham
-had simply queered the pitch for everybody.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly that lady felt it to be her duty to rebuke
-Mary’s enthusiasm. There was nothing to make a song
-about. Milly was simply throwing herself away. If
-everyone had had their rights, she would have been Lady
-W., with a coronet on her notepaper. As it was, there
-was really nothing so very wonderful in being the wife
-of an overdressed tobacconist.</p>
-
-<p>Mary cried “Shame,” and for her pains was sternly
-admonished. One who has made such hay of her own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>
-dazzling matrimonial chances must not venture to say a
-word. She who might have queened it among the highest
-in the land merely by substituting the big word “Yes”
-for the small word “No” must forever hold her peace on
-this vexed subject. But Mary was in such wild spirits
-at the announcement in the <i>Morning Post</i> that she refused
-to be browbeaten. She continued to sing the
-praises of “Charley” in spite of the clear annoyance of
-Mrs. Wren. The good lady was unable to realize that
-the girl was trying with might and main to stifle an ache
-that was almost intolerable.</p>
-
-<p>“What ho!” Milly suddenly exclaimed, withdrawing
-a slightly <i>retroussé</i> but decidedly charming nose from
-Page 5 of the <i>Morning Post</i>, “so they’ve actually made
-Uncle Jacob a Bart.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, you mean a baronet. Who?&mdash;made who
-a baronet?” Mrs. Wren laid down an imperious egg-spoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Jacob Cheesewright, Esquire, M.P. for Bradbury, a
-rich manufacturer and prominent philanthropist. He’s
-in the honor list just issued by the King’s government.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!” Mary indulged in an enthusiastic wave
-of the tea-pot which happily was rather less than half
-full. “Which means, my dear Miss Wren, that one of
-these days there’s just a chance of your being my lady.”</p>
-
-<p>“As though that could possibly matter!” cried Milly
-upon a note of the finest scorn imaginable.</p>
-
-<p>“As though that could possibly matter!” Mary’s reproduction
-of the note in question was so humorously
-exact that it sent her victim into a fit of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Wren had her word to say on the subject. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
-her opinion, which was that of all sensible people, it mattered
-immensely.</p>
-
-<p>“As though it could!” persisted Milly.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear,” said Mrs. Wren, “that is shallow and ignorant.
-A baronetcy is a baronetcy. All people of
-breeding think so, anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>The prospect of Uncle Jacob’s elevation had already
-been canvassed in Broad Place by Charles, his nephew.
-There was evidently something in the wind Whitehall
-way. Uncle Jacob had professed such a heroic indifference
-to Aunt Priscilla’s intelligent anticipations, that
-even Charles, his nephew, the simplest of simple souls,
-and a singularly unworldly young man, had been constrained
-to take an interest in the matter. As for Aunt
-Priscilla, she had been in such a state of flutter for the
-past two months, that the upper servants at Thole Park,
-Maidstone, even had visions of an earldom. Still, as
-Mr. Bryant, the butler, who in his distinguished youth
-had graduated at Bridport House, Mayfair, remarked to
-Mrs. Jennings the housekeeper in his statesmanlike way,
-“The Limit for baby’s underclothing is a baronetcy.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>Breakfast was just at an end when the trim parlormaid
-came into the room with a portentous-looking
-milliner’s box. It had that moment arrived, and on examination
-was found to contain a long coat of sable.
-This enchanting garment was with Mary’s best wishes
-for future happiness.</p>
-
-<p>The donor was scolded roundly for her lavishness, but
-Milly was delighted by the gift, and Mrs. Wren, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
-had professed a stern determination to be no longer
-friends with Mary was rather touched. She well knew
-that she was a person “to bank on.” Besides, Mrs. Wren
-had an honest admiration for a fine talent and the unassumingness
-with which it was worn. She was incapable
-of making an enemy, for her one idea was to
-bring pleasure to other people. If ever human creature
-had been designed for happiness it must have been this
-girl, yet none could have been more fully bent on casting
-it willfully away.</p>
-
-<p>As a fact, both Milly and her mother had been much
-troubled by the course of recent events. The previous
-afternoon Jack had taken a sad farewell of his friends
-in Broad Place. His passage was already booked in the
-<i>Arcadia</i>, which that very Saturday was to sail from
-Liverpool to New York. All his hopes had proved futile,
-all his arguments vain. Mary could not be induced to
-change her mind, which even at the eleventh hour he had
-ventured to think was just possible. In those last desperate
-moments, strength of will had enabled her to stick
-to her resolve. And in the absence of any intimation
-from Bridport House the Tenderfoot had been driven
-to carry out his threat. Yet up till the very last he had
-tried his utmost to persuade the girl he loved to merge
-her own life in his and accompany him to that new world
-where a career awaited him.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps these efforts had not been wholly reasonable.
-She had a real vocation for the theater if ever girl had,
-even if he had a real vocation for jobbing land. But
-allowance has to be made for a strong man in love. He
-was in sorry case, poor fellow, but her sense of duty to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-others was so strong, that even if it meant tragic unhappiness
-for both, as it surely must, she still sought
-the courage not to yield.</p>
-
-<p>Such a decision was going to cost a very great deal.
-The previous afternoon, at the moment of parting,
-she had been fully aware of that, and hour by hour
-since she had realized it with a growing intensity. A
-stern effort of the will had been needed for Princess
-Bedalia to achieve her five hundred-and-sixty-second appearance
-that evening; she had spent a miserable night
-and now, in spite of the whole-heartedness with which
-she threw herself into Milly’s affairs, her laugh was
-pitched a little too high.</p>
-
-<p>Since the visit to Bridport House she had come to
-know her own mind quite definitely. She was deeply in
-love with Jack, but unless the powers that were gave
-consent, she was now resolved never to marry him. In
-vain her friends continued to assure her that such an
-attitude was wrong. In vain the Tenderfoot declared
-it to be simply preposterous. Cost what it might, it had
-become a point of honor not to yield. To one of such
-clear vision, with, as it seemed, a rather uncanny insight
-into the workings of worlds beyond her own, it was
-of vital importance to study the interests of Bridport
-House.</p>
-
-<p>Milly, even if very angry with her friend, could not
-help admiring this devotion to a quixotic sense of right,
-and the force of character which faced the issue so unflinchingly.
-She could not begin to understand the point
-of view, but she well knew what it was going to cost.
-And this morning, in spite of the pleasant and piquant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span>
-drama of her own affairs, she could not rid herself of a
-feeling of distress on Mary’s account. Now it had come
-“to footing the bill,” a heavy price would have to be
-paid. And to Milly’s shrewd, engagingly material mind,
-the whole situation was exasperating.</p>
-
-<p>So much for the thoughts uppermost in a loyal heart,
-while the misguided cause of them danced a <i>pas seul</i> in
-honor of the morning’s news. Milly, indeed, as she
-gazed in the glass over the chimney-piece to see what
-sort of a figure she made in the coat of sable, was much
-nearer tears than was either seemly or desirable. Still,
-in spite of that, she was able to muster a healthy curiosity
-upon the subject of her appearance. Fur has a
-trick of making common people look more common, and
-uncommon people look more uncommon, a trite fact of
-which Milly, the astute, was well aware. It was pleasant
-to find at any rate that a moment’s fleeting survey set all
-her doubts at rest upon that important point. The coat,
-a dream of beauty, became her quite miraculously. What
-a virtue there was in that deep, rich gloss! It gave new
-values to the eyes, the hair, the rounded chin, even the
-piquant nose of the wearer.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a dear!” Milly burst out, as she turned aside
-from the glass. But the person to whom the tribute was
-offered was quite absorbed in looking through the open
-window. Indeed, at that very moment a succession of
-royal toots from a motor horn ascended from the precincts
-of Broad Place, and Mary ran out on to the
-veranda with a view halloa. Then, her face full of
-humor and eloquence, she turned to look back into the
-room with the thrilling announcement: “Charley’s here!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>In two minutes, or rather less as time is measured in
-Elysium, Mr. Charles Cheesewright had entered that
-pleasant room with all the gay assurance of an accepted
-suitor.</p>
-
-<p>“How awfully well it reads, doesn’t it?” he said, taking
-up the <i>Morning Post</i> with the fingers of a lover.</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Jacob’s baronetcy?” said Mary, with an eye of
-bold mischief.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no! That’s a bit of a bore,” said Mr. Charles
-with a polite grimace.</p>
-
-<p>“Why a bore?”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Jacob has no heir and he’s trying to arrange
-for me to be the second bart.”</p>
-
-<p>Princess Bedalia looked with a royal air at her favorite.
-“The truth is, dear Charles, you are shamelessly pleased
-about the whole matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, ye-es, I am.” Charles was hopelessly cornered,
-but like any other self-respecting Briton he was quite
-determined to put as good a face as possible upon a most
-damaging admission. “I am so awfully pleased for
-Milly. And, of course, for Uncle Jacob.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not to mention Aunt Priscilla,” interposed Milly. It
-was her proud boast that she had already tried a fall
-with Aunt Priscilla, had tried it, moreover, pretty successfully.
-That lady, within her own orbit, was a great
-light, but Miss Wren had proved very well able for her
-so far. The Aunt Priscillas of the world were not going
-to harry Miss Wren, and it was by no means clear that
-this simple fact did not count as much to her honor in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>
-the sight of Uncle Jacob as it undoubtedly did in the
-sight of Charles, his nephew.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, Mr. Charles had come that morning to
-Broad Place on a diplomatic mission. It seemed that
-Uncle Jacob had made the sporting suggestion that the
-happy pair should motor down to Thole Park, Maidstone,
-for luncheon, that Charles, whose only merit in the sight
-of heaven was that he was “plus one” at North Berwick,
-should afterwards give careful consideration to the new
-nine-hole course which had been laid out in front of the
-house by the renowned Alec Thomson of Cupar, while
-Milly had a little heart-to-heart talk with Aunt Priscilla.</p>
-
-<p>In a word, it began to look like being quite a good
-world for Charles and Milly. And even Mrs. Wren was
-constrained to admit it. Sheer human merit was becoming
-a little too much for the higher criticism. And daily
-these twain were discovering new beauties in each other.
-For one thing, Charles’s upper lip was now as smooth
-as a baby’s, and a mouth so firm and manly was thereby
-disclosed that it really seemed a pity to hide it. Moreover,
-for a fortnight past, in subtle, unsuspected ways he
-had been bursting forth into fine qualities. This morning,
-for instance, he seemed to have added a cubit to his
-stature. He was in the habit of saying in regard to
-himself that “he was not a flyer,” but really if you saw
-him at the angle Milly did, and you came to think about
-him in her rational manner, it began to seem after all
-he might turn out a bit of one. If only he could be
-persuaded to give up his piano-tuner’s hat there would
-be hope for him anyway.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span></p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>Milly had scarcely left the room to put on her things
-before she was back in it. And she returned in such
-a state of excitement that she could hardly speak. The
-cause of it, moreover, following hard upon her heels, was
-a wholly unexpected visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“He was just coming in at the front door,” Milly
-explained, as soon as the state of her emotions would
-allow her to do so. “I was never so taken aback in my
-life. Why, a feather would have downed me.”</p>
-
-<p>In that moment of drama it was not too much to say
-that a feather would have had an equal effect upon Mary.
-If human resolve stood for anything, and it stood for a
-good deal in the case of Jack Dinneford, he should have
-been on his way to Liverpool. At six o’clock the previous
-evening they had parted heroically, not expecting
-to see each other again. For seventeen hours or so,
-they had been steeling their wills miserably. About
-2 a.m., the hour when ghosts walk and pixies dance the
-foxtrot, both had felt that, after all, they would not be
-strong enough to bear the self-inflicted blow. But daylight
-had found them true to the faith that was in them.
-She had just enough fortitude not to telephone a change
-of mind, he was just man enough to decide not to miss
-the 10.5 from Euston.</p>
-
-<p>Still, when the best has been said for it, the human
-will is but a trivial affair. Man is not much when the
-Fates begin to weave their magic web. A taxi was actually
-at the door of Jack’s chambers, nay, his luggage had
-even been strapped into the front of the vehicle, when
-there came an urgent message by telephone from Bridport<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
-House to say that his Grace most particularly desired
-that Mr. Dinneford and Miss Lawrence would come
-to luncheon at half-past one.</p>
-
-<p>What was a man to do? To obey the command was,
-of course, to forgo all hope of sailing by the <i>Arcadia</i>.
-To ignore it was to forgo all hope of entering Elysium.
-In justice to Mr. Dinneford it took him rather less than
-one minute to decide. His servant was promptly ordered
-to unship his gear and dismiss the taxi.</p>
-
-<p>It was the nearest possible shave. His Grace had
-run matters so fine, that had he delayed his communication
-another two minutes, the Tenderfoot would have
-been on his way to New York. Some miraculous change
-of plan had occurred at the fifty-ninth minute of the
-eleventh hour. Exactly what it was must now be the
-business of a distracted lover to find out.</p>
-
-<p>Jack’s totally unexpected return to Broad Place was
-in itself an epic. And his unheralded appearance had
-such an effect upon Mary, upon Milly, upon Mrs. Wren,
-that he regretted not having had the forethought to telephone
-his change of plans. He came as a bolt from
-the blue, bringing with him an immensely difficult
-moment; and the presence of Mr. Charles Cheesewright,
-of whom Jack only knew by hearsay, undoubtedly added
-to its embarrassments.</p>
-
-<p>Before anything could be done, even before the excited
-Milly could interpose a “Tell me, is it all right?” it was
-necessary for these paladins to be made known to each
-other. There was wariness on the part of both in the
-process. Neither was quite able to accept the other on
-trust. But a brief taking of the moral temperature by
-two members of the sex which inclines to reserve convinced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>
-the one that Wrexham’s successor had the air and
-the look of a good chap, and what was quite as important,
-convinced the other that the heir to the dukedom
-was not the least of a swankpot. All of which was so
-far excellent.</p>
-
-<p>A desire to ask a thousand questions was simply burning
-holes in Milly. But she had to endure the torments
-of martyrdom. Questions could not be asked in the
-presence of Charles. It called for a great effort to behave
-as if the bottom had not fallen out of the universe.
-In the most heroic way she kept the conversation at a
-diplomatic level, remarking among other things that it
-was an ideal day for motoring, which finally reminded
-her that she must really go and put on her hat.</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t forget a thick veil,” Mary called after her,
-in a voice of superhuman detachment.</p>
-
-<p>The business of not letting the innocent Charles into
-the secret was a superb piece of comedy. There is really
-no need to write novels or to go to the play. They are
-the stuff our daily lives are made of. The way in which
-these four people set themselves to hoodwink a Simple
-Simon of a fifth was quite a rich bit of humor. Little
-recked Mr. Charles Cheesewright that the heavens had
-just opened in Broad Place.</p>
-
-<p>At last Milly returned <i>cap-à-pie</i>, and then by the mercy
-of Divine Providence Mr. Charles suddenly remembered
-that it was a long way to Maidstone and that it was now
-a quarter past eleven.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m quite ready when you are,” said Milly to her
-cavalier, with all the guile of a young female serpent.
-Mr. Charles shook hands gravely and Britishly all round,
-and Mary wished them a pleasant journey, and Mrs.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-Wren “hoped they would wrap up well,” and then Milly
-stepped deftly back three paces from the door, saying,
-“You know the way down, Charley,” as clear an intimation
-as any young man could desire that it was up to him
-to lead it.</p>
-
-<p>Charles led the way accordingly, and then came Milly’s
-chance.</p>
-
-<p>“What <i>has</i> happened?”</p>
-
-<p>“Uncle Albert has sent for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“For both?”</p>
-
-<p>“For both!”</p>
-
-<p>Just for a moment Mary’s feelings nearly proved too
-much for her. Having come to despair of Bridport
-House, there had been no reason to hope for this sudden
-change of front. She simply couldn’t fathom it. That
-was also true of Milly. And as the significance of the
-whole thing rushed upon that imperious creature, she
-turned to Mary in the manner of Helen, the Spartan
-Queen. “A last word to you, Miss Lawrence!” Her
-voice trembled with excitement. “If you do anything
-idiotic, I’ll never speak to you again. And that’s
-official!”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>As the crow flies, it is just nine minutes from Broad
-Place to Bridport House. Therefore they had time to
-burn. And as it was such a perfect day for motoring,
-it was a day equally well adapted for sitting under the
-trees in the Park.</p>
-
-<p><i>Force majeure</i> was applied so vigorously by Mrs.
-Wren, with timely aid from the Tenderfoot, that Mary
-was not given half a chance to jib at this new and amazing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
-turn of fortune’s shuttle. She must wear her new
-hat with the roses&mdash;Mrs. Wren. She must wear
-Raquin’s biscuit-colored masterpiece&mdash;Mr. Dinneford.
-Her diamond earrings thought Mrs. Wren. Mr. Dinneford
-thought her old-fashioned seed pearl. There was
-never really any question of her going to luncheon at
-Bridport House at 1.30. Her friends and counselors did
-not even allow it to arise. The only thing that need
-trouble her was how she looked when she got there.</p>
-
-<p>En route she made a picture of immense distinction
-beyond a doubt. Whether it was the hat with the roses,
-or the sunshine of July, or the dress of simple muslin,
-which on second thoughts seemed more in keeping with
-the occasion than the Raquin masterpiece, and in the
-opinion of Mrs. Wren had the further merit “that it gave
-her eyes a chance,” or her favorite earrings which Aunt
-Harriet had given her as a little girl; or the fact that Jack
-walked beside her, and that Happiness is still the greatest
-of Court painters, who shall say?&mdash;but in the course of
-a pilgrimage from Albert Gate to the Marble Arch and
-half way back again, she certainly attracted more than
-her share of the public notice. In fact, with her fine
-height and her lithe grace she actually provoked a hook-nosed,
-hard-featured dame in a sort of high-hung
-barouche to turn in the most deliberate manner and look
-at her. Or it may have been because the Tenderfoot in
-passing had raised a reluctant, semi-ironical hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Charlotte,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope Aunt Charlotte is not as disagreeable as she
-looks,” was Mary’s thought, but doubtless remembering
-in the nick of time Talleyrand’s famous maxim, she
-merely said, “What a <i>clever</i> face!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Is it?” said Jack, unconcernedly. But his mind was
-on other things, perhaps.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, it <i>was</i> on other things.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s sit here five minutes,” he said, as they came to
-a couple of vacant chairs. “Then I’ll tell you a bit of
-news.”</p>
-
-<p>They sat accordingly. And the bit of news was the
-following:</p>
-
-<p>“Muriel’s hooked it.”</p>
-
-<p>Respect for her mother tongue caused Mary to demand
-a repetition of this cryptic statement.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooked it with her Radical,” Jack amplified. “They
-were married yesterday morning, quite quietly, ‘owing
-to the indisposition of his Grace,’ the papers say. And
-they are now in Scotland on their honeymoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us hope they’ll be happy,” said Mary. “She has
-a very brilliant husband, at any rate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a doubt of that. If brains breed happiness,
-they’ll be all right.”</p>
-
-<p>But do brains breed happiness? that was the question
-in their minds at the moment. Aunt Charlotte had
-brains undoubtedly, but as she passed them three minutes
-since no one could have said that she looked happy. The
-Duke had brains, but few would have said that he was
-happy. Mary herself had brains, and they had brought
-her within an ace of wrecking her one chance of real
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p>They were in the midst of this philosophical inquiry,
-when Chance, that prince of magicians, gave the kaleidoscope
-a little loving shake, and hey! presto! the other side
-of the picture was laughingly presented to them.</p>
-
-<p>A rather lop-sided young man in a brown bowler hat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
-was marching head in air along the gravel in front of
-them. One shoulder was a little higher than its neighbor,
-his clothes looked shabby in the sun of July, his
-gait was slightly grotesque, yet upon his face was a smile
-of rare complacency. In one hand he held a small girl
-of five, and in the other a small boy to match her; and
-that may have been why at this precise moment he looked
-as if he had just acquired a controlling interest in the
-planet. And yet there must have been some deeper,
-subtler reason for this young man’s air of power mingled
-with beatitude.</p>
-
-<p>Rather mean of mansion as he was, it was impossible
-for two shrewd spectators of the human comedy on the
-Park chairs to ignore him as he swung gayly by. In
-spite of his impossible hat and his weird trousers, the
-mere look on his face was almost cosmic in its significance,
-he was so clearly on terms with heaven. But in
-any case he would have forcibly entered their scheme of
-existence. Just as he came level with them he chanced
-to lower his gaze abruptly and by doing so caught the
-fascinated eyes of Mary fixed upon his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning, Miss Lawrence. What a nice day!”</p>
-
-<p>He was not in a position to take off his hat, but he
-enforced a hearty greeting with a superb bow, and passed
-jauntily on.</p>
-
-<p>The Tenderfoot could not help being amused. “Who’s
-your friend?” He turned a quizzical eye upon a countenance
-glowing with mischief.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Alf.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of all that’s wonderful, who is Alf?”
-The tone was expostulation all compact, but as mirth was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span>
-frankly uppermost, even the most sensitive democrat
-could hardly have resented it.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a man on a newspaper.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said the Tenderfoot. But somehow it didn’t
-explain him.</p>
-
-<p>“An old friend, my dear, and he’s now the Press, with
-a capital letter. The other day he interviewed me for
-his paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could you let him?” gasped the Tenderfoot.</p>
-
-<p>“For the sake of old times.” Suddenly she loosed her
-famous note. “That little man is in my stars. He dates
-back to my earliest flapperdom, when my great ambition
-was to kill him. He was the greengrocer’s boy in the
-next street, and he used to call after me:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘I am Mary Plantagenet;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who would imagine it?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Eyes full of liquid fire,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Hair bright as jet;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No one knows my hist’ry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I am wrapt in myst’ry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">I am the She-ro</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Of a penny novelette.’”</div>
- </div></div></div>
-
-<p>“Well, I hope,” said the Tenderfoot, “you jolly well
-lammed into him for such a piece of infernal cheek.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did,” she confessed. “One day I turned on
-him and boxed his ears, and I’m bound to say he’s been
-very respectful ever since. It was very amusing to be
-reminded of his existence when he turned up the other
-day. He paid me all sorts of extravagant compliments;
-he seems to hold himself responsible for any success I
-may have had.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nice of him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He says he has written me up for the past two years;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>
-and that when he edits a paper of his own, and he’s
-quite made up his mind that it won’t be long before he
-does, I can have my portrait in it as often as I want.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>My</i> Lord!”</p>
-
-<p>“All very honestly meant,” laughed Mary Plantagenet.
-“It is very charming of Alf&mdash;a <i>nom de guerre</i>, by the
-way. His real name is Michael Conner, but now he’s
-Alf of the <i>Millennium</i>. And the other day at our interview,
-when he came to talk of old times, somehow I
-couldn’t help loving him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, love&mdash;<i>that</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something to love in everybody, my dear. It’s
-really very easy to like people if you hunt for the positive&mdash;if
-that’s not a high brow way of putting it! The
-other day when Alf began to talk of his ambitions, and
-of the wife he had married, and of the little Alfs and
-the little Alfesses, I thought the more there are of you
-the merrier, because after all you are rather fine, you
-are good for the community, and you make this old world
-go round. Anyhow we began as enemies, and now we
-are friends ‘for keeps,’ and both Alf and I are so much
-the better for knowing it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder!”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course we are. And when Alf is a great editor,
-as he means to be, and he is able to carry out his great
-scheme of founding a Universal Love and Admiration
-Society, for the purpose of bringing out the best in
-everybody, including foreign nations&mdash;his very own idea,
-and to my mind a noble one&mdash;he has promised to make
-me an original member.”</p>
-
-<p>“A very original member!” The Tenderfoot scoffed.</p>
-
-<p>But sitting there in the eye of the morning, with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-gentle leaves whispering over his head, and the finest
-girl in the land by his side drawing a fanciful picture of
-“Alf” on the gravel with the point of her sunshade, he
-was not in the mood for mockery. The world was so
-full of a number of things, that it seemed but right and
-decent to have these large and generous notions. Let
-every atom and molecule that made up the pageant of
-human experience overflow in love and admiration of
-its neighbor. He was a dud himself, his dwelling-place
-was <i>en parterre</i>, yet as heaven was above him and She
-was at his elbow, there was no denying that the little man
-who had just passed out of sight had laid hold somehow
-of a divine idea.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the ticket for the future was Universal Love and
-Admiration, at any rate for the heirs of the good God.
-Not a doubt that! He didn’t pretend to be a philosopher,
-or a poet, but even he could see that yonder little
-scug in the brown pot hat was a big proposition.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder,” he mused aloud, “how the little bounder
-came to think of <i>that</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“He says it came to him in his sleep.” And the artist
-at his elbow gave one final masterful curl to the amazing
-trousers of the latest benefactor of the human species.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-EVERYTHING FOR THE BEST</h2>
-
-<p class="ph2">I</p>
-
-<p class="no-indent"><span class="smcap"><span class="dropcap">J</span>ack</span> glanced at the watch on his wrist. By the
-mercy of Allah there were fifty minutes yet. A
-whole fifty minutes yet to stay in heaven. And
-then....</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly hard set by thoughts which had no right to
-be there he looked up and away in the direction of Bridport
-House.</p>
-
-<p>“There they go!” He gave the pavement artist a
-little prod.</p>
-
-<p>“Who&mdash;goes&mdash;where?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie.”</p>
-
-<p>True enough! Sublimely unconscious of two pairs of
-amused eyes upon them, Cousin Blanche and Cousin
-Marjorie were passing slowly by. As usual at that hour
-they were riding their tall horses. And they became
-their tall horses so remarkably well that they might have
-belonged to the train of Artemis. In the saddle, at any
-rate, Cousin Blanche and Cousin Marjorie looked hard
-to beat.</p>
-
-<p>“Now for your precious theory,” said the Tenderfoot
-with malice. “Here’s your chance to hunt for the
-positive.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span></p>
-
-<p>She fixed her eyes on the slowly-receding enemy.
-“Well, in the first place, my dear, those old-fashioned
-habits become them marvelously.”</p>
-
-<p>“No use for that sort of kit myself,” growled the
-hostile critic.</p>
-
-<p>“Then they are so much a part of their horses they
-might be female centaurs.”</p>
-
-<p>“And about as amusing as female centaurs.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we are hunting for the positive, aren’t we? We
-are trying ‘to affirm something,’ as Alf would say. Now
-those two and their horses are far grander works of
-art than anything that ever came out of Greece or Italy.
-It has taken millions of years to produce them and they
-are so perfect in their way that one wonders how they
-ever came to be produced at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“You might say that of anything or anybody&mdash;if you
-come to think of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. I agree. And so would Alf. And
-that’s why universal love and admiration are so proper
-and natural.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait till you are really up against ’em and then
-you’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p>“The more I’m up against them&mdash;if I am to be up
-against them&mdash;the more I shall love and admire them,
-not for what they are perhaps, but for what they might
-be if only they’d take a little trouble over their parts in
-this wonderful Play, which I’m quite sure the Author
-meant to be so very much finer than we silly amateurs
-ever give it a chance of becoming.”</p>
-
-<p>The sunshade began to scratch the gravel again, while
-Jack Dinneford sighed over its owner’s crude philosophy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Presently he began to realize again that they were in
-a fool’s paradise. Surely they were taking a climb down
-too much for granted. Why should these hardshells
-give in so inexplicably? It was in the nature of things
-for a flaw to lurk under all this fair-seeming. Only
-fools would ever build on such a sublime pretense as
-Bridport House. Was it rational to expect its denizens
-to behave like ordinary sensible human people?</p>
-
-<p>In order to sidetrack his fears he turned again to
-watch the labors of the pavement artist. The tip of a
-gifted sunshade was doing wonderful things with the
-gravel. It had just evolved a <i>chef d’œuvre</i>, which however
-was only apparent to the eye of faith.</p>
-
-<p>“Who do you imagine that is?”</p>
-
-<p>Imagination was certainly needed. It would not have
-been possible otherwise to see a resemblance to anything
-human.</p>
-
-<p>“That is his lamp,” hovered the sunshade above this
-masterpiece. “That is his truncheon. Those are his
-boots. That is his overcoat. And there we have his
-helmet. And there,” the tip of the sunshade traced
-slowly, “the noble profile of the greatest dear in existence.”</p>
-
-<p>At that he was bound to own that had the Park gravel
-been more sensitive, here would have been a living portrait
-of Sergeant Kelly of the X Division. And even if
-it was only visible to the eye of faith it was pretext
-enough for honest laughter.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“No one knows her hist’ry,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">She is wrapt in myst’ry,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>he quoted softly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
-
-<p>It was quite true. Various zephyrs and divers little
-birds had whispered the romantic fact in their ears long
-ago. But what did it matter? It was but one plume
-more in the cap of the Magician, a mere detail in that
-pageant of which Mystery itself is the last expression.</p>
-
-<p>There may have been wisdom in their laughter. At
-any rate it seemed to give them a kind of Dutch courage
-for the ordeal that was now so near. But a rather
-forced gayety did not long continue; it was soon merged
-in a further piece of news which Jack suddenly remembered.</p>
-
-<p>“By the way,” he announced, “there’s more trouble at
-Bridport House. My cousins, I hear, are going to live
-with Aunt Charlotte.”</p>
-
-<p>She was obliged to ask why, but he had to own that
-it was beyond his power to answer her question. All
-that he knew was that his cousins were “at serious outs”
-with their father, and that according to recent information
-they were on the point of leaving the paternal roof.</p>
-
-<p>The Tenderfoot, however, in professing a diplomatic
-ignorance of a matter to which he had indiscreetly referred,
-had only pulled up in the nick of time. He knew
-rather more than he said. “There’s a violent quarrel
-about Mrs. Sanderson,” was at the tip of his tongue, but
-happily he saw in time that such words in such circumstances
-would be pure folly. Nay, it was folly to have
-drifted into these perilous waters at all; and in the face
-of a suddenly awakened curiosity, he proceeded at once
-to steer the talk into a safer channel.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<a id="illo3"><img src="images/i_296.jpg" width="300" alt=" “We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the light
-fringed her eyelids" title="" /></a></div>
-
-<p class="caption"> “We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the<br />
-light fringed her eyelids</p>
-
-<p class="p2">After all, that was not very difficult. As they sat under
-the whispering leaves, gazing a little wistfully at the
-pomp of a summer’s day, heaven was so near that it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>hardly seemed rational to be giving a thought to those
-who dwelt in spheres less halcyon. The previous evening
-at six o’clock they had parted for ever in this very
-spot. But a swift turn of Fate’s shuttle had changed
-everything.</p>
-
-<p>As now they tried to understand what had occurred,
-it was hard to keep from building castles. An absurd
-old planet might prove, after all, such a wonderful place.
-When you are four-and-twenty and in love, and the
-crooked path suddenly turns to the straight, and the
-future is seen through magic vistas just ahead, surprising
-things are apt to arise, take shape, acquire a hue, a
-meaning. The light that never was on sea or land is
-quite likely to be found south of the Marble Arch and
-north of Hyde Park Corner. They were on the threshold
-of a very wonderful world. What gifts were
-theirs! Health, youth, a high-hearted joy in existence,
-here were the keys of heaven. Life was what they
-chose to make it.</p>
-
-<p>Poetry herself clothed them as with a garment. But
-not for a moment must they forget, even amid the dangerous
-joys of a rather wild reaction, that all might be
-illusion. Voices whispered from the leaves that as yet
-they were not out of the wood. Jack, it is true, was fain
-to believe that the latest act of Bridport House implied a
-very real change of heart. For all that, as the hour of
-Fate drew on, he could not stifle a miserable feeling of
-nervousness. And Mary, too, in spite of a proud surface
-gayety, felt faint within. The dream was far too good
-to be true.</p>
-
-<p>“Of <i>course</i> it’s a climb down,” said Jack, whistling to
-keep up his courage. “Do you suppose Uncle Albert<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
-would have sent for us like this unless he meant to chuck
-up the sponge?”</p>
-
-<p>“We mustn’t build castles,” she sighed, and the light
-fringed her eyelids.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll build ’em as high as the moon!”</p>
-
-<p>She shook a whimsical head. And then the goad of
-youth drove her to a smile of perilous happiness. All
-sorts of subtle fears were lurking in that good, shrewd
-brain of hers. They were on the verge of chaos and
-Old Night&mdash;yet she had not the heart to rebuke him.</p>
-
-<p>The dread hour of one-thirty was now so very near,
-that it was idle to disguise the fact that one at least of
-the two people on the Park chairs had grown extremely
-unhappy. Mary was quite sure that a horrible ordeal
-was going to prove too much for her. It was hardly
-less than madness to have yielded in the way she had.
-But qualms were useless, fears were vain. There was
-only one thing to do. She must set her teeth and go
-and face the music.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">II</p>
-
-<p>Punctual to the minute they were at the solemn portals
-of Bridport House. And then as a servant in a grotesque
-livery piloted them across an expanse of rather
-pretentious hall into a somber room, full of grandiose
-decoration and Victorian furniture, a grand fighting spirit
-suddenly rose in one whose need of it was sore. Mary
-was quaking in her shoes, yet the joy of battle came upon
-her in the queerest, most unexpected way. It was as if
-a magician had waved his wand and all the paltry emotions
-of the past hour were dispelled. Perhaps it was
-that deep down in her slept an Amazon. Or a clear conscience<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span>
-may have inspired her; at any rate she had no
-need to reproach herself just then. She could look the
-whole world in the face. Her attitude had been sensitively
-correct; if other people did not appreciate that
-simple fact, so much the worse for other people!</p>
-
-<p>A long five minutes they waited in that large and
-dismal room, a slight flush of anxiety upon their faces,
-their hearts beating a little wildly, no doubt. In all
-that time not a word passed between them; the tension
-was almost more than they could bear. If Fate had
-kept till the last one final scurvy trick it would be too
-horrible! And then suddenly, in the midst of this grim
-thought, an old man came hobbling painfully in. Both
-were struck at once by the look of him. There was
-something in the bearing, in the manner, in the play of
-the rather exquisite face which spoke to them intimately.
-For a reason deeply obscure, which Jack and Mary were
-very far from comprehending, the welcome he gave her
-was quite touching. It was full of a simple kindness,
-spontaneous, unstudied, oddly caressing.</p>
-
-<p>Jack, amazed not a little by the heart-on-the-sleeve
-attitude of this old barbarian, could only ascribe it to the
-desire of a finished man of the world to put the best
-possible face on an impossible matter. Yet, somehow,
-that cynical view did not seem to cover the facts of
-the case.</p>
-
-<p>In a way that hardly belonged to a tyrant and an
-autocrat, the old man took one of the girl’s hands into
-the keeping of his poor enfeebled ones, and was still
-holding it when his sister and his eldest daughter came
-into the room. Both ladies were firm in the belief that
-this was the most disagreeable moment of their lives.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
-Still it was their nature to meet things heroically, and
-they now proceeded to do so.</p>
-
-<p>The picture their minds had already formed of this
-girl was not a pleasing one. But as far as Lady Wargrave
-was concerned it was shattered almost instantly.
-The likeness between father and daughter was amazing.
-She had, in quite a remarkable degree, the look
-of noblesse the world had always admired in him, with
-which, however, he had signally failed to endow the
-daughters of the first marriage. But there was far more
-than a superficial likeness to shatter preconceived ideas.
-Another, more virile strain was hers. The mettle of
-the pasture, the breath of the moorland, had given her
-a look of purpose and fire, even if the grace of the
-salon had yielded much of its own peculiar amenity.
-Whatever else she might be, the youngest daughter of
-the House of Dinneford was a personality of a rare but
-vivid kind.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the Duke realized that the ladies had entered
-the room, he gravely presented the girl, but with
-a touch of chivalry that she simply adored in him. The
-little note of homage melted in the oddest way the half-fierce
-constraint with which she turned instinctively to
-meet these enemies. Sarah bowed rather coldly, but
-Aunt Charlotte came forward at once with a proffered
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“My sister,” murmured his Grace. In his eyes was a
-certain humor and perhaps a spice of malice.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment speech was impossible. The girl looked
-slowly from one to the other, and then suddenly it came
-upon her that these people were old and hard hit. She
-felt a curious revulsion of feeling. Their surrender was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span>
-unconditional, and woman’s sixth sense told her what
-their thoughts must be. They must be suffering horribly.
-All at once the fight went out of her.</p>
-
-<p>In a fashion rather odd, with almost the naïveté of a
-child, she turned aside in a deadly fight with tears, that
-she managed to screw back into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was left to Lady Wargrave to break a silence which
-threatened to become bitterly embarrassing: “Come over
-here and talk to me,” she said with a directness the girl
-was quick to obey.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Wargrave led the way to a couple of empty
-chairs near a window, Mary following with a kind sick
-timidity she had never felt before, and a heart that
-beat convulsively. What could the old dragon have to
-say to her? Even now she half expected a talon.</p>
-
-<p>The Dowager pointed to a chair, sat down grimly, and
-then said abruptly, “I hope you will be happy.”</p>
-
-<p>There was something in the words that threw the
-girl into momentary confusion. The fact was a miracle
-had occurred and her bewilderment was seeking a reason
-for it. Only one explanation came to her, and it
-was that these great powers, rather than suffer Jack to
-depart, were ready to make the best of his fiancée. There
-was not much comfort in the theory, but no other was
-feasible. Place and power, it seemed, were caught in
-meshes of their own weaving. And yet bruised in pride
-as she was by a situation for which she was not to blame,
-the rather splendid bearing of these old hard-bitten warriors
-touched a chivalry far down. Deep called unto
-deep. At the unexpected words of the griffin, she had
-again to screw the tears back into her eyes. And then
-she said in a voice that seemed to be stifling her, “It’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
-not my fault. I didn’t know.... I didn’t want this....
-If you will.... If you will help me I will do my best
-... not ... to....”</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the Dowager searched her right through.</p>
-
-<p>“No, you are not to blame,” she said judicially. “We
-are all going to help you,” and then in a voice which
-cracked in the middle she added, to her own surprise,
-“my dear.”</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">III</p>
-
-<p>At luncheon the girl had the place of honor at the
-right hand of his Grace. It was a rather chastened assembly.
-The arrival of the cuckoo in the nest was a
-fitting climax to Muriel. Both episodes were felt to be
-buffets of a wholly undeserved severity; they might
-even be said to have shaken a sublime edifice to its base.
-Not for a moment had the collective wisdom of the
-Dinneford ladies connived at Muriel’s Breadth, nor had
-it in any way countenanced the absurd fellow Jack in his
-infatuation for a chorus girl.</p>
-
-<p>Simple justice, however, compelled these stern critics
-to own that Bridport’s future duchess had come as a
-rather agreeable surprise. She differed so much from
-the person they had expected. They couldn’t deny that
-she was a personality. Moreover, there was a force, a
-distinction that might hope to mold and even harmonize
-with her place in the table of precedence. So good were
-her manners that the subtle air of the great world might
-one day be hers.</p>
-
-<p>It amazed them to see the effect she had already had
-on their fastidious and difficult parent. He was talking
-to her of men and events and times past in a way he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
-had not talked for years. He discoursed of the great
-ones of his youth, the singers and dancers of the ’Sixties
-when he was at the Embassy at Paris and ginger was hot
-in the mouth. Then by a process of gradation he went
-on to tell his old stories of Gladstone and Dizzy, to discuss
-books and politics and the pictures in the Uffizi, and
-to cap with tales of his own travels an occasional brief
-anecdote, wittily told, of her own tours in America and
-South Africa.</p>
-
-<p>Sarah, Blanche, and Marjorie could not help feeling
-hostile, yet it was clear that this remarkable girl had put
-an enchantment on their father. While he talked to her
-the table, the room, the people in it seemed to pass beyond
-his ken. Candor bred the thought that it was not
-to be wondered at, her way of listening was so delightful.
-The beautiful head&mdash;it hurt them to admit the fact yet
-there it was&mdash;bent towards him in a kind of loving reverence,
-changing each phrase of his into something rare
-and memorable by a receptivity whose only wish was to
-give pleasure to a poor old man struggling with a basin
-of arrowroot&mdash;that sight and the sense of a presence alive
-in every nerve, a voice of pure music, and a face incapable
-of evil: was it surprising that a spell was cast
-upon their sire? Take her as one would she was a real
-natural force&mdash;an original upon whom the fairies had
-lavished many gifts.</p>
-
-<p>The family chieftain was renewing his youth, but only
-Charlotte understood why. In common with the rest of
-the world, Sarah, Blanche, and Marjorie were to be kept
-in ignorance of the truth&mdash;for the present at any rate.
-But already the Dinneford ladies had taken further counsel
-of the sage of Hill Street, and upon her advice all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
-thought of secession from Bridport House had been
-given up. Reflection had convinced Lady Wargrave, now
-in possession of the light, that the true interests of the
-Family would be served by silence and submission. After
-all, Mrs. Sanderson was an old and valued retainer; her
-integrity was beyond question; her devotion and single-minded
-regard for their father’s welfare ought not to be
-forgotten!</p>
-
-<p>Taking all the circumstances into account, it was in
-Aunt Charlotte’s opinion, a case for humble pie. And to
-do the ladies no injustice they were ready to consume it
-gracefully. Jack, after all, was quite a distant connection;
-and what was even more important in their sight,
-the girl herself was presentable. Their father, at any
-rate, made no secret of the fact that he found her sympathetic.
-Nay, he was even a little carried away by her.
-As the meal went on, his manner towards her almost
-verged upon affection; and at the end, in open defiance
-of his doctors, he went to the length of wishing her
-happiness in a glass of famous Madeira.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">IV</p>
-
-<p>At five minutes past three Mary and Jack awoke with
-a start from a dream fantasy, to find themselves breathing
-the ampler air of Park Lane. Even then they could
-not quite grasp the meaning of all that had happened.
-Unconditional surrender indeed, yet so sudden, so causeless,
-so mysterious. Why had this strange thing come
-to be?</p>
-
-<p>But just now they were not in a mood to question
-the inscrutable wisdom of the good God. Behind the
-curtain of appearances the sun shone more bravely than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>
-ever, the dust of July lay a shade lighter on the trees
-across the road. No, there was really no need for Providence
-to give an account of itself at that moment; the
-nature of things called for no analysis.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve fallen in love with that old man.”</p>
-
-<p>Even if Jack heard the words he was not in a position
-to offer comment upon them, for he was in the act of
-summoning a taxi from the lee of the Park railings.</p>
-
-<p>“Where shall we go?”</p>
-
-<p>“To the moon and back again?”</p>
-
-<p>And why not! It is not very far to the moon if you
-get hold of the right kind of vehicle. But MX 54,906
-proved on inspection hardly to be adapted for the purpose;
-at any rate Jack came to the conclusion after a
-mere glance at the tires that Hampton Court, via Richmond
-and Elysium, would meet the case equally well.</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">V</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile his Grace in his favorite chair in his
-favorite room, was doing his best to envisage “The
-Outlook for Democracy,” with the aid of the <i>Quarterly
-Review</i>. Of a sudden the clock on the chimneypiece
-chimed a quarter past three, and he laid down an article
-perfect alike in form, taste and scholarship, with the air
-of one who expects something to happen.</p>
-
-<p>Something did happen. In almost the same moment,
-the housekeeper, Mrs. Sanderson, came into the room.
-She carried a tray containing a glass, a spoon, and a
-bottle.</p>
-
-<p>His Grace shook his head. “I’ve had a glass of
-Madeira.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could you be so unwise!” It was the gentle,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>
-half-smiling tone of a mother who reproves a very dear
-but willful child.</p>
-
-<p>She measured the draught inflexibly and he drank
-it like a man. As he returned the glass to the tray he
-sighed a little, and then with a whimsical glance upwards
-he said slowly and softly, “She has her mother’s brains.”</p>
-
-<p>As she looked down upon him, he saw the color darkening
-a strong and beautiful face. “And her father’s
-eyes.” The warmth of her voice almost stifled the words.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly a minute there was so deep a silence that
-even the clock on the chimneypiece was lost in it. And
-then very slowly and gently, as one who thinks aloud,
-he said, “I am trying to remember those words of Milton.”
-He closed his eyes with a smile of perplexity.
-“Ah, yes, yes. I have them now:</p>
-
-<p>“‘He for God only, she for God in him.’”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="transnote"><div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2 nobreak"><span class="smcap">Transcriber’s Notes:</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On pages 43 and 51, Number Five Beaconsfield has been changed to
-Number Five, Beaconsfield.</p>
-
-<p>On page 53, universed has been changed to unversed.</p>
-
-<p>On page 58, spirt has been changed to spirit.</p>
-
-<p>On page 59, réclamce has been changed to réclame.</p>
-
-<p>On pages 72 and 218, a period has been added to Mrs.</p>
-
-<p>On page 88, Majorie has been changed to Marjorie.</p>
-
-<p>On page 90, Majorie’s has been changed to Marjorie’s.</p>
-
-<p>On pages 97, 107 and 117, commonsense has been changed to common sense.</p>
-
-<p>On page 102, the single quote has been removed from America’s.</p>
-
-<p>On page 130, the single quote has been removed from Wren’s.</p>
-
-<p>On page 143, decidely has been changed to decidedly.</p>
-
-<p>On page 163, cause has been changed to course.</p>
-
-<p>On page 188, the single quote has been removed from Parington’s.</p>
-
-<p>On page 235, Panjandram has been changerd to Panjandrum.</p>
-
-<p>On page 239, efficiency has been changed to efficiently.</p>
-
-<p>On page 259, redoutable has been changed to redoubtable.</p>
-
-<p>On page 266, a closing double quote has been added to “Whom do you mean?.</p>
-
-<p>On page 267, familar has been changed to familiar.</p>
-
-<p>On page 274, financée has been changed to fiancée.</p>
-
-<p>On page 290, green-grocer’s has been changed to greengrocer’s.</p>
-
-<p>On page 302, undeservedly has been changed to undeserved.</p>
-
-<p>On page 305, a closing double quote has been added to the last sentence.</p>
-
-<p>All other hyphenation and variant/archaic spellings have been retained.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations in the midst of a paragraph have been moved to avoid
-interrupting the paragraph flow.</p></div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE TIME SPIRIT ***</div>
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